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History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire Volume
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by Edward Gibbon, Esq. With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
April, 1997 [Etext # 893]
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This is volume four of the six volumes of Edward Gibbon's
History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire. If you find
any errors please feel free to notify me of them. I want to make
this the best etext edition possible for both scholars and the
general public. Especially Dale R. Fredrickson who has had
entered the Greek characters in the footnotes and who has
suggested retaining the conjoined ae character in the text.
[email protected] and [email protected] are my email addresses
for now. Please feel free to send me your comments and I hope you
enjoy this.
David Reed
History Of The Decline And Fall Of The
Roman Empire
Edward Gibbon, Esq.
With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
Vol. 4
1782 (Written), 1845 (Revised)
Chapter XXXIX: Gothic Kingdom Of Italy.
Part I.
Zeno And Anastasius, Emperors Of The East. -- Birth,
Education, And First Exploits Of Theodoric The Ostrogoth. -- His
Invasion And Conquest Of Italy. -- The Gothic Kingdom Of Italy.
-- State Of The West. -- Military And Civil Government. -- The
Senator Boethius. -- Last Acts And Death Of Theodoric.
After the fall of the Roman empire in the West, an interval of
fifty years, till the memorable reign of Justinian, 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 contrived to represent
the signature of the illiterate king of Italy. As soon as he had
attained the age of eighteen, he was restored to the wishes of
the Ostrogoths, whom the emperor aspired to gain by liberality
and confidence. Walamir had fallen in battle; the youngest of the
brothers, Widimir, had led away into Italy and Gaul an army of
Barbarians, and the whole nation acknowledged for their king the
father of Theodoric. His ferocious subjects admired the strength
and stature of their young prince; and he soon convinced them
that he had not degenerated from the valor of his ancestors. At
the head of six thousand volunteers, he secretly left the camp in
quest of adventures, descended the Danube as far as Singidunum,
or Belgrade, and soon returned to his father with the spoils of a
Sarmatian king whom he had vanquished and slain. Such triumphs,
however, were productive only of fame, and the invincible
Ostrogoths were reduced to extreme distress by the want of
clothing and food. They unanimously resolved to desert their
Pannonian encampments, and boldly to advance into the warm and
wealthy neighborhood of the Byzantine court, which already
maintained in pride and luxury so many bands of confederate
Goths. After proving, by some acts of hostility, that they could
be dangerous, or at least troublesome, enemies, the Ostrogoths
sold at a high price their reconciliation and fidelity, accepted
a donative of lands and money, and were intrusted with the
defence of the Lower Danube, under the command of Theodoric, who
succeeded after his father's death to the hereditary throne of
the Amali.
A hero, descended from a race of kings, must have despised the
base Isaurian who was invested with the Roman purple, without any
endowment of mind or body, without any advantages of royal birth,
or superior qualifications. After the failure of the Theodosian
life, the choice of Pulcheria and of the senate might be
justified in some measure by the characters of Martin and Leo,
but the latter of these princes confirmed and dishonored his
reign by the perfidious murder of Aspar and his sons, who too
rigorously exacted the debt of gratitude and obedience. The
inheritance of Leo and of the East was peaceably devolved on his
infant grandson, the son of his daughter Ariadne; and her
Isaurian husband, the fortunate Trascalisseus, exchanged that
barbarous sound for the Grecian appellation of Zeno. After the
decease of the elder Leo, he approached with unnatural respect
the throne of his son, humbly received, as a gift, the second
rank in the empire, and soon excited the public suspicion on the
sudden and premature death of his young colleague, whose life
could no longer promote the success of his ambition. But the
palace of Constantinople was ruled by female influence, and
agitated by female passions: and Verina, the widow of Leo,
claiming his empire as her own, pronounced a sentence of
deposition against the worthless and ungrateful servant on whom
she alone had bestowed the sceptre of the East. As soon as she
sounded a revolt in the ears of Zeno, he fled with precipitation
into the mountains of Isauria, and her brother Basiliscus,
already infamous by his African expedition, was unanimously
proclaimed by the servile senate. But the reign of the usurper
was short and turbulent. Basiliscus presumed to assassinate the
lover of his sister; he dared to offend the lover of his wife,
the vain and insolent Harmatius, who, in the midst of Asiatic
luxury, affected the dress, the demeanor, and the surname of
Achilles. By the conspiracy of the malecontents, Zeno was
recalled from exile; the armies, the capital, the person, of
Basiliscus, were betrayed; and his whole family was condemned to
the long agony of cold and hunger by the inhuman conqueror, who
wanted courage to encounter or to forgive his enemies. * The
haughty spirit of Verina was still incapable of submission or
repose. She provoked the enmity of a favorite general, embraced
his cause as soon as he was disgraced, created a new emperor in
Syria and Egypt, * raised an army of seventy thousand men, and
persisted to the last moment of her life in a fruitless
rebellion, which, according to the fashion of the age, had been
predicted by Christian hermits and Pagan magicians. While the
East was afflicted by the passions of Verina, her daughter
Ariadne was distinguished by the female virtues of mildness and
fidelity; she followed her husband in his exile, and after his
restoration, she implored his clemency in favor of her mother. On
the decease of Zeno, Ariadne, the daughter, the mother, and the
widow of an emperor, gave her hand and the Imperial title to
Anastasius, an aged domestic of the palace, who survived his
elevation above twenty-seven years, and whose character is
attested by the acclamation of the people, "Reign as you have
lived!"
Whatever fear of affection could bestow, was profusely
lavished by Zeno on the king of the Ostrogoths; the rank of
patrician and consul, the command of the Palatine troops, an
equestrian statue, a treasure in gold and silver of many thousand
pounds, the name of son, and the promise of a rich and honorable
wife. As long as Theodoric condescended to serve, he supported
with courage and fidelity the cause of his benefactor; his rapid
march contributed to the restoration of Zeno; and in the second
revolt, the Walamirs, as they were
called, pursued and pressed the Asiatic rebels, till they left an
easy victory to the Imperial troops. But the faithful servant was
suddenly converted into a formidable enemy, who spread the flames
of war from Constantinople to the Adriatic; many flourishing
cities were reduced to ashes, and the agriculture of Thrace was
almost extirpated by the wanton cruelty of the Goths, who
deprived their captive peasants of the right hand that guided the
plough. On such occasions, Theodoric sustained the loud and
specious reproach of disloyalty, of ingratitude, and of insatiate
avarice, which could be only excused by the hard necessity of his
situation. He reigned, not as the monarch, but as the minister of
a ferocious people, whose spirit was unbroken by slavery, and
impatient of real or imaginary insults. Their poverty was
incurable; since the most liberal donatives were soon dissipated
in wasteful luxury, and the most fertile estates became barren in
their hands; they despised, but they envied, the laborious
provincials; and when their subsistence had failed, the
Ostrogoths embraced the familiar resources of war and rapine. It
had been the wish of Theodoric (such at least was his
declaration) to lead a peaceful, obscure, obedient life on the
confines of Scythia, till the Byzantine court, by splendid and
fallacious promises, seduced him to attack a confederate tribe of
Goths, who had been engaged in the party of Basiliscus. He
marched from his station in Mæsia, on the solemn assurance
that before he reached Adrianople, he should meet a plentiful
convoy of provisions, and a reënforcement of eight thousand
horse and thirty thousand foot, while the legions of Asia were
encamped at Heraclea to second his operations. These measures
were disappointed by mutual jealousy. As he advanced into Thrace,
the son of Theodemir found an inhospitable solitude, and his
Gothic followers, with a heavy train of horses, of mules, and of
wagons, were betrayed by their guides among the rocks and
precipices of Mount Sondis, where he was assaulted by the arms
and invectives of Theodoric the son of Triarius. From a
neighboring height, his artful rival harangued the camp of the
Walamirs, and branded their leader with
the opprobrious names of child, of madman, of perjured traitor,
the enemy of his blood and nation. "Are you ignorant," exclaimed
the son of Triarius, "that it is the constant policy of the
Romans to destroy the Goths by each other's swords? Are you
insensible that the victor in this unnatural contest will be
exposed, and justly exposed, to their implacable revenge? Where
are those warriors, my kinsmen and thy own, whose widows now
lament that their lives were sacrificed to thy rash ambition?
Where is the wealth which thy soldiers possessed when they were
first allured from their native homes to enlist under thy
standard? Each of them was then master of three or four horses;
they now follow thee on foot, like slaves, through the deserts of
Thrace; those men who were tempted by the hope of measuring gold
with a bushel, those brave men who are as free and as noble as
thyself." A language so well suited to the temper of the Goths
excited clamor and discontent; and the son of Theodemir,
apprehensive of being left alone, was compelled to embrace his
brethren, and to imitate the example of Roman perfidy. *
In every state of his fortune, the prudence and firmness of
Theodoric were equally conspicuous; whether he threatened
Constantinople at the head of the confederate Goths, or retreated
with a faithful band to the mountains and sea-coast of Epirus. At
length the accidental death of the son of Triarius destroyed the
balance which the Romans had been so anxious to preserve, the
whole nation acknowledged the supremacy of the Amali, and the
Byzantine court subscribed an ignominious and oppressive treaty.
The senate had already declared, that it was necessary to choose
a party among the Goths, since the public was unequal to the
support of their united forces; a subsidy of two thousand pounds
of gold, with the ample pay of thirteen thousand men, were
required for the least considerable of their armies; and the
Isaurians, who guarded not the empire but the emperor, enjoyed,
besides the privilege of rapine, an annual pension of five
thousand pounds. The sagacious mind of Theodoric soon perceived
that he was odious to the Romans, and suspected by the
Barbarians: he understood the popular murmur, that his subjects
were exposed in their frozen huts to intolerable hardships, while
their king was dissolved in the luxury of Greece, and he
prevented the painful alternative of encountering the Goths, as
the champion, or of leading them to the field, as the enemy, of
Zeno. Embracing an enterprise worthy of his courage and ambition,
Theodoric addressed the emperor in the following words: "Although
your servant is maintained in affluence by your liberality,
graciously listen to the wishes of my heart! Italy, the
inheritance of your predecessors, and Rome itself, the head and
mistress of the world, now fluctuate under the violence and
oppression of Odoacer the mercenary. Direct me, with my national
troops, to march against the tyrant. If I fall, you will be
relieved from an expensive and troublesome friend: if, with the
divine permission, I succeed, I shall govern in your name, and to
your glory, the Roman senate, and the part of the republic
delivered from slavery by my victorious arms." The proposal of
Theodoric was accepted, and perhaps had been suggested, by the
Byzantine court. But the forms of the commission, or grant,
appear to have been expressed with a prudent ambiguity, which
might be explained by the event; and it was left doubtful,
whether the conqueror of Italy should reign as the lieutenant,
the vassal, or the ally, of the emperor of the East.
The reputation both of the leader and of the war diffused a
universal ardor; the Walamirs were
multiplied by the Gothic swarms already engaged in the service,
or seated in the provinces, of the empire; and each bold
Barbarian, who had heard of the wealth and beauty of Italy, was
impatient to seek, through the most perilous adventures, the
possession of such enchanting objects. The march of Theodoric
must be considered as the emigration of an entire people; the
wives and children of the Goths, their aged parents, and most
precious effects, were carefully transported; and some idea may
be formed of the heavy baggage that now followed the camp, by the
loss of two thousand wagons, which had been sustained in a single
action in the war of Epirus. For their subsistence, the Goths
depended on the magazines of corn which was ground in portable
mills by the hands of their women; on the milk and flesh of their
flocks and herds; on the casual produce of the chase, and upon
the contributions which they might impose on all who should
presume to dispute the passage, or to refuse their friendly
assistance. Notwithstanding these precautions, they were exposed
to the danger, and almost to the distress, of famine, in a march
of seven hundred miles, which had been undertaken in the depth of
a rigorous winter. Since the fall of the Roman power, Dacia and
Pannonia no longer exhibited the rich prospect of populous
cities, well-cultivated fields, and convenient highways: the
reign of barbarism and desolation was restored, and the tribes of
Bulgarians, Gepidæ, and Sarmatians, who had occupied the
vacant province, were prompted by their native fierceness, or the
solicitations of Odoacer, to resist the progress of his enemy. In
many obscure though bloody battles, Theodoric fought and
vanquished; till at length, surmounting every obstacle by skilful
conduct and persevering courage, he descended from the Julian
Alps, and displayed his invincible banners on the confines of
Italy.
Odoacer, a rival not unworthy of his arms, had already
occupied the advantageous and well-known post of the River
Sontius, near the ruins of Aquileia, at the head of a powerful
host, whose independent kings or
leaders disdained the duties of subordination and the prudence of
delays. No sooner had Theodoric gained a short repose and
refreshment to his wearied cavalry, than he boldly attacked the
fortifications of the enemy; the Ostrogoths showed more ardor to
acquire, than the mercenaries to defend, the lands of Italy; and
the reward of the first victory was the possession of the
Venetian province as far as the walls of Verona. In the
neighborhood of that city, on the steep banks of the rapid Adige,
he was opposed by a new army, reënforced in its numbers, and
not impaired in its courage: the contest was more obstinate, but
the event was still more decisive; Odoacer fled to Ravenna,
Theodoric advanced to Milan, and the vanquished troops saluted
their conqueror with loud acclamations of respect and fidelity.
But their want either of constancy or of faith soon exposed him
to the most imminent danger; his vanguard, with several Gothic
counts, which had been rashly intrusted to a deserter, was
betrayed and destroyed near Faenza by his double treachery;
Odoacer again appeared master of the field, and the invader,
strongly intrenched in his camp of Pavia, was reduced to solicit
the aid of a kindred nation, the Visigoths of Gaul. In the course
of this History, the most voracious appetite for war will be
abundantly satiated; nor can I much lament that our dark and
imperfect materials do not afford a more ample narrative of the
distress of Italy, and of the fierce conflict, which was finally
decided by the abilities, experience, and valor of the Gothic
king. Immediately before the battle of Verona, he visited the
tent of his mother and sister, and requested, that on a day, the
most illustrious festival of his life, they would adorn him with
the rich garments which they had worked with their own hands.
"Our glory," said he, "is mutual and inseparable. You are known
to the world as the mother of Theodoric; and it becomes me to
prove, that I am the genuine offspring of those heroes from whom
I claim my descent." The wife or concubine of Theodemir was
inspired with the spirit of the German matrons, who esteemed
their sons' honor far above their safety; and it is reported,
that in a desperate action, when Theodoric himself was hurried
along by the torrent of a flying crowd, she boldly met them at
the entrance of the camp, and, by her generous reproaches, drove
them back on the swords of the enemy.
From the Alps to the extremity of Calabria, Theodoric reigned
by the right of conquest; the Vandal ambassadors surrendered the
Island of Sicily, as a lawful appendage of his kingdom; and he
was accepted as the deliverer of Rome by the senate and people,
who had shut their gates against the flying usurper. Ravenna
alone, secure in the fortifications of art and nature, still
sustained a siege of almost three years; and the daring sallies
of Odoacer carried slaughter and dismay into the Gothic camp. At
length, destitute of provisions and hopeless of relief, that
unfortunate monarch yielded to the groans of his subjects and the
clamors of his soldiers. A treaty of peace was negotiated by the
bishop of Ravenna; the Ostrogoths were admitted into the city,
and the hostile kings consented, under the sanction of an oath,
to rule with equal and undivided authority the provinces of
Italy. The event of such an agreement may be easily foreseen.
After some days had been devoted to the semblance of joy and
friendship, Odoacer, in the midst of a solemn banquet, was
stabbed by the hand, or at least by the command, of his rival.
Secret and effectual orders had been previously despatched; the
faithless and rapacious mercenaries, at the same moment, and
without resistance, were universally massacred; and the royalty
of Theodoric was proclaimed by the Goths, with the tardy,
reluctant, ambiguous consent of the emperor of the East. The
design of a conspiracy was imputed, according to the usual forms,
to the prostrate tyrant; but his innocence, and the guilt of his
conqueror, are sufficiently proved by the advantageous treaty
which force would not sincerely have
granted, nor weakness have rashly
infringed. The jealousy of power, and the mischiefs of discord,
may suggest a more decent apology, and a sentence less rigorous
may be pronounced against a crime which was necessary to
introduce into Italy a generation of public felicity. The living
author of this felicity was audaciously praised in his own
presence by sacred and profane orators; but history (in his time
she was mute and inglorious) has not left any just representation
of the events which displayed, or of the defects which clouded,
the virtues of Theodoric. One record of his fame, the volume of
public epistles composed by Cassiodorus in the royal name, is
still extant, and has obtained more implicit credit than it seems
to deserve. They exhibit the forms, rather than the substance, of
his government; and we should vainly search for the pure and
spontaneous sentiments of the Barbarian amidst the declamation
and learning of a sophist, the wishes of a Roman senator, the
precedents of office, and the vague professions, which, in every
court, and on every occasion, compose the language of discreet
ministers. The reputation of Theodoric may repose with more
confidence on the visible peace and prosperity of a reign of
thirty-three years; the unanimous esteem of his own times, and
the memory of his wisdom and courage, his justice and humanity,
which was deeply impressed on the minds of the Goths and
Italians.
The partition of the lands of Italy, of which Theodoric
assigned the third part to his soldiers, is
honorably arraigned as the sole
injustice of his life. * And even this act may be fairly
justified by the example of Odoacer, the rights of conquest, the
true interest of the Italians, and the sacred duty of subsisting
a whole people, who, on the faith of his promises, had
transported themselves into a distant land. Under the reign of
Theodoric, and in the happy climate of Italy, the Goths soon
multiplied to a formidable host of two hundred thousand men, and
the whole amount of their families may be computed by the
ordinary addition of women and children. Their invasion of
property, a part of which must have been already vacant, was
disguised by the generous but improper name of
hospitality; these unwelcome guests
were irregularly dispersed over the face of Italy, and the lot of
each Barbarian was adequate to his birth and office, the number
of his followers, and the rustic wealth which he possessed in
slaves and cattle. The distinction of noble and plebeian were
acknowledged; but the lands of every freeman were exempt from
taxes, * and he enjoyed the inestimable privilege of being
subject only to the laws of his country. Fashion, and even
convenience, soon persuaded the conquerors to assume the more
elegant dress of the natives, but they still persisted in the use
of their mother-tongue; and their contempt for the Latin schools
was applauded by Theodoric himself, who gratified their
prejudices, or his own, by declaring, that the child who had
trembled at a rod, would never dare to look upon a sword.
Distress might sometimes provoke the indigent Roman to assume the
ferocious manners which were insensibly relinquished by the rich
and luxurious Barbarian; but these mutual conversions were not
encouraged by the policy of a monarch who perpetuated the
separation of the Italians and Goths; reserving the former for
the arts of peace, and the latter for the service of war. To
accomplish this design, he studied to protect his industrious
subjects, and to moderate the violence, without enervating the
valor, of his soldiers, who were maintained for the public
defence. They held their lands and benefices as a military
stipend: at the sound of the trumpet, they were prepared to march
under the conduct of their provincial officers; and the whole
extent of Italy was distributed into the several quarters of a
well-regulated camp. The service of the palace and of the
frontiers was performed by choice or by rotation; and each
extraordinary fatigue was recompensed by an increase of pay and
occasional donatives. Theodoric had convinced his brave
companions, that empire must be acquired and defended by the same
arts. After his example, they strove to excel in the use, not
only of the lance and sword, the instruments of their victories,
but of the missile weapons, which they were too much inclined to
neglect; and the lively image of war was displayed in the daily
exercise and annual reviews of the Gothic cavalry. A firm though
gentle discipline imposed the habits of modesty, obedience, and
temperance; and the Goths were instructed to spare the people, to
reverence the laws, to understand the duties of civil society,
and to disclaim the barbarous license of judicial combat and
private revenge.
Chapter XXXIX: Gothic Kingdom Of Italy. -- Part
II.
Among the Barbarians of the West, the victory of Theodoric had
spread a general alarm. But as soon as it appeared that he was
satisfied with conquest and desirous of peace, terror was changed
into respect, and they submitted to a powerful mediation, which
was uniformly employed for the best purposes of reconciling their
quarrels and civilizing their manners. The ambassadors who
resorted to Ravenna from the most distant countries of Europe,
admired his wisdom, magnificence, and courtesy; and if he
sometimes accepted either slaves or arms, white horses or strange
animals, the gift of a sun-dial, a water-clock, or a musician,
admonished even the princes of Gaul of the superior art and
industry of his Italian subjects. His domestic alliances, a wife,
two daughters, a sister, and a niece, united the family of
Theodoric with the kings of the Franks, the Burgundians, the
Visigoths, the Vandals, and the Thuringians, and contributed to
maintain the harmony, or at least the balance, of the great
republic of the West. It is difficult in the dark forests of
Germany and Poland to pursue the emigrations of the Heruli, a
fierce people who disdained the use of armor, and who condemned
their widows and aged parents not to survive the loss of their
husbands, or the decay of their strength. The king of these
savage warriors solicited the friendship of Theodoric, and was
elevated to the rank of his son, according to the barbaric rites
of a military adoption. From the shores of the Baltic, the
Æstians or Livonians laid their offerings of native amber
at the feet of a prince, whose fame had excited them to undertake
an unknown and dangerous journey of fifteen hundred miles. With
the country from whence the Gothic nation derived their origin,
he maintained a frequent and friendly correspondence: the
Italians were clothed in the rich sables of Sweden; and one of
its sovereigns, after a voluntary or reluctant abdication, found
a hospitable retreat in the palace of Ravenna. He had reigned
over one of the thirteen populous tribes who cultivated a small
portion of the great island or peninsula of Scandinavia, to which
the vague appellation of Thule has been sometimes applied. That
northern region was peopled, or had been explored, as high as the
sixty-eighth degree of latitude, where the natives of the polar
circle enjoy and lose the presence of the sun at each summer and
winter solstice during an equal period of forty days. The long
night of his absence or death was the mournful season of distress
and anxiety, till the messengers, who had been sent to the
mountain tops, descried the first rays of returning light, and
proclaimed to the plain below the festival of his
resurrection.
The life of Theodoric represents the rare and meritorious
example of a Barbarian, who sheathed his sword in the pride of
victory and the vigor of his age. A reign of three and thirty
years was consecrated to the duties of civil government, and the
hostilities, in which he was sometimes involved, were speedily
terminated by the conduct of his lieutenants, the discipline of
his troops, the arms of his allies, and even by the terror of his
name. He reduced, under a strong and regular government, the
unprofitable countries of Rhætia, Noricum, Dalmatia, and
Pannonia, from the source of the Danube and the territory of the
Bavarians, to the petty kingdom erected by the Gepidæ on
the ruins of Sirmium. His prudence could not safely intrust the
bulwark of Italy to such feeble and turbulent neighbors; and his
justice might claim the lands which they oppressed, either as a
part of his kingdom, or as the inheritance of his father. The
greatness of a servant, who was named perfidious because he was
successful, awakened the jealousy of the emperor Anastasius; and
a war was kindled on the Dacian frontier, by the protection which
the Gothic king, in the vicissitude of human affairs, had granted
to one of the descendants of Attila. Sabinian, a general
illustrious by his own and father's merit, advanced at the head
of ten thousand Romans; and the provisions and arms, which filled
a long train of wagons, were distributed to the fiercest of the
Bulgarian tribes. But in the fields of Margus, the eastern powers
were defeated by the inferior forces of the Goths and Huns; the
flower and even the hope of the Roman armies was irretrievably
destroyed; and such was the temperance with which Theodoric had
inspired his victorious troops, that, as their leader had not
given the signal of pillage, the rich spoils of the enemy lay
untouched at their feet. Exasperated by this disgrace, the
Byzantine court despatched two hundred ships and eight thousand
men to plunder the sea-coast of Calabria and Apulia: they
assaulted the ancient city of Tarentum, interrupted the trade and
agriculture of a happy country, and sailed back to the
Hellespont, proud of their piratical victory over a people whom
they still presumed to consider as their
Roman brethren. Their retreat was
possibly hastened by the activity of Theodoric; Italy was covered
by a fleet of a thousand light vessels, which he constructed with
incredible despatch; and his firm moderation was soon rewarded by
a solid and honorable peace. He maintained, with a powerful hand,
the balance of the West, till it was at length overthrown by the
ambition of Clovis; and although unable to assist his rash and
unfortunate kinsman, the king of the Visigoths, he saved the
remains of his family and people, and checked the Franks in the
midst of their victorious career. I am not desirous to prolong or
repeat this narrative of military events, the least interesting
of the reign of Theodoric; and shall be content to add, that the
Alemanni were protected, that an inroad of the Burgundians was
severely chastised, and that the conquest of Arles and Marseilles
opened a free communication with the Visigoths, who revered him
as their national protector, and as the guardian of his
grandchild, the infant son of Alaric. Under this respectable
character, the king of Italy restored the prætorian
præfecture of the Gauls, reformed some abuses in the civil
government of Spain, and accepted the annual tribute and apparent
submission of its military governor, who wisely refused to trust
his person in the palace of Ravenna. The Gothic sovereignty was
established from Sicily to the Danube, from Sirmium or Belgrade
to the Atlantic Ocean; and the Greeks themselves have
acknowledged that Theodoric reigned over the fairest portion of
the Western empire.
The union of the Goths and Romans might have fixed for ages
the transient happiness of Italy; and the first of nations, a new
people of free subjects and enlightened soldiers, might have
gradually arisen from the mutual emulation of their respective
virtues. But the sublime merit of guiding or seconding such a
revolution was not reserved for the reign of Theodoric: he wanted
either the genius or the opportunities of a legislator; and while
he indulged the Goths in the enjoyment of rude liberty, he
servilely copied the institutions, and even the abuses, of the
political system which had been framed by Constantine and his
successors. From a tender regard to the expiring prejudices of
Rome, the Barbarian declined the name, the purple, and the
diadem, of the emperors; but he assumed, under the hereditary
title of king, the whole substance and plenitude of Imperial
prerogative. His addresses to the eastern throne were respectful
and ambiguous: he celebrated, in pompous style, the harmony of
the two republics, applauded his own government as the perfect
similitude of a sole and undivided empire, and claimed above the
kings of the earth the same preeminence which he modestly allowed
to the person or rank of Anastasius. The alliance of the East and
West was annually declared by the unanimous choice of two
consuls; but it should seem that the Italian candidate who was
named by Theodoric accepted a formal confirmation from the
sovereign of Constantinople. The Gothic palace of Ravenna
reflected the image of the court of Theodosius or Valentinian.
The Prætorian præfect, the præfect of Rome, the
quæstor, the master of the offices, with the public and
patrimonial treasurers, * whose functions are painted in gaudy
colors by the rhetoric of Cassiodorus, still continued to act as
the ministers of state. And the subordinate care of justice and
the revenue was delegated to seven consulars, three correctors,
and five presidents, who governed the fifteen
regions of Italy according to the
principles, and even the forms, of Roman jurisprudence. The
violence of the conquerors was abated or eluded by the slow
artifice of judicial proceedings; the civil administration, with
its honors and emoluments, was confined to the Italians; and the
people still preserved their dress and language, their laws and
customs, their personal freedom, and two thirds of their landed
property. It had been the object of Augustus to conceal the
introduction of monarchy; it was the policy of Theodoric to
disguise the reign of a Barbarian. If his subjects were sometimes
awakened from this pleasing vision of a Roman government, they
derived more substantial comfort from the character of a Gothic
prince, who had penetration to discern, and firmness to pursue,
his own and the public interest. Theodoric loved the virtues
which he possessed, and the talents of which he was destitute.
Liberius was promoted to the office of Prætorian
præfect for his unshaken fidelity to the unfortunate cause
of Odoacer. The ministers of Theodoric, Cassiodorus, and
Boethius, have reflected on his reign the lustre of their genius
and learning. More prudent or more fortunate than his colleague,
Cassiodorus preserved his own esteem without forfeiting the royal
favor; and after passing thirty years in the honors of the world,
he was blessed with an equal term of repose in the devout and
studious solitude of Squillace. *
As the patron of the republic, it was the interest and duty of
the Gothic king to cultivate the affections of the senate and
people. The nobles of Rome were flattered by sonorous epithets
and formal professions of respect, which had been more justly
applied to the merit and authority of their ancestors. The people
enjoyed, without fear or danger, the three blessings of a
capital, order, plenty, and public amusements. A visible
diminution of their numbers may be found even in the measure of
liberality; yet Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily, poured their
tribute of corn into the granaries of Rome an allowance of bread
and meat was distributed to the indigent citizens; and every
office was deemed honorable which was consecrated to the care of
their health and happiness. The public games, such as the Greek
ambassador might politely applaud, exhibited a faint and feeble
copy of the magnificence of the Cæsars: yet the musical,
the gymnastic, and the pantomime arts, had not totally sunk in
oblivion; the wild beasts of Africa still exercised in the
amphitheatre the courage and dexterity of the hunters; and the
indulgent Goth either patiently tolerated or gently restrained
the blue and green factions, whose contests so often filled the
circus with clamor and even with blood. In the seventh year of
his peaceful reign, Theodoric visited the old capital of the
world; the senate and people advanced in solemn procession to
salute a second Trajan, a new Valentinian; and he nobly supported
that character by the assurance of a just and legal government,
in a discourse which he was not afraid to pronounce in public,
and to inscribe on a tablet of brass. Rome, in this august
ceremony, shot a last ray of declining glory; and a saint, the
spectator of this pompous scene, could only hope, in his pious
fancy, that it was excelled by the celestial splendor of the new
Jerusalem. During a residence of six months, the fame, the
person, and the courteous demeanor of the Gothic king, excited
the admiration of the Romans, and he contemplated, with equal
curiosity and surprise, the monuments that remained of their
ancient greatness. He imprinted the footsteps of a conqueror on
the Capitoline hill, and frankly confessed that each day he
viewed with fresh wonder the forum of Trajan and his lofty
column. The theatre of Pompey appeared, even in its decay, as a
huge mountain artificially hollowed, and polished, and adorned by
human industry; and he vaguely computed, that a river of gold
must have been drained to erect the colossal amphitheatre of
Titus. From the mouths of fourteen aqueducts, a pure and copious
stream was diffused into every part of the city; among these the
Claudian water, which arose at the distance of thirty-eight miles
in the Sabine mountains, was conveyed along a gentle though
constant declivity of solid arches, till it descended on the
summit of the Aventine hill. The long and spacious vaults which
had been constructed for the purpose of common sewers, subsisted,
after twelve centuries, in their pristine strength; and these
subterraneous channels have been preferred to all the visible
wonders of Rome. The Gothic kings, so injuriously accused of the
ruin of antiquity, were anxious to preserve the monuments of the
nation whom they had subdued. The royal edicts were framed to
prevent the abuses, the neglect, or the depredations of the
citizens themselves; and a professed architect, the annual sum of
two hundred pounds of gold, twenty-five thousand tiles, and the
receipt of customs from the Lucrine port, were assigned for the
ordinary repairs of the walls and public edifices. A similar care
was extended to the statues of metal or marble of men or animals.
The spirit of the horses, which have given a modern name to the
Quirinal, was applauded by the Barbarians; the brazen elephants
of the Via sacra were diligently
restored; the famous heifer of Myron deceived the cattle, as they
were driven through the forum of peace; and an officer was
created to protect those works of rat, which Theodoric considered
as the noblest ornament of his kingdom.
Chapter XXXIX: Gothic Kingdom Of Italy. -- Part
III.
After the example of the last emperors, Theodoric preferred
the residence of Ravenna, where he cultivated an orchard with his
own hands. As often as the peace of his kingdom was threatened
(for it was never invaded) by the Barbarians, he removed his
court to Verona on the northern frontier, and the image of his
palace, still extant on a coin, represents the oldest and most
authentic model of Gothic architecture. These two capitals, as
well as Pavia, Spoleto, Naples, and the rest of the Italian
cities, acquired under his reign the useful or splendid
decorations of churches, aqueducts, baths, porticos, and palaces.
But the happiness of the subject was more truly conspicuous in
the busy scene of labor and luxury, in the rapid increase and
bold enjoyment of national wealth. From the shades of Tibur and
Præneste, the Roman senators still retired in the winter
season to the warm sun, and salubrious springs of Baiæ; and
their villas, which advanced on solid moles into the Bay of
Naples, commanded the various prospect of the sky, the earth, and
the water. On the eastern side of the Adriatic, a new Campania
was formed in the fair and fruitful province of Istria, which
communicated with the palace of Ravenna by an easy navigation of
one hundred miles. The rich productions of Lucania and the
adjacent provinces were exchanged at the Marcilian fountain, in a
populous fair annually dedicated to trade, intemperance, and
superstition. In the solitude of Comum, which had once been
animated by the mild genius of Pliny, a transparent basin above
sixty miles in length still reflected the rural seats which
encompassed the margin of the Larian lake; and the gradual ascent
of the hills was covered by a triple plantation of olives, of
vines, and of chestnut trees. Agriculture revived under the
shadow of peace, and the number of husbandmen was multiplied by
the redemption of captives. The iron mines of Dalmatia, a gold
mine in Bruttium, were carefully explored, and the Pomptine
marshes, as well as those of Spoleto, were drained and cultivated
by private undertakers, whose distant reward must depend on the
continuance of the public prosperity. Whenever the seasons were
less propitious, the doubtful precautions of forming magazines of
corn, fixing the price, and prohibiting the exportation, attested
at least the benevolence of the state; but such was the
extraordinary plenty which an industrious people produced from a
grateful soil, that a gallon of wine was sometimes sold in Italy
for less than three farthings, and a quarter of wheat at about
five shillings and sixpence. A country possessed of so many
valuable objects of exchange soon attracted the merchants of the
world, whose beneficial traffic was encouraged and protected by
the liberal spirit of Theodoric. The free intercourse of the
provinces by land and water was restored and extended; the city
gates were never shut either by day or by night; and the common
saying, that a purse of gold might be safely left in the fields,
was expressive of the conscious security of the inhabitants.
A difference of religion is always pernicious, and often
fatal, to the harmony of the prince and people: the Gothic
conqueror had been educated in the profession of Arianism, and
Italy was devoutly attached to the Nicene faith. But the
persuasion of Theodoric was not infected by zeal; and he piously
adhered to the heresy of his fathers, without condescending to
balance the subtile arguments of theological metaphysics.
Satisfied with the private toleration of his Arian sectaries, he
justly conceived himself to be the guardian of the public
worship, and his external reverence for a superstition which he
despised, may have nourished in his mind the salutary
indifference of a statesman or philosopher. The Catholics of his
dominions acknowledged, perhaps with reluctance, the peace of the
church; their clergy, according to the degrees of rank or merit,
were honorably entertained in the palace of Theodoric; he
esteemed the living sanctity of Cæsarius and Epiphanius,
the orthodox bishops of Arles and Pavia; and presented a decent
offering on the tomb of St. Peter, without any scrupulous inquiry
into the creed of the apostle. His favorite Goths, and even his
mother, were permitted to retain or embrace the Athanasian faith,
and his long reign could not afford the example of an Italian
Catholic, who, either from choice or compulsion, had deviated
into the religion of the conqueror. The people, and the
Barbarians themselves, were edified by the pomp and order of
religious worship; the magistrates were instructed to defend the
just immunities of ecclesiastical persons and possessions; the
bishops held their synods, the metropolitans exercised their
jurisdiction, and the privileges of sanctuary were maintained or
moderated according to the spirit of the Roman jurisprudence.
With the protection, Theodoric assumed the legal supremacy, of
the church; and his firm administration restored or extended some
useful prerogatives which had been neglected by the feeble
emperors of the West. He was not ignorant of the dignity and
importance of the Roman pontiff, to whom the venerable name of
Pope was now appropriated. The peace or the revolt of Italy might
depend on the character of a wealthy and popular bishop, who
claimed such ample dominion both in heaven and earth; who had
been declared in a numerous synod to be pure from all sin, and
exempt from all judgment. When the chair of St. Peter was
disputed by Symmachus and Laurence, they appeared at his summons
before the tribunal of an Arian monarch, and he confirmed the
election of the most worthy or the most obsequious candidate. At
the end of his life, in a moment of jealousy and resentment, he
prevented the choice of the Romans, by nominating a pope in the
palace of Ravenna. The danger and furious contests of a schism
were mildly restrained, and the last decree of the senate was
enacted to extinguish, if it were possible, the scandalous
venality of the papal elections.
I have descanted with pleasure on the fortunate condition of
Italy; but our fancy must not hastily conceive that the golden
age of the poets, a race of men without vice or misery, was
realized under the Gothic conquest. The fair prospect was
sometimes overcast with clouds; the wisdom of Theodoric might be
deceived, his power might be resisted and the declining age of
the monarch was sullied with popular hatred and patrician blood.
In the first insolence of victory, he had been tempted to deprive
the whole party of Odoacer of the civil and even the natural
rights of society; a tax unseasonably imposed after the
calamities of war, would have crushed the rising agriculture of
Liguria; a rigid preemption of corn, which was intended for the
public relief, must have aggravated the distress of Campania.
These dangerous projects were defeated by the virtue and
eloquence of Epiphanius and Boethius, who, in the presence of
Theodoric himself, successfully pleaded the cause of the people:
but if the royal ear was open to the voice of truth, a saint and
a philosopher are not always to be found at the ear of kings. The
privileges of rank, or office, or favor, were too frequently
abused by Italian fraud and Gothic violence, and the avarice of
the king's nephew was publicly exposed, at first by the
usurpation, and afterwards by the restitution of the estates
which he had unjustly extorted from his Tuscan neighbors. Two
hundred thousand Barbarians, formidable even to their master,
were seated in the heart of Italy; they indignantly supported the
restraints of peace and discipline; the disorders of their march
were always felt and sometimes compensated; and where it was
dangerous to punish, it might be prudent to dissemble, the
sallies of their native fierceness. When the indulgence of
Theodoric had remitted two thirds of the Ligurian tribute, he
condescended to explain the difficulties of his situation, and to
lament the heavy though inevitable burdens which he imposed on
his subjects for their own defence. These ungrateful subjects
could never be cordially reconciled to the origin, the religion,
or even the virtues of the Gothic conqueror; past calamities were
forgotten, and the sense or suspicion of injuries was rendered
still more exquisite by the present felicity of the times.
Even the religious toleration which Theodoric had the glory of
introducing into the Christian world, was painful and offensive
to the orthodox zeal of the Italians. They respected the armed
heresy of the Goths; but their pious rage was safely pointed
against the rich and defenceless Jews, who had formed their
establishments at Naples, Rome, Ravenna, Milan, and Genoa, for
the benefit of trade, and under the sanction of the laws. Their
persons were insulted, their effects were pillaged, and their
synagogues were burned by the mad populace of Ravenna and Rome,
inflamed, as it should seem, by the most frivolous or extravagant
pretences. The government which could neglect, would have
deserved such an outrage. A legal inquiry was instantly directed;
and as the authors of the tumult had escaped in the crowd, the
whole community was condemned to repair the damage; and the
obstinate bigots, who refused their contributions, were whipped
through the streets by the hand of the executioner. * This simple
act of justice exasperated the discontent of the Catholics, who
applauded the merit and patience of these holy confessors. Three
hundred pulpits deplored the persecution of the church; and if
the chapel of St. Stephen at Verona was demolished by the command
of Theodoric, it is probable that some miracle hostile to his
name and dignity had been performed on that sacred theatre. At
the close of a glorious life, the king of Italy discovered that
he had excited the hatred of a people whose happiness he had so
assiduously labored to promote; and his mind was soured by
indignation, jealousy, and the bitterness of unrequited love. The
Gothic conqueror condescended to disarm the unwarlike natives of
Italy, interdicting all weapons of offence, and excepting only a
small knife for domestic use. The deliverer of Rome was accused
of conspiring with the vilest informers against the lives of
senators whom he suspected of a secret and treasonable
correspondence with the Byzantine court. After the death of
Anastasius, the diadem had been placed on the head of a feeble
old man; but the powers of government were assumed by his nephew
Justinian, who already meditated the extirpation of heresy, and
the conquest of Italy and Africa. A rigorous law, which was
published at Constantinople, to reduce the Arians by the dread of
punishment within the pale of the church, awakened the just
resentment of Theodoric, who claimed for his distressed brethren
of the East the same indulgence which he had so long granted to
the Catholics of his dominions. At his stern command, the Roman
pontiff, with four illustrious
senators, embarked on an embassy, of which he must have alike
dreaded the failure or the success. The singular veneration shown
to the first pope who had visited Constantinople was punished as
a crime by his jealous monarch; the artful or peremptory refusal
of the Byzantine court might excuse an equal, and would provoke a
larger, measure of retaliation; and a mandate was prepared in
Italy, to prohibit, after a stated day, the exercise of the
Catholic worship. By the bigotry of his subjects and enemies, the
most tolerant of princes was driven to the brink of persecution;
and the life of Theodoric was too long, since he lived to condemn
the virtue of Boethius and Symmachus.
The senator Boethius is the last of the Romans whom Cato or
Tully could have acknowledged for their countryman. As a wealthy
orphan, he inherited the patrimony and honors of the Anician
family, a name ambitiously assumed by the kings and emperors of
the age; and the appellation of Manlius asserted his genuine or
fabulous descent from a race of consuls and dictators, who had
repulsed the Gauls from the Capitol, and sacrificed their sons to
the discipline of the republic. In the youth of Boethius the
studies of Rome were not totally abandoned; a Virgil is now
extant, corrected by the hand of a consul; and the professors of
grammar, rhetoric, and jurisprudence, were maintained in their
privileges and pensions by the liberality of the Goths. But the
erudition of the Latin language was insufficient to satiate his
ardent curiosity: and Boethius is said to have employed eighteen
laborious years in the schools of Athens, which were supported by
the zeal, the learning, and the diligence of Proclus and his
disciples. The reason and piety of their Roman pupil were
fortunately saved from the contagion of mystery and magic, which
polluted the groves of the academy; but he imbibed the spirit,
and imitated the method, of his dead and living masters, who
attempted to reconcile the strong and subtile sense of Aristotle
with the devout contemplation and sublime fancy of Plato. After
his return to Rome, and his marriage with the daughter of his
friend, the patrician Symmachus, Boethius still continued, in a
palace of ivory and marble, to prosecute the same studies. The
church was edified by his profound defence of the orthodox creed
against the Arian, the Eutychian, and the Nestorian heresies; and
the Catholic unity was explained or exposed in a formal treatise
by the indifference of three distinct
though consubstantial persons. For the benefit of his Latin
readers, his genius submitted to teach the first elements of the
arts and sciences of Greece. The geometry of Euclid, the music of
Pythagoras, the arithmetic of Nicomachus, the mechanics of
Archimedes, the astronomy of Ptolemy, the theology of Plato, and
the logic of Aristotle, with the commentary of Porphyry, were
translated and illustrated by the indefatigable pen of the Roman
senator. And he alone was esteemed capable of describing the
wonders of art, a sun-dial, a water-clock, or a sphere which
represented the motions of the planets. From these abstruse
speculations, Boethius stooped, or, to speak more truly, he rose
to the social duties of public and private life: the indigent
were relieved by his liberality; and his eloquence, which
flattery might compare to the voice of Demosthenes or Cicero, was
uniformly exerted in the cause of innocence and humanity. Such
conspicuous merit was felt and rewarded by a discerning prince:
the dignity of Boethius was adorned with the titles of consul and
patrician, and his talents were usefully employed in the
important station of master of the offices. Notwithstanding the
equal claims of the East and West, his two sons were created, in
their tender youth, the consuls of the same year. On the
memorable day of their inauguration, they proceeded in solemn
pomp from their palace to the forum amidst the applause of the
senate and people; and their joyful father, the true consul of
Rome, after pronouncing an oration in the praise of his royal
benefactor, distributed a triumphal largess in the games of the
circus. Prosperous in his fame and fortunes, in his public honors
and private alliances, in the cultivation of science and the
consciousness of virtue, Boethius might have been styled happy,
if that precarious epithet could be safely applied before the
last term of the life of man.
A philosopher, liberal of his wealth and parsimonious of his
time, might be insensible to the common allurements of ambition,
the thirst of gold and employment. And some credit may be due to
the asseveration of Boethius, that he had reluctantly obeyed the
divine Plato, who enjoins every virtuous citizen to rescue the
state from the usurpation of vice and ignorance. For the
integrity of his public conduct he appeals to the memory of his
country. His authority had restrained the pride and oppression of
the royal officers, and his eloquence had delivered Paulianus
from the dogs of the palace. He had always pitied, and often
relieved, the distress of the provincials, whose fortunes were
exhausted by public and private rapine; and Boethius alone had
courage to oppose the tyranny of the Barbarians, elated by
conquest, excited by avarice, and, as he complains, encouraged by
impunity. In these honorable contests his spirit soared above the
consideration of danger, and perhaps of prudence; and we may
learn from the example of Cato, that a character of pure and
inflexible virtue is the most apt to be misled by prejudice, to
be heated by enthusiasm, and to confound private enmities with
public justice. The disciple of Plato might exaggerate the
infirmities of nature, and the imperfections of society; and the
mildest form of a Gothic kingdom, even the weight of allegiance
and gratitude, must be insupportable to the free spirit of a
Roman patriot. But the favor and fidelity of Boethius declined in
just proportion with the public happiness; and an unworthy
colleague was imposed to divide and control the power of the
master of the offices. In the last gloomy season of Theodoric, he
indignantly felt that he was a slave; but as his master had only
power over his life, he stood without arms and without fear
against the face of an angry Barbarian, who had been provoked to
believe that the safety of the senate was incompatible with his
own. The senator Albinus was accused and already convicted on the
presumption of hoping, as it was said,
the liberty of Rome. "If Albinus be criminal," exclaimed the
orator, "the senate and myself are all guilty of the same crime.
If we are innocent, Albinus is equally entitled to the protection
of the laws." These laws might not have punished the simple and
barren wish of an unattainable blessing; but they would have
shown less indulgence to the rash confession of Boethius, that,
had he known of a conspiracy, the tyrant never should. The
advocate of Albinus was soon involved in the danger and perhaps
the guilt of his client; their signature (which they denied as a
forgery) was affixed to the original address, inviting the
emperor to deliver Italy from the Goths; and three witnesses of
honorable rank, perhaps of infamous reputation, attested the
treasonable designs of the Roman patrician. Yet his innocence
must be presumed, since he was deprived by Theodoric of the means
of justification, and rigorously confined in the tower of Pavia,
while the senate, at the distance of five hundred miles,
pronounced a sentence of confiscation and death against the most
illustrious of its members. At the command of the Barbarians, the
occult science of a philosopher was stigmatized with the names of
sacrilege and magic. A devout and dutiful attachment to the
senate was condemned as criminal by the trembling voices of the
senators themselves; and their ingratitude deserved the wish or
prediction of Boethius, that, after him, none should be found
guilty of the same offence.
While Boethius, oppressed with fetters, expected each moment
the sentence or the stroke of death, he composed, in the tower of
Pavia, the Consolation of Philosophy; a
golden volume not unworthy of the leisure of Plato or Tully, but
which claims incomparable merit from the barbarism of the times
and the situation of the author. The celestial guide, whom he had
so long invoked at Rome and Athens, now condescended to illumine
his dungeon, to revive his courage, and to pour into his wounds
her salutary balm. She taught him to compare his long prosperity
and his recent distress, and to conceive new hopes from the
inconstancy of fortune. Reason had informed him of the precarious
condition of her gifts; experience had satisfied him of their
real value; he had enjoyed them without guilt; he might resign
them without a sigh, and calmly disdain the impotent malice of
his enemies, who had left him happiness, since they had left him
virtue. From the earth, Boethius ascended to heaven in search of
the Supreme Good; explored the metaphysical labyrinth of chance
and destiny, of prescience and free will, of time and eternity;
and generously attempted to reconcile the perfect attributes of
the Deity with the apparent disorders of his moral and physical
government. Such topics of consolation so obvious, so vague, or
so abstruse, are ineffectual to subdue the feelings of human
nature. Yet the sense of misfortune may be diverted by the labor
of thought; and the sage who could artfully combine in the same
work the various riches of philosophy, poetry, and eloquence,
must already have possessed the intrepid calmness which he
affected to seek. Suspense, the worst of evils, was at length
determined by the ministers of death, who executed, and perhaps
exceeded, the inhuman mandate of Theodoric. A strong cord was
fastened round the head of Boethius, and forcibly tightened, till
his eyes almost started from their sockets; and some mercy may be
discovered in the milder torture of beating him with clubs till
he expired. But his genius survived to diffuse a ray of knowledge
over the darkest ages of the Latin world; the writings of the
philosopher were translated by the most glorious of the English
kings, and the third emperor of the name of Otho removed to a
more honorable tomb the bones of a Catholic saint, who, from his
Arian persecutors, had acquired the honors of martyrdom, and the
fame of miracles. In the last hours of Boethius, he derived some
comfort from the safety of his two sons, of his wife, and of his
father-in-law, the venerable Symmachus. But the grief of
Symmachus was indiscreet, and perhaps disrespectful: he had
presumed to lament, he might dare to revenge, the death of an
injured friend. He was dragged in chains from Rome to the palace
of Ravenna; and the suspicions of Theodoric could only be
appeased by the blood of an innocent and aged senator.
Humanity will be disposed to encourage any report which
testifies the jurisdiction of conscience and the remorse of
kings; and philosophy is not ignorant that the most horrid
spectres are sometimes created by the powers of a disordered
fancy, and the weakness of a distempered body. After a life of
virtue and glory, Theodoric was now descending with shame and
guilt into the grave; his mind was humbled by the contrast of the
past, and justly alarmed by the invisible terrors of futurity.
One evening, as it is related, when the head of a large fish was
served on the royal table, he suddenly exclaimed, that he beheld
the angry countenance of Symmachus, his eyes glaring fury and
revenge, and his mouth armed with long sharp teeth, which
threatened to devour him. The monarch instantly retired to his
chamber, and, as he lay, trembling with aguish cold, under a
weight of bed-clothes, he expressed, in broken murmurs to his
physician Elpidius, his deep repentance for the murders of
Boethius and Symmachus. His malady increased, and after a
dysentery which continued three days, he expired in the palace of
Ravenna, in the thirty-third, or, if we compute from the invasion
of Italy, in the thirty-seventh year of his reign. Conscious of
his approaching end, he divided his treasures and provinces
between his two grandsons, and fixed the Rhone as their common
boundary. Amalaric was restored to the throne of Spain. Italy,
with all the conquests of the Ostrogoths, was bequeathed to
Athalaric; whose age did not exceed ten years, but who was
cherished as the last male offspring of the line of Amali, by the
short-lived marriage of his mother Amalasuntha with a royal
fugitive of the same blood. In the presence of the dying monarch,
the Gothic chiefs and Italian magistrates mutually engaged their
faith and loyalty to the young prince, and to his guardian
mother; and received, in the same awful moment, his last salutary
advice, to maintain the laws, to love the senate and people of
Rome, and to cultivate with decent reverence the friendship of
the emperor. The monument of Theodoric was erected by his
daughter Amalasuntha, in a conspicuous situation, which commanded
the city of Ravenna, the harbor, and the adjacent coast. A chapel
of a circular form, thirty feet in diameter, is crowned by a dome
of one entire piece of granite: from the centre of the dome four
columns arose, which supported, in a vase of porphyry, the
remains of the Gothic king, surrounded by the brazen statues of
the twelve apostles. His spirit, after some previous expiation,
might have been permitted to mingle with the benefactors of
mankind, if an Italian hermit had not been witness, in a vision,
to the damnation of Theodoric, whose soul was plunged, by the
ministers of divine vengeance, into the volcano of Lipari, one of
the flaming mouths of the infernal world.
Chapter XL: Reign Of Justinian.
Part I.
Elevation Of Justin The Elder. -- Reign Of Justinian. -- I.
The Empress Theodora. -- II. Factions Of The Circus, And Sedition
Of Constantinople. -- III. Trade And Manufacture Of Silk. -- IV.
Finances And Taxes. -- V. Edifices Of Justinian. -- Church Of St.
Sophia. -- Fortifications And Frontiers Of The Eastern Empire. --
Abolition Of The Schools Of Athens, And The Consulship Of
Rome.
The emperor Justinian was born near the ruins of Sardica, (the
modern Sophia,) of an obscure race of Barbarians, the inhabitants
of a wild and desolate country, to which the names of Dardania,
of Dacia, and of Bulgaria, have been successively applied. His
elevation was prepared by the adventurous spirit of his uncle
Justin, who, with two other peasants of the same village,
deserted, for the profession of arms, the more useful employment
of husbandmen or shepherds. On foot, with a scanty provision of
biscuit in their knapsacks, the three youths followed the high
road of Constantinople, and were soon enrolled, for their
strength and stature, among the guards of the emperor Leo. Under
the two succeeding reigns, the fortunate peasant emerged to
wealth and honors; and his escape from some dangers which
threatened his life was afterwards ascribed to the guardian angel
who watches over the fate of kings. His long and laudable service
in the Isaurian and Persian wars would not have preserved from
oblivion the name of Justin; yet they might warrant the military
promotion, which in the course of fifty years he gradually
obtained; the rank of tribune, of count, and of general; the
dignity of senator, and the command of the guards, who obeyed him
as their chief, at the important crisis when the emperor
Anastasius was removed from the world. The powerful kinsmen whom
he had raised and enriched were excluded from the throne; and the
eunuch Amantius, who reigned in the palace, had secretly resolved
to fix the diadem on the head of the most obsequious of his
creatures. A liberal donative, to conciliate the suffrage of the
guards, was intrusted for that purpose in the hands of their
commander. But these weighty arguments were treacherously
employed by Justin in his own favor; and as no competitor
presumed to appear, the Dacian peasant was invested with the
purple by the unanimous consent of the soldiers, who knew him to
be brave and gentle, of the clergy and people, who believed him
to be orthodox, and of the provincials, who yielded a blind and
implicit submission to the will of the capital. The elder Justin,
as he is distinguished from another emperor of the same family
and name, ascended the Byzantine throne at the age of sixty-eight
years; and, had he been left to his own guidance, every moment of
a nine years' reign must have exposed to his subjects the
impropriety of their choice. His ignorance was similar to that of
Theodoric; and it is remarkable that in an age not destitute of
learning, two contemporary monarchs had never been instructed in
the knowledge of the alphabet. * But the genius of Justin was far
inferior to that of the Gothic king: the experience of a soldier
had not qualified him for the government of an empire; and though
personally brave, the consciousness of his own weakness was
naturally attended with doubt, distrust, and political
apprehension. But the official business of the state was
diligently and faithfully transacted by the quæstor
Proclus; and the aged emperor adopted the talents and ambition of
his nephew Justinian, an aspiring youth, whom his uncle had drawn
from the rustic solitude of Dacia, and educated at
Constantinople, as the heir of his private fortune, and at length
of the Eastern empire.
Since the eunuch Amantius had been defrauded of his money, it
became necessary to deprive him of his life. The task was easily
accomplished by the charge of a real or fictitious conspiracy;
and the judges were informed, as an accumulation of guilt, that
he was secretly addicted to the Manichæan heresy. Amantius
lost his head; three of his companions, the first domestics of
the palace, were punished either with death or exile; and their
unfortunate candidate for the purple was cast into a deep
dungeon, overwhelmed with stones, and ignominiously thrown,
without burial, into the sea. The ruin of Vitalian was a work of
more difficulty and danger. That Gothic chief had rendered
himself popular by the civil war which he boldly waged against
Anastasius for the defence of the orthodox faith, and after the
conclusion of an advantageous treaty, he still remained in the
neighborhood of Constantinople at the head of a formidable and
victorious army of Barbarians. By the frail security of oaths, he
was tempted to relinquish this advantageous situation, and to
trust his person within the walls of a city, whose inhabitants,
particularly the blue faction, were
artfully incensed against him by the remembrance even of his
pious hostilities. The emperor and his nephew embraced him as the
faithful and worthy champion of the church and state; and
gratefully adorned their favorite with the titles of consul and
general; but in the seventh month of his consulship, Vitalian was
stabbed with seventeen wounds at the royal banquet; and
Justinian, who inherited the spoil, was accused as the assassin
of a spiritual brother, to whom he had recently pledged his faith
in the participation of the Christian mysteries. After the fall
of his rival, he was promoted, without any claim of military
service, to the office of master-general of the Eastern armies,
whom it was his duty to lead into the field against the public
enemy. But, in the pursuit of fame, Justinian might have lost his
present dominion over the age and weakness of his uncle; and
instead of acquiring by Scythian or Persian trophies the applause
of his countrymen, the prudent warrior solicited their favor in
the churches, the circus, and the senate, of Constantinople. The
Catholics were attached to the nephew of Justin, who, between the
Nestorian and Eutychian heresies, trod the narrow path of
inflexible and intolerant orthodoxy. In the first days of the new
reign, he prompted and gratified the popular enthusiasm against
the memory of the deceased emperor. After a schism of thirty-four
years, he reconciled the proud and angry spirit of the Roman
pontiff, and spread among the Latins a favorable report of his
pious respect for the apostolic see. The thrones of the East were
filled with Catholic bishops, devoted to his interest, the clergy
and the monks were gained by his liberality, and the people were
taught to pray for their future sovereign, the hope and pillar of
the true religion. The magnificence of Justinian was displayed in
the superior pomp of his public spectacles, an object not less
sacred and important in the eyes of the multitude than the creed
of Nice or Chalcedon: the expense of his consulship was esteemed
at two hundred and twenty-eight thousand pieces of gold; twenty
lions, and thirty leopards, were produced at the same time in the
amphitheatre, and a numerous train of horses, with their rich
trappings, was bestowed as an extraordinary gift on the
victorious charioteers of the circus. While he indulged the
people of Constantinople, and received the addresses of foreign
kings, the nephew of Justin assiduously cultivated the friendship
of the senate. That venerable name seemed to qualify its members
to declare the sense of the nation, and to regulate the
succession of the Imperial throne: the feeble Anastasius had
permitted the vigor of government to degenerate into the form or
substance of an aristocracy; and the military officers who had
obtained the senatorial rank were followed by their domestic
guards, a band of veterans, whose arms or acclamations might fix
in a tumultuous moment the diadem of the East. The treasures of
the state were lavished to procure the voices of the senators,
and their unanimous wish, that he would be pleased to adopt
Justinian for his colleague, was communicated to the emperor. But
this request, which too clearly admonished him of his approaching
end, was unwelcome to the jealous temper of an aged monarch,
desirous to retain the power which he was incapable of
exercising; and Justin, holding his purple with both his hands,
advised them to prefer, since an election was so profitable, some
older candidate. Not withstanding this reproach, the senate
proceeded to decorate Justinian with the royal epithet of
nobilissimus; and their decree was
ratified by the affection or the fears of his uncle. After some
time the languor of mind and body, to which he was reduced by an
incurable wound in his thigh, indispensably required the aid of a
guardian. He summoned the patriarch and senators; and in their
presence solemnly placed the diadem on the head of his nephew,
who was conducted from the palace to the circus, and saluted by
the loud and joyful applause of the people. The life of Justin
was prolonged about four months; but from the instant of this
ceremony, he was considered as dead to the empire, which
acknowledged Justinian, in the forty-fifth year of his age, for
the lawful sovereign of the East.
From his elevation to his death, Justinian governed the Roman
empire thirty-eight years, seven months, and thirteen days. The
events of his reign, which excite our curious attention by their
number, variety, and importance, are diligently related by the
secretary of Belisarius, a rhetorician, whom eloquence had
promoted to the rank of senator and præfect of
Constantinople. According to the vicissitudes of courage or
servitude, of favor or disgrace, Procopius successively composed
the history, the
panegyric, and the
satire of his own times. The eight
books of the Persian, Vandalic, and Gothic wars, which are
continued in the five books of Agathias, deserve our esteem as a
laborious and successful imitation of the Attic, or at least of
the Asiatic, writers of ancient Greece. His facts are collected
from the personal experience and free conversation of a soldier,
a statesman, and a traveller; his style continually aspires, and
often attains, to the merit of strength and elegance; his
reflections, more especially in the speeches, which he too
frequently inserts, contain a rich fund of political knowledge;
and the historian, excited by the generous ambition of pleasing
and instructing posterity, appears to disdain the prejudices of
the people, and the flattery of courts. The writings of Procopius
were read and applauded by his contemporaries: but, although he
respectfully laid them at the foot of the throne, the pride of
Justinian must have been wounded by the praise of a hero, who
perpetually eclipses the glory of his inactive sovereign. The
conscious dignity of independence was subdued by the hopes and
fears of a slave; and the secretary of Belisarius labored for
pardon and reward in the six books of the Imperial
edifices. He had dexterously chosen a
subject of apparent splendor, in which he could loudly celebrate
the genius, the magnificence, and the piety of a prince, who,
both as a conqueror and legislator, had surpassed the puerile
virtues of Themistocles and Cyrus. Disappointment might urge the
flatterer to secret revenge; and the first glance of favor might
again tempt him to suspend and suppress a libel, in which the
Roman Cyrus is degraded into an odious and contemptible tyrant,
in which both the emperor and his consort Theodora are seriously
represented as two dæmons, who had assumed a human form for
the destruction of mankind. Such base inconsistency must
doubtless sully the reputation, and detract from the credit, of
Procopius: yet, after the venom of his malignity has been
suffered to exhale, the residue of the
anecdotes, even the most disgraceful
facts, some of which had been tenderly hinted in his public
history, are established by their internal evidence, or the
authentic monuments of the times. * From these various materials,
I shall now proceed to describe the reign of Justinian, which
will deserve and occupy an ample space. The present chapter will
explain the elevation and character of Theodora, the factions of
the circus, and the peaceful administration of the sovereign of
the East. In the three succeeding chapters, I shall relate the
wars of Justinian, which achieved the conquest of Africa and
Italy; and I shall follow the victories of Belisarius and Narses,
without disguising the vanity of their triumphs, or the hostile
virtue of the Persian and Gothic heroes. The series of this and
the following volume will embrace the jurisprudence and theology
of the emperor; the controversies and sects which still divide
the Oriental church; the reformation of the Roman law which is
obeyed or respected by the nations of modern Europe.
I. In the exercise of supreme power, the first act of
Justinian was to divide it with the woman whom he loved, the
famous Theodora, whose strange elevation cannot be applauded as
the triumph of female virtue. Under the reign of Anastasius, the
care of the wild beasts maintained by the green faction at
Constantinople was intrusted to Acacius, a native of the Isle of
Cyprus, who, from his employment, was surnamed the master of the
bears. This honorable office was given after his death to another
candidate, notwithstanding the diligence of his widow, who had
already provided a husband and a successor. Acacius had left
three daughters, Comito, Theodora, and Anastasia, the eldest of
whom did not then exceed the age of seven years. On a solemn
festival, these helpless orphans were sent by their distressed
and indignant mother, in the garb of suppliants, into the midst
of the theatre: the green faction received them with contempt,
the blues with compassion; and this difference, which sunk deep
into the mind of Theodora, was felt long afterwards in the
administration of the empire. As they improved in age and beauty,
the three sisters were successively devoted to the public and
private pleasures of the Byzantine people: and Theodora, after
following Comito on the stage, in the dress of a slave, with a
stool on her head, was at length permitted to exercise her
independent talents. She neither danced, nor sung, nor played on
the flute; her skill was confined to the pantomime arts; she
excelled in buffoon characters, and as often as the comedian
swelled her cheeks, and complained with a ridiculous tone and
gesture of the blows that were inflicted, the whole theatre of
Constantinople resounded with laughter and applause. The beauty
of Theodora was the subject of more flattering praise, and the
source of more exquisite delight. Her features were delicate and
regular; her complexion, though somewhat pale, was tinged with a
natural color; every sensation was instantly expressed by the
vivacity of her eyes; her easy motions displayed the graces of a
small but elegant figure; and either love or adulation might
proclaim, that painting and poetry were incapable of delineating
the matchless excellence of her form. But this form was degraded
by the facility with which it was exposed to the public eye, and
prostituted to licentious desire. Her venal charms were abandoned
to a promiscuous crowd of citizens and strangers of every rank,
and of every profession: the fortunate lover who had been
promised a night of enjoyment, was often driven from her bed by a
stronger or more wealthy favorite; and when she passed through
the streets, her presence was avoided by all who wished to escape
either the scandal or the temptation. The satirical historian has
not blushed to describe the naked scenes which Theodora was not
ashamed to exhibit in the theatre. After exhausting the arts of
sensual pleasure, she most ungratefully murmured against the
parsimony of Nature; but her murmurs, her pleasures, and her
arts, must be veiled in the obscurity of a learned language.
After reigning for some time, the delight and contempt of the
capital, she condescended to accompany Ecebolus, a native of
Tyre, who had obtained the government of the African Pentapolis.
But this union was frail and transient; Ecebolus soon rejected an
expensive or faithless concubine; she was reduced at Alexandria
to extreme distress; and in her laborious return to
Constantinople, every city of the East admired and enjoyed the
fair Cyprian, whose merit appeared to justify her descent from
the peculiar island of Venus. The vague commerce of Theodora, and
the most detestable precautions, preserved her from the danger
which she feared; yet once, and once only, she became a mother.
The infant was saved and educated in Arabia, by his father, who
imparted to him on his death-bed, that he was the son of an
empress. Filled with ambitious hopes, the unsuspecting youth
immediately hastened to the palace of Constantinople, and was
admitted to the presence of his mother. As he was never more
seen, even after the decease of Theodora, she deserves the foul
imputation of extinguishing with his life a secret so offensive
to her Imperial virtue.
In the most abject state of her fortune, and reputation, some
vision, either of sleep or of fancy, had whispered to Theodora
the pleasing assurance that she was destined to become the spouse
of a potent monarch. Conscious of her approaching greatness, she
returned from Paphlagonia to Constantinople; assumed, like a
skilful actress, a more decent character; relieved her poverty by
the laudable industry of spinning wool; and affected a life of
chastity and solitude in a small house, which she afterwards
changed into a magnificent temple. Her beauty, assisted by art or
accident, soon attracted, captivated, and fixed, the patrician
Justinian, who already reigned with absolute sway under the name
of his uncle. Perhaps she contrived to enhance the value of a
gift which she had so often lavished on the meanest of mankind;
perhaps she inflamed, at first by modest delays, and at last by
sensual allurements, the desires of a lover, who, from nature or
devotion, was addicted to long vigils and abstemious diet. When
his first transports had subsided, she still maintained the same
ascendant over his mind, by the more solid merit of temper and
understanding. Justinian delighted to ennoble and enrich the
object of his affection; the treasures of the East were poured at
her feet, and the nephew of Justin was determined, perhaps by
religious scruples, to bestow on his concubine the sacred and
legal character of a wife. But the laws of Rome expressly
prohibited the marriage of a senator with any female who had been
dishonored by a servile origin or theatrical profession: the
empress Lupicina, or Euphemia, a Barbarian of rustic manners, but
of irreproachable virtue, refused to accept a prostitute for her
niece; and even Vigilantia, the superstitious mother of
Justinian, though she acknowledged the wit and beauty of
Theodora, was seriously apprehensive, lest the levity and
arrogance of that artful paramour might corrupt the piety and
happiness of her son. These obstacles were removed by the
inflexible constancy of Justinian. He patiently expected the
death of the empress; he despised the tears of his mother, who
soon sunk under the weight of her affliction; and a law was
promulgated in the name of the emperor Justin, which abolished
the rigid jurisprudence of antiquity. A glorious repentance (the
words of the edict) was left open for the unhappy females who had
prostituted their persons on the theatre, and they were permitted
to contract a legal union with the most illustrious of the
Romans. This indulgence was speedily followed by the solemn
nuptials of Justinian and Theodora; her dignity was gradually
exalted with that of her lover, and, as soon as Justin had
invested his nephew with the purple, the patriarch of
Constantinople placed the diadem on the heads of the emperor and
empress of the East. But the usual honors which the severity of
Roman manners had allowed to the wives of princes, could not
satisfy either the ambition of Theodora or the fondness of
Justinian. He seated her on the throne as an equal and
independent colleague in the sovereignty of the empire, and an
oath of allegiance was imposed on the governors of the provinces
in the joint names of Justinian and Theodora. The Eastern world
fell prostrate before the genius and fortune of the daughter of
Acacius. The prostitute who, in the presence of innumerable
spectators, had polluted the theatre of Constantinople, was
adored as a queen in the same city, by grave magistrates,
orthodox bishops, victorious generals, and captive monarchs.
Chapter XL: Reign Of Justinian. -- Part
II.
Those who believe that the female mind is totally depraved by
the loss of chastity, will eagerly listen to all the invectives
of private envy, or popular resentment which have dissembled the
virtues of Theodora, exaggerated her vices, and condemned with
rigor the venal or voluntary sins of the youthful harlot. From a
motive of shame, or contempt, she often declined the servile
homage of the multitude, escaped from the odious light of the
capital, and passed the greatest part of the year in the palaces
and gardens which were pleasantly seated on the sea-coast of the
Propontis and the Bosphorus. Her private hours were devoted to
the prudent as well as grateful care of her beauty, the luxury of
the bath and table, and the long slumber of the evening and the
morning. Her secret apartments were occupied by the favorite
women and eunuchs, whose interests and passions she indulged at
the expense of justice; the most illustrious person ages of the
state were crowded into a dark and sultry antechamber, and when
at last, after tedious attendance, they were admitted to kiss the
feet of Theodora, they experienced, as her humor might suggest,
the silent arrogance of an empress, or the capricious levity of a
comedian. Her rapacious avarice to accumulate an immense
treasure, may be excused by the apprehension of her husband's
death, which could leave no alternative between ruin and the
throne; and fear as well as ambition might exasperate Theodora
against two generals, who, during the malady of the emperor, had
rashly declared that they were not disposed to acquiesce in the
choice of the capital. But the reproach of cruelty, so repugnant
even to her softer vices, has left an indelible stain on the
memory of Theodora. Her numerous spies observed, and zealously
reported, every action, or word, or look, injurious to their
royal mistress. Whomsoever they accused were cast into her
peculiar prisons, inaccessible to the inquiries of justice; and
it was rumored, that the torture of the rack, or scourge, had
been inflicted in the presence of the female tyrant, insensible
to the voice of prayer or of pity. Some of these unhappy victims
perished in deep, unwholesome dungeons, while others were
permitted, after the loss of their limbs, their reason, or their
fortunes, to appear in the world, the living monuments of her
vengeance, which was commonly extended to the children of those
whom she had suspected or injured. The senator or bishop, whose
death or exile Theodora had pronounced, was delivered to a trusty
messenger, and his diligence was quickened by a menace from her
own mouth. "If you fail in the execution of my commands, I swear
by Him who liveth forever, that your skin shall be flayed from
your body."
If the creed of Theodora had not been tainted with heresy, her
exemplary devotion might have atoned, in the opinion of her
contemporaries, for pride, avarice, and cruelty. But, if she
employed her influence to assuage the intolerant fury of the
emperor, the present age will allow some merit to her religion,
and much indulgence to her speculative errors. The name of
Theodora was introduced, with equal honor, in all the pious and
charitable foundations of Justinian; and the most benevolent
institution of his reign may be ascribed to the sympathy of the
empress for her less fortunate sisters, who had been seduced or
compelled to embrace the trade of prostitution. A palace, on the
Asiatic side of the Bosphorus, was converted into a stately and
spacious monastery, and a liberal maintenance was assigned to
five hundred women, who had been collected from the streets and
brothels of Constantinople. In this safe and holy retreat, they
were devoted to perpetual confinement; and the despair of some,
who threw themselves headlong into the sea, was lost in the
gratitude of the penitents, who had been delivered from sin and
misery by their generous benefactress. The prudence of Theodora
is celebrated by Justinian himself; and his laws are attributed
to the sage counsels of his most reverend wife whom he had
received as the gift of the Deity. Her courage was displayed
amidst the tumult of the people and the terrors of the court. Her
chastity, from the moment of her union with Justinian, is founded
on the silence of her implacable enemies; and although the
daughter of Acacius might be satiated with love, yet some
applause is due to the firmness of a mind which could sacrifice
pleasure and habit to the stronger sense either of duty or
interest. The wishes and prayers of Theodora could never obtain
the blessing of a lawful son, and she buried an infant daughter,
the sole offspring of her marriage. Notwithstanding this
disappointment, her dominion was permanent and absolute; she
preserved, by art or merit, the affections of Justinian; and
their seeming dissensions were always fatal to the courtiers who
believed them to be sincere. Perhaps her health had been impaired
by the licentiousness of her youth; but it was always delicate,
and she was directed by her physicians to use the Pythian warm
baths. In this journey, the empress was followed by the
Prætorian præfect, the great treasurer, several
counts and patricians, and a splendid train of four thousand
attendants: the highways were repaired at her approach; a palace
was erected for her reception; and as she passed through
Bithynia, she distributed liberal alms to the churches, the
monasteries, and the hospitals, that they might implore Heaven
for the restoration of her health. At length, in the
twenty-fourth year of her marriage, and the twenty-second of her
reign, she was consumed by a cancer; and the irreparable loss was
deplored by her husband, who, in the room of a theatrical
prostitute, might have selected the purest and most noble virgin
of the East.
II. A material difference may be observed in the games of
antiquity: the most eminent of the Greeks were actors, the Romans
were merely spectators. The Olympic stadium was open to wealth,
merit, and ambition; and if the candidates could depend on their
personal skill and activity, they might pursue the footsteps of
Diomede and Menelaus, and conduct their own horses in the rapid
career. Ten, twenty, forty chariots were allowed to start at the
same instant; a crown of leaves was the reward of the victor; and
his fame, with that of his family and country, was chanted in
lyric strains more durable than monuments of brass and marble.
But a senator, or even a citizen, conscious of his dignity, would
have blushed to expose his person, or his horses, in the circus
of Rome. The games were exhibited at the expense of the republic,
the magistrates, or the emperors: but the reins were abandoned to
servile hands; and if the profits of a favorite charioteer
sometimes exceeded those of an advocate, they must be considered
as the effects of popular extravagance, and the high wages of a
disgraceful profession. The race, in its first institution, was a
simple contest of two chariots, whose drivers were distinguished
by white and
red liveries: two additional colors, a
light green, and a cærulean
blue, were afterwards introduced; and
as the races were repeated twenty-five times, one hundred
chariots contributed in the same day to the pomp of the circus.
The four factions soon acquired a legal
establishment, and a mysterious origin, and their fanciful colors
were derived from the various appearances of nature in the four
seasons of the year; the red dogstar of summer, the snows of
winter, the deep shades of autumn, and the cheerful verdure of
the spring. Another interpretation preferred the elements to the
seasons, and the struggle of the green and blue was supposed to
represent the conflict of the earth and sea. Their respective
victories announced either a plentiful harvest or a prosperous
navigation, and the hostility of the husbandmen and mariners was
somewhat less absurd than the blind ardor of the Roman people,
who devoted their lives and fortunes to the color which they had
espoused. Such folly was disdained and indulged by the wisest
princes; but the names of Caligula, Nero, Vitellius, Verus,
Commodus, Caracalla, and Elagabalus, were enrolled in the blue or
green factions of the circus; they frequented their stables,
applauded their favorites, chastised their antagonists, and
deserved the esteem of the populace, by the natural or affected
imitation of their manners. The bloody and tumultuous contest
continued to disturb the public festivity, till the last age of
the spectacles of Rome; and Theodoric, from a motive of justice
or affection, interposed his authority to protect the greens
against the violence of a consul and a patrician, who were
passionately addicted to the blue faction of the circus.
Constantinople adopted the follies, though not the virtues, of
ancient Rome; and the same factions which had agitated the
circus, raged with redoubled fury in the hippodrome. Under the
reign of Anastasius, this popular frenzy was inflamed by
religious zeal; and the greens, who had treacherously concealed
stones and daggers under baskets of fruit, massacred, at a solemn
festival, three thousand of their blue adversaries. From this
capital, the pestilence was diffused into the provinces and
cities of the East, and the sportive distinction of two colors
produced two strong and irreconcilable factions, which shook the
foundations of a feeble government. The popular dissensions,
founded on the most serious interest, or holy pretence, have
scarcely equalled the obstinacy of this wanton discord, which
invaded the peace of families, divided friends and brothers, and
tempted the female sex, though seldom seen in the circus, to
espouse the inclinations of their lovers, or to contradict the
wishes of their husbands. Every law, either human or divine, was
trampled under foot, and as long as the party was successful, its
deluded followers appeared careless of private distress or public
calamity. The license, without the freedom, of democracy, was
revived at Antioch and Constantinople, and the support of a
faction became necessary to every candidate for civil or
ecclesiastical honors. A secret attachment to the family or sect
of Anastasius was imputed to the greens; the blues were zealously
devoted to the cause of orthodoxy and Justinian, and their
grateful patron protected, above five years, the disorders of a
faction, whose seasonable tumults overawed the palace, the
senate, and the capitals of the East. Insolent with royal favor,
the blues affected to strike terror by a peculiar and Barbaric
dress, the long hair of the Huns, their close sleeves and ample
garments, a lofty step, and a sonorous voice. In the day they
concealed their two-edged poniards, but in the night they boldly
assembled in arms, and in numerous bands, prepared for every act
of violence and rapine. Their adversaries of the green faction,
or even inoffensive citizens, were stripped and often murdered by
these nocturnal robbers, and it became dangerous to wear any gold
buttons or girdles, or to appear at a late hour in the streets of
a peaceful capital. A daring spirit, rising with impunity,
proceeded to violate the safeguard of private houses; and fire
was employed to facilitate the attack, or to conceal the crimes
of these factious rioters. No place was safe or sacred from their
depredations; to gratify either avarice or revenge, they
profusely spilt the blood of the innocent; churches and altars
were polluted by atrocious murders; and it was the boast of the
assassins, that their dexterity could always inflict a mortal
wound with a single stroke of their dagger. The dissolute youth
of Constantinople adopted the blue livery of disorder; the laws
were silent, and the bonds of society were relaxed: creditors
were compelled to resign their obligations; judges to reverse
their sentence; masters to enfranchise their slaves; fathers to
supply the extravagance of their children; noble matrons were
prostituted to the lust of their servants; beautiful boys were
torn from the arms of their parents; and wives, unless they
preferred a voluntary death, were ravished in the presence of
their husbands. The despair of the greens, who were persecuted by
their enemies, and deserted by the magistrates, assumed the
privilege of defence, perhaps of retaliation; but those who
survived the combat were dragged to execution, and the unhappy
fugitives, escaping to woods and caverns, preyed without mercy on
the society from whence they were expelled. Those ministers of
justice who had courage to punish the crimes, and to brave the
resentment, of the blues, became the victims of their indiscreet
zeal; a præfect of Constantinople fled for refuge to the
holy sepulchre, a count of the East was ignominiously whipped,
and a governor of Cilicia was hanged, by the order of Theodora,
on the tomb of two assassins whom he had condemned for the murder
of his groom, and a daring attack upon his own life. An aspiring
candidate may be tempted to build his greatness on the public
confusion, but it is the interest as well as duty of a sovereign
to maintain the authority of the laws. The first edict of
Justinian, which was often repeated, and sometimes executed,
announced his firm resolution to support the innocent, and to
chastise the guilty, of every denomination and
color. Yet the balance of justice was
still inclined in favor of the blue faction, by the secret
affection, the habits, and the fears of the emperor; his equity,
after an apparent struggle, submitted, without reluctance, to the
implacable passions of Theodora, and the empress never forgot, or
forgave, the injuries of the comedian. At the accession of the
younger Justin, the proclamation of equal and rigorous justice
indirectly condemned the partiality of the former reign. "Ye
blues, Justinian is no more! ye greens, he is still alive!"
A sedition, which almost laid Constantinople in ashes, was
excited by the mutual hatred and momentary reconciliation of the
two factions. In the fifth year of his reign, Justinian
celebrated the festival of the ides of January; the games were
incessantly disturbed by the clamorous discontent of the greens:
till the twenty-second race, the emperor maintained his silent
gravity; at length, yielding to his impatience, he condescended
to hold, in abrupt sentences, and by the voice of a crier, the
most singular dialogue that ever passed between a prince and his
subjects. Their first complaints were respectful and modest; they
accused the subordinate ministers of oppression, and proclaimed
their wishes for the long life and victory of the emperor. "Be
patient and attentive, ye insolent railers!" exclaimed Justinian;
"be mute, ye Jews, Samaritans, and Manichæans!" The greens
still attempted to awaken his compassion. "We are poor, we are
innocent, we are injured, we dare not pass through the streets: a
general persecution is exercised against our name and color. Let
us die, O emperor! but let us die by your command, and for your
service!" But the repetition of partial and passionate invectives
degraded, in their eyes, the majesty of the purple; they
renounced allegiance to the prince who refused justice to his
people; lamented that the father of Justinian had been born; and
branded his son with the opprobrious names of a homicide, an ass,
and a perjured tyrant. "Do you despise your lives?" cried the
indignant monarch: the blues rose with fury from their seats;
their hostile clamors thundered in the hippodrome; and their
adversaries, deserting the unequal contest spread terror and
despair through the streets of Constantinople. At this dangerous
moment, seven notorious assassins of both factions, who had been
condemned by the præfect, were carried round the city, and
afterwards transported to the place of execution in the suburb of
Pera. Four were immediately beheaded; a fifth was hanged: but
when the same punishment was inflicted on the remaining two, the
rope broke, they fell alive to the ground, the populace applauded
their escape, and the monks of St. Conon, issuing from the
neighboring convent, conveyed them in a boat to the sanctuary of
the church. As one of these criminals was of the blue, and the
other of the green livery, the two factions were equally provoked
by the cruelty of their oppressor, or the ingratitude of their
patron; and a short truce was concluded till they had delivered
their prisoners and satisfied their revenge. The palace of the
præfect, who withstood the seditious torrent, was instantly
burnt, his officers and guards were massacred, the prisons were
forced open, and freedom was restored to those who could only use
it for the public destruction. A military force, which had been
despatched to the aid of the civil magistrate, was fiercely
encountered by an armed multitude, whose numbers and boldness
continually increased; and the Heruli, the wildest Barbarians in
the service of the empire, overturned the priests and their
relics, which, from a pious motive, had been rashly interposed to
separate the bloody conflict. The tumult was exasperated by this
sacrilege, the people fought with enthusiasm in the cause of God;
the women, from the roofs and windows, showered stones on the
heads of the soldiers, who darted fire brands against the houses;
and the various flames, which had been kindled by the hands of
citizens and strangers, spread without control over the face of
the city. The conflagration involved the cathedral of St. Sophia,
the baths of Zeuxippus, a part of the palace, from the first
entrance to the altar of Mars, and the long portico from the
palace to the forum of Constantine: a large hospital, with the
sick patients, was consumed; many churches and stately edifices
were destroyed and an immense treasure of gold and silver was
either melted or lost. From such scenes of horror and distress,
the wise and wealthy citizens escaped over the Bosphorus to the
Asiatic side; and during five days Constantinople was abandoned
to the factions, whose watchword, Nika,
vanquish! has given a name to this
memorable sedition.
As long as the factions were divided, the triumphant blues,
and desponding greens, appeared to behold with the same
indifference the disorders of the state. They agreed to censure
the corrupt management of justice and the finance; and the two
responsible ministers, the artful Tribonian, and the rapacious
John of Cappadocia, were loudly arraigned as the authors of the
public misery. The peaceful murmurs of the people would have been
disregarded: they were heard with respect when the city was in
flames; the quæstor, and the præfect, were instantly
removed, and their offices were filled by two senators of
blameless integrity. After this popular concession, Justinian
proceeded to the hippodrome to confess his own errors, and to
accept the repentance of his grateful subjects; but they
distrusted his assurances, though solemnly pronounced in the
presence of the holy Gospels; and the emperor, alarmed by their
distrust, retreated with precipitation to the strong fortress of
the palace. The obstinacy of the tumult was now imputed to a
secret and ambitious conspiracy, and a suspicion was entertained,
that the insurgents, more especially the green faction, had been
supplied with arms and money by Hypatius and Pompey, two
patricians, who could neither forget with honor, nor remember
with safety, that they were the nephews of the emperor
Anastasius. Capriciously trusted, disgraced, and pardoned, by the
jealous levity of the monarch, they had appeared as loyal
servants before the throne; and, during five days of the tumult,
they were detained as important hostages; till at length, the
fears of Justinian prevailing over his prudence, he viewed the
two brothers in the light of spies, perhaps of assassins, and
sternly commanded them to depart from the palace. After a
fruitless representation, that obedience might lead to
involuntary treason, they retired to their houses, and in the
morning of the sixth day, Hypatius was surrounded and seized by
the people, who, regardless of his virtuous resistance, and the
tears of his wife, transported their favorite to the forum of
Constantine, and instead of a diadem, placed a rich collar on his
head. If the usurper, who afterwards pleaded the merit of his
delay, had complied with the advice of his senate, and urged the
fury of the multitude, their first irresistible effort might have
oppressed or expelled his trembling competitor. The Byzantine
palace enjoyed a free communication with the sea; vessels lay
ready at the garden stairs; and a secret resolution was already
formed, to convey the emperor with his family and treasures to a
safe retreat, at some distance from the capital.
Justinian was lost, if the prostitute whom he raised from the
theatre had not renounced the timidity, as well as the virtues,
of her sex. In the midst of a council, where Belisarius was
present, Theodora alone displayed the spirit of a hero; and she
alone, without apprehending his future hatred, could save the
emperor from the imminent danger, and his unworthy fears. "If
flight," said the consort of Justinian, "were the only means of
safety, yet I should disdain to fly. Death is the condition of
our birth; but they who have reigned should never survive the
loss of dignity and dominion. I implore Heaven, that I may never
be seen, not a day, without my diadem and purple; that I may no
longer behold the light, when I cease to be saluted with the name
of queen. If you resolve, O Cæsar! to fly, you have
treasures; behold the sea, you have ships; but tremble lest the
desire of life should expose you to wretched exile and
ignominious death. For my own part, I adhere to the maxim of
antiquity, that the throne is a glorious sepulchre." The firmness
of a woman restored the courage to deliberate and act, and
courage soon discovers the resources of the most desperate
situation. It was an easy and a decisive measure to revive the
animosity of the factions; the blues were astonished at their own
guilt and folly, that a trifling injury should provoke them to
conspire with their implacable enemies against a gracious and
liberal benefactor; they again proclaimed the majesty of
Justinian; and the greens, with their upstart emperor, were left
alone in the hippodrome. The fidelity of the guards was doubtful;
but the military force of Justinian consisted in three thousand
veterans, who had been trained to valor and discipline in the
Persian and Illyrian wars. Under the command of Belisarius and
Mundus, they silently marched in two divisions from the palace,
forced their obscure way through narrow passages, expiring
flames, and falling edifices, and burst open at the same moment
the two opposite gates of the hippodrome. In this narrow space,
the disorderly and affrighted crowd was incapable of resisting on
either side a firm and regular attack; the blues signalized the
fury of their repentance; and it is computed, that above thirty
thousand persons were slain in the merciless and promiscuous
carnage of the day. Hypatius was dragged from his throne, and
conducted, with his brother Pompey, to the feet of the emperor:
they implored his clemency; but their crime was manifest, their
innocence uncertain, and Justinian had been too much terrified to
forgive. The next morning the two nephews of Anastasius, with
eighteen illustrious accomplices, of
patrician or consular rank, were privately executed by the
soldiers; their bodies were thrown into the sea, their palaces
razed, and their fortunes confiscated. The hippodrome itself was
condemned, during several years, to a mournful silence: with the
restoration of the games, the same disorders revived; and the
blue and green factions continued to afflict the reign of
Justinian, and to disturb the tranquility of the Eastern
empire.
III. That empire, after Rome was barbarous, still embraced the
nations whom she had conquered beyond the Adriatic, and as far as
the frontiers of Æthiopia and Persia. Justinian reigned
over sixty-four provinces, and nine hundred and thirty-five
cities; his dominions were blessed by nature with the advantages
of soil, situation, and climate: and the improvements of human
art had been perpetually diffused along the coast of the
Mediterranean and the banks of the Nile from ancient Troy to the
Egyptian Thebes. Abraham had been relieved by the well-known
plenty of Egypt; the same country, a small and populous tract,
was still capable of exporting, each year, two hundred and sixty
thousand quarters of wheat for the use of Constantinople; and the
capital of Justinian was supplied with the manufactures of Sidon,
fifteen centuries after they had been celebrated in the poems of
Homer. The annual powers of vegetation, instead of being
exhausted by two thousand harvests, were renewed and invigorated
by skilful husbandry, rich manure, and seasonable repose. The
breed of domestic animals was infinitely multiplied. Plantations,
buildings, and the instruments of labor and luxury, which are
more durable than the term of human life, were accumulated by the
care of successive generations. Tradition preserved, and
experience simplified, the humble practice of the arts: society
was enriched by the division of labor and the facility of
exchange; and every Roman was lodged, clothed, and subsisted, by
the industry of a thousand hands. The invention of the loom and
distaff has been piously ascribed to the gods. In every age, a
variety of animal and vegetable productions, hair, skins, wool,
flax, cotton, and at length silk, have
been skilfully manufactured to hide or adorn the human body; they
were stained with an infusion of permanent colors; and the pencil
was successfully employed to improve the labors of the loom. In
the choice of those colors which imitate the beauties of nature,
the freedom of taste and fashion was indulged; but the deep
purple which the Phnicians extracted from a shell-fish, was
restrained to the sacred person and palace of the emperor; and
the penalties of treason were denounced against the ambitious
subjects who dared to usurp the prerogative of the throne.
Chapter XL: Reign Of Justinian. --Part
III.
I need not explain that silk is
originally spun from the bowels of a caterpillar, and that it
composes the golden tomb, from whence a worm emerges in the form
of a butterfly. Till the reign of Justinian, the silk-worm who
feed on the leaves of the white mulberry-tree were confined to
China; those of the pine, the oak, and the ash, were common in
the forests both of Asia and Europe; but as their education is
more difficult, and their produce more uncertain, they were
generally neglected, except in the little island of Ceos, near
the coast of Attica. A thin gauze was procured from their webs,
and this Cean manufacture, the invention of a woman, for female
use, was long admired both in the East and at Rome. Whatever
suspicions may be raised by the garments of the Medes and
Assyrians, Virgil is the most ancient writer, who expressly
mentions the soft wool which was combed from the trees of the
Seres or Chinese; and this natural error, less marvellous than
the truth, was slowly corrected by the knowledge of a valuable
insect, the first artificer of the luxury of nations. That rare
and elegant luxury was censured, in the reign of Tiberius, by the
gravest of the Romans; and Pliny, in affected though forcible
language, has condemned the thirst of gain, which explores the
last confines of the earth, for the pernicious purpose of
exposing to the public eye naked draperies and transparent
matrons. * A dress which showed the turn of the limbs, and color
of the skin, might gratify vanity, or provoke desire; the silks
which had been closely woven in China were sometimes unravelled
by the Phnician women, and the precious materials were multiplied
by a looser texture, and the intermixture of linen threads. Two
hundred years after the age of Pliny, the use of pure, or even of
mixed silks, was confined to the female sex, till the opulent
citizens of Rome and the provinces were insensibly familiarized
with the example of Elagabalus, the first who, by this effeminate
habit, had sullied the dignity of an emperor and a man. Aurelian
complained, that a pound of silk was sold at Rome for twelve
ounces of gold; but the supply increased with the demand, and the
price diminished with the supply. If accident or monopoly
sometimes raised the value even above the standard of Aurelian,
the manufacturers of Tyre and Berytus were sometimes compelled,
by the operation of the same causes, to content themselves with a
ninth part of that extravagant rate. A law was thought necessary
to discriminate the dress of comedians from that of senators; and
of the silk exported from its native country the far greater part
was consumed by the subjects of Justinian. They were still more
intimately acquainted with a shell-fish of the Mediterranean,
surnamed the silk-worm of the sea: the fine wool or hair by which
the mother-of-pearl affixes itself to the rock is now
manufactured for curiosity rather than use; and a robe obtained
from the same singular materials was the gift of the Roman
emperor to the satraps of Armenia.
A valuable merchandise of small bulk is capable of defraying
the expense of land-carriage; and the caravans traversed the
whole latitude of Asia in two hundred and forty-three days from
the Chinese Ocean to the sea-coast of Syria. Silk was immediately
delivered to the Romans by the Persian merchants, who frequented
the fairs of Armenia and Nisibis; but this trade, which in the
intervals of truce was oppressed by avarice and jealousy, was
totally interrupted by the long wars of the rival monarchies. The
great king might proudly number Sogdiana, and even
Serica, among the provinces of his
empire; but his real dominion was bounded by the Oxus and his
useful intercourse with the Sogdoites, beyond the river, depended
on the pleasure of their conquerors, the white Huns, and the
Turks, who successively reigned over that industrious people. Yet
the most savage dominion has not extirpated the seeds of
agriculture and commerce, in a region which is celebrated as one
of the four gardens of Asia; the cities of Samarcand and Bochara
are advantageously seated for the exchange of its various
productions; and their merchants purchased from the Chinese, the
raw or manufactured silk which they transported into Persia for
the use of the Roman empire. In the vain capital of China, the
Sogdian caravans were entertained as the suppliant embassies of
tributary kingdoms, and if they returned in safety, the bold
adventure was rewarded with exorbitant gain. But the difficult
and perilous march from Samarcand to the first town of Shensi,
could not be performed in less than sixty, eighty, or one hundred
days: as soon as they had passed the Jaxartes they entered the
desert; and the wandering hordes, unless they are restrained by
armies and garrisons, have always considered the citizen and the
traveller as the objects of lawful rapine. To escape the Tartar
robbers, and the tyrants of Persia, the silk caravans explored a
more southern road; they traversed the mountains of Thibet,
descended the streams of the Ganges or the Indus, and patiently
expected, in the ports of Guzerat and Malabar, the annual fleets
of the West. But the dangers of the desert were found less
intolerable than toil, hunger, and the loss of time; the attempt
was seldom renewed, and the only European who has passed that
unfrequented way, applauds his own diligence, that, in nine
months after his departure from Pekin, he reached the mouth of
the Indus. The ocean, however, was open to the free communication
of mankind. From the great river to the tropic of Cancer, the
provinces of China were subdued and civilized by the emperors of
the North; they were filled about the time of the Christian
æra with cities and men, mulberry-trees and their precious
inhabitants; and if the Chinese, with the knowledge of the
compass, had possessed the genius of the Greeks or Phnicians,
they might have spread their discoveries over the southern
hemisphere. I am not qualified to examine, and I am not disposed
to believe, their distant voyages to the Persian Gulf, or the
Cape of Good Hope; but their ancestors might equal the labors and
success of the present race, and the sphere of their navigation
might extend from the Isles of Japan to the Straits of Malacca,
the pillars, if we may apply that name, of an Oriental Hercules.
Without losing sight of land, they might sail along the coast to
the extreme promontory of Achin, which is annually visited by ten
or twelve ships laden with the productions, the manufactures, and
even the artificers of China; the Island of Sumatra and the
opposite peninsula are faintly delineated as the regions of gold
and silver; and the trading cities named in the geography of
Ptolemy may indicate, that this wealth was not solely derived
from the mines. The direct interval between Sumatra and Ceylon is
about three hundred leagues: the Chinese and Indian navigators
were conducted by the flight of birds and periodical winds; and
the ocean might be securely traversed in square-built ships,
which, instead of iron, were sewed together with the strong
thread of the cocoanut. Ceylon, Serendib, or Taprobana, was
divided between two hostile princes; one of whom possessed the
mountains, the elephants, and the luminous carbuncle, and the
other enjoyed the more solid riches of domestic industry, foreign
trade, and the capacious harbor of Trinquemale, which received
and dismissed the fleets of the East and West. In this hospitable
isle, at an equal distance (as it was computed) from their
respective countries, the silk merchants of China, who had
collected in their voyages aloes, cloves, nutmeg, and sandal
wood, maintained a free and beneficial commerce with the
inhabitants of the Persian Gulf. The subjects of the great king
exalted, without a rival, his power and magnificence: and the
Roman, who confounded their vanity by comparing his paltry coin
with a gold medal of the emperor Anastasius, had sailed to
Ceylon, in an Æthiopian ship, as a simple passenger.
As silk became of indispensable use, the emperor Justinian saw
with concern that the Persians had occupied by land and sea the
monopoly of this important supply, and that the wealth of his
subjects was continually drained by a nation of enemies and
idolaters. An active government would have restored the trade of
Egypt and the navigation of the Red Sea, which had decayed with
the prosperity of the empire; and the Roman vessels might have
sailed, for the purchase of silk, to the ports of Ceylon, of
Malacca, or even of China. Justinian embraced a more humble
expedient, and solicited the aid of his Christian allies, the
Æthiopians of Abyssinia, who had recently acquired the arts
of navigation, the spirit of trade, and the seaport of Adulis, *
still decorated with the trophies of a Grecian conqueror. Along
the African coast, they penetrated to the equator in search of
gold, emeralds, and aromatics; but they wisely declined an
unequal competition, in which they must be always prevented by
the vicinity of the Persians to the markets of India; and the
emperor submitted to the disappointment, till his wishes were
gratified by an unexpected event. The gospel had been preached to
the Indians: a bishop already governed the Christians of St.
Thomas on the pepper-coast of Malabar; a church was planted in
Ceylon, and the missionaries pursued the footsteps of commerce to
the extremities of Asia. Two Persian monks had long resided in
China, perhaps in the royal city of Nankin, the seat of a monarch
addicted to foreign superstitions, and who actually received an
embassy from the Isle of Ceylon. Amidst their pious occupations,
they viewed with a curious eye the common dress of the Chinese,
the manufactures of silk, and the myriads of silk-worms, whose
education (either on trees or in houses) had once been considered
as the labor of queens. They soon discovered that it was
impracticable to transport the short-lived insect, but that in
the eggs a numerous progeny might be preserved and multiplied in
a distant climate. Religion or interest had more power over the
Persian monks than the love of their country: after a long
journey, they arrived at Constantinople, imparted their project
to the emperor, and were liberally encouraged by the gifts and
promises of Justinian. To the historians of that prince, a
campaign at the foot of Mount Caucasus has seemed more deserving
of a minute relation than the labors of these missionaries of
commerce, who again entered China, deceived a jealous people by
concealing the eggs of the silk-worm in a hollow cane, and
returned in triumph with the spoils of the East. Under their
direction, the eggs were hatched at the proper season by the
artificial heat of dung; the worms were fed with mulberry leaves;
they lived and labored in a foreign climate; a sufficient number
of butterflies was saved to propagate the race, and trees were
planted to supply the nourishment of the rising generations.
Experience and reflection corrected the errors of a new attempt,
and the Sogdoite ambassadors acknowledged, in the succeeding
reign, that the Romans were not inferior to the natives of China
in the education of the insects, and the manufactures of silk, in
which both China and Constantinople have been surpassed by the
industry of modern Europe. I am not insensible of the benefits of
elegant luxury; yet I reflect with some pain, that if the
importers of silk had introduced the art of printing, already
practised by the Chinese, the comedies of Menander and the entire
decads of Livy would have been perpetuated in the editions of the
sixth century. A larger view of the globe might at least have
promoted the improvement of speculative science, but the
Christian geography was forcibly extracted from texts of
Scripture, and the study of nature was the surest symptom of an
unbelieving mind. The orthodox faith confined the habitable world
to one temperate zone, and represented
the earth as an oblong surface, four hundred days' journey in
length, two hundred in breadth, encompassed by the ocean, and
covered by the solid crystal of the firmament.
IV. The subjects of Justinian were dissatisfied with the
times, and with the government. Europe was overrun by the
Barbarians, and Asia by the monks: the poverty of the West
discouraged the trade and manufactures of the East: the produce
of labor was consumed by the unprofitable servants of the church,
the state, and the army; and a rapid decrease was felt in the
fixed and circulating capitals which constitute the national
wealth. The public distress had been alleviated by the economy of
Anastasius, and that prudent emperor accumulated an immense
treasure, while he delivered his people from the most odious or
oppressive taxes. * Their gratitude universally applauded the
abolition of the gold of affliction, a
personal tribute on the industry of the poor, but more
intolerable, as it should seem, in the form than in the
substance, since the flourishing city of Edessa paid only one
hundred and forty pounds of gold, which was collected in four
years from ten thousand artificers. Yet such was the parsimony
which supported this liberal disposition, that, in a reign of
twenty-seven years, Anastasius saved, from his annual revenue,
the enormous sum of thirteen millions sterling, or three hundred
and twenty thousand pounds of gold. His example was neglected,
and his treasure was abused, by the nephew of Justin. The riches
of Justinian were speedily exhausted by alms and buildings, by
ambitious wars, and ignominious treaties. His revenues were found
inadequate to his expenses. Every art was tried to extort from
the people the gold and silver which he scattered with a lavish
hand from Persia to France: his reign was marked by the
vicissitudes or rather by the combat, of rapaciousness and
avarice, of splendor and poverty; he lived with the reputation of
hidden treasures, and bequeathed to his successor the payment of
his debts. Such a character has been justly accused by the voice
of the people and of posterity: but public discontent is
credulous; private malice is bold; and a lover of truth will
peruse with a suspicious eye the instructive anecdotes of
Procopius. The secret historian represents only the vices of
Justinian, and those vices are darkened by his malevolent pencil.
Ambiguous actions are imputed to the worst motives; error is
confounded with guilt, accident with design, and laws with
abuses; the partial injustice of a moment is dexterously applied
as the general maxim of a reign of thirty-two years; the emperor
alone is made responsible for the faults of his officers, the
disorders of the times, and the corruption of his subjects; and
even the calamities of nature, plagues, earthquakes, and
inundations, are imputed to the prince of the dæmons, who
had mischievously assumed the form of Justinian.
After this precaution, I shall briefly relate the anecdotes of
avarice and rapine under the following heads: I. Justinian was so
profuse that he could not be liberal. The civil and military
officers, when they were admitted into the service of the palace,
obtained an humble rank and a moderate stipend; they ascended by
seniority to a station of affluence and repose; the annual
pensions, of which the most honorable class was abolished by
Justinian, amounted to four hundred thousand pounds; and this
domestic economy was deplored by the venal or indigent courtiers
as the last outrage on the majesty of the empire. The posts, the
salaries of physicians, and the nocturnal illuminations, were
objects of more general concern; and the cities might justly
complain, that he usurped the municipal revenues which had been
appropriated to these useful institutions. Even the soldiers were
injured; and such was the decay of military spirit, that they
were injured with impunity. The emperor refused, at the return of
each fifth year, the customary donative of five pieces of gold,
reduced his veterans to beg their bread, and suffered unpaid
armies to melt away in the wars of Italy and Persia. II. The
humanity of his predecessors had always remitted, in some
auspicious circumstance of their reign, the arrears of the public
tribute, and they dexterously assumed the merit of resigning
those claims which it was impracticable to enforce. "Justinian,
in the space of thirty-two years, has never granted a similar
indulgence; and many of his subjects have renounced the
possession of those lands whose value is insufficient to satisfy
the demands of the treasury. To the cities which had suffered by
hostile inroads Anastasius promised a general exemption of seven
years: the provinces of Justinian have been ravaged by the
Persians and Arabs, the Huns and Sclavonians; but his vain and
ridiculous dispensation of a single year has been confined to
those places which were actually taken by the enemy." Such is the
language of the secret historian, who expressly denies that any
indulgence was granted to Palestine after the revolt of the
Samaritans; a false and odious charge, confuted by the authentic
record which attests a relief of thirteen centenaries of gold
(fifty-two thousand pounds) obtained for that desolate province
by the intercession of St. Sabas. III. Procopius has not
condescended to explain the system of taxation, which fell like a
hail-storm upon the land, like a devouring pestilence on its
inhabitants: but we should become the accomplices of his
malignity, if we imputed to Justinian alone the ancient though
rigorous principle, that a whole district should be condemned to
sustain the partial loss of the persons or property of
individuals. The Annona, or supply of
corn for the use of the army and capital, was a grievous and
arbitrary exaction, which exceeded, perhaps in a tenfold
proportion, the ability of the farmer; and his distress was
aggravated by the partial injustice of weights and measures, and
the expense and labor of distant carriage. In a time of scarcity,
an extraordinary requisition was made to the adjacent provinces
of Thrace, Bithynia, and Phrygia: but the proprietors, after a
wearisome journey and perilous navigation, received so inadequate
a compensation, that they would have chosen the alternative of
delivering both the corn and price at the doors of their
granaries. These precautions might indicate a tender solicitude
for the welfare of the capital; yet Constantinople did not escape
the rapacious despotism of Justinian. Till his reign, the Straits
of the Bosphorus and Hellespont were open to the freedom of
trade, and nothing was prohibited except the exportation of arms
for the service of the Barbarians. At each of these gates of the
city, a prætor was stationed, the minister of Imperial
avarice; heavy customs were imposed on the vessels and their
merchandise; the oppression was retaliated on the helpless
consumer; the poor were afflicted by the artificial scarcity, and
exorbitant price of the market; and a people, accustomed to
depend on the liberality of their prince, might sometimes
complain of the deficiency of water and bread. The
aerial tribute, without a name, a law,
or a definite object, was an annual gift of one hundred and
twenty thousand pounds, which the emperor accepted from his
Prætorian præfect; and the means of payment were
abandoned to the discretion of that powerful magistrate. IV. Even
such a tax was less intolerable than the privilege of monopolies,
* which checked the fair competition of industry, and, for the
sake of a small and dishonest gain, imposed an arbitrary burden
on the wants and luxury of the subject. "As soon" (I transcribe
the Anecdotes) "as the exclusive sale of silk was usurped by the
Imperial treasurer, a whole people, the manufacturers of Tyre and
Berytus, was reduced to extreme misery, and either perished with
hunger, or fled to the hostile dominions of Persia." A province
might suffer by the decay of its manufactures, but in this
example of silk, Procopius has partially overlooked the
inestimable and lasting benefit which the empire received from
the curiosity of Justinian. His addition of one seventh to the
ordinary price of copper money may be interpreted with the same
candor; and the alteration, which might be wise, appears to have
been innocent; since he neither alloyed the purity, nor enhanced
the value, of the gold coin, the legal measure of public and
private payments. V. The ample jurisdiction required by the
farmers of the revenue to accomplish their engagements might be
placed in an odious light, as if they had purchased from the
emperor the lives and fortunes of their fellow-citizens. And a
more direct sale of honors and offices was transacted in the
palace, with the permission, or at least with the connivance, of
Justinian and Theodora. The claims of merit, even those of favor,
were disregarded, and it was almost reasonable to expect, that
the bold adventurer, who had undertaken the trade of a
magistrate, should find a rich compensation for infamy, labor,
danger, the debts which he had contracted, and the heavy interest
which he paid. A sense of the disgrace and mischief of this venal
practice, at length awakened the slumbering virtue of Justinian;
and he attempted, by the sanction of oaths and penalties, to
guard the integrity of his government: but at the end of a year
of perjury, his rigorous edict was suspended, and corruption
licentiously abused her triumph over the impotence of the laws.
VI. The testament of Eulalius, count of the domestics, declared
the emperor his sole heir, on condition, however, that he should
discharge his debts and legacies, allow to his three daughters a
decent maintenance, and bestow each of them in marriage, with a
portion of ten pounds of gold. But the splendid fortune of
Eulalius had been consumed by fire, and the inventory of his
goods did not exceed the trifling sum of five hundred and
sixty-four pieces of gold. A similar instance, in Grecian
history, admonished the emperor of the honorable part prescribed
for his imitation. He checked the selfish murmurs of the
treasury, applauded the confidence of his friend, discharged the
legacies and debts, educated the three virgins under the eye of
the empress Theodora, and doubled the marriage portion which had
satisfied the tenderness of their father. The humanity of a
prince (for princes cannot be generous) is entitled to some
praise; yet even in this act of virtue we may discover the
inveterate custom of supplanting the legal or natural heirs,
which Procopius imputes to the reign of Justinian. His charge is
supported by eminent names and scandalous examples; neither
widows nor orphans were spared; and the art of soliciting, or
extorting, or supposing testaments, was beneficially practised by
the agents of the palace. This base and mischievous tyranny
invades the security of private life; and the monarch who has
indulged an appetite for gain, will soon be tempted to anticipate
the moment of succession, to interpret wealth as an evidence of
guilt, and to proceed, from the claim of inheritance, to the
power of confiscation. VII. Among the forms of rapine, a
philosopher may be permitted to name the conversion of Pagan or
heretical riches to the use of the faithful; but in the time of
Justinian this holy plunder was condemned by the sectaries alone,
who became the victims of his orthodox avarice.
Chapter XL: Reign Of Justinian. -- Part
IV.
Dishonor might be ultimately reflected on the character of
Justinian; but much of the guilt, and still more of the profit,
was intercepted by the ministers, who were seldom promoted for
their virtues, and not always selected for their talents. The
merits of Tribonian the quæstor will hereafter be weighed
in the reformation of the Roman law; but the economy of the East
was subordinate to the Prætorian præfect, and
Procopius has justified his anecdotes by the portrait which he
exposes in his public history, of the notorious vices of John of
Cappadocia. * His knowledge was not borrowed from the schools,
and his style was scarcely legible; but he excelled in the powers
of native genius, to suggest the wisest counsels, and to find
expedients in the most desperate situations. The corruption of
his heart was equal to the vigor of his understanding. Although
he was suspected of magic and Pagan superstition, he appeared
insensible to the fear of God or the reproaches of man; and his
aspiring fortune was raised on the death of thousands, the
poverty of millions, the ruins of cities, and the desolation of
provinces. From the dawn of light to the moment of dinner, he
assiduously labored to enrich his master and himself at the
expense of the Roman world; the remainder of the day was spent in
sensual and obscene pleasures, * and the silent hours of the
night were interrupted by the perpetual dread of the justice of
an assassin. His abilities, perhaps his vices, recommended him to
the lasting friendship of Justinian: the emperor yielded with
reluctance to the fury of the people; his victory was displayed
by the immediate restoration of their enemy; and they felt above
ten years, under his oppressive administration, that he was
stimulated by revenge, rather than instructed by misfortune.
Their murmurs served only to fortify the resolution of Justinian;
but the resentment of Theodora, disdained a power before which
every knee was bent, and attempted to sow the seeds of discord
between the emperor and his beloved consort. Even Theodora
herself was constrained to dissemble, to wait a favorable moment,
and, by an artful conspiracy, to render John of Cappadocia the
accomplice of his own destruction. At a time when Belisarius,
unless he had been a hero, must have shown himself a rebel, his
wife Antonina, who enjoyed the secret confidence of the empress,
communicated his feigned discontent to Euphemia, the daughter of
the præfect; the credulous virgin imparted to her father
the dangerous project, and John, who might have known the value
of oaths and promises, was tempted to accept a nocturnal, and
almost treasonable, interview with the wife of Belisarius. An
ambuscade of guards and eunuchs had been posted by the command of
Theodora; they rushed with drawn swords to seize or to punish the
guilty minister: he was saved by the fidelity of his attendants;
but instead of appealing to a gracious sovereign, who had
privately warned him of his danger, he pusillanimously fled to
the sanctuary of the church. The favorite of Justinian was
sacrificed to conjugal tenderness or domestic tranquility; the
conversion of a præfect into a priest extinguished his
ambitious hopes: but the friendship of the emperor alleviated his
disgrace, and he retained in the mild exile of Cyzicus an ample
portion of his riches. Such imperfect revenge could not satisfy
the unrelenting hatred of Theodora; the murder of his old enemy,
the bishop of Cyzicus, afforded a decent pretence; and John of
Cappadocia, whose actions had deserved a thousand deaths, was at
last condemned for a crime of which he was innocent. A great
minister, who had been invested with the honors of consul and
patrician, was ignominiously scourged like the vilest of
malefactors; a tattered cloak was the sole remnant of his
fortunes; he was transported in a bark to the place of his
banishment at Antinopolis in Upper Egypt, and the præfect
of the East begged his bread through the cities which had
trembled at his name. During an exile of seven years, his life
was protracted and threatened by the ingenious cruelty of
Theodora; and when her death permitted the emperor to recall a
servant whom he had abandoned with regret, the ambition of John
of Cappadocia was reduced to the humble duties of the sacerdotal
profession. His successors convinced the subjects of Justinian,
that the arts of oppression might still be improved by experience
and industry; the frauds of a Syrian banker were introduced into
the administration of the finances; and the example of the
præfect was diligently copied by the quæstor, the
public and private treasurer, the governors of provinces, and the
principal magistrates of the Eastern empire.
V. The edifices of Justinian were
cemented with the blood and treasure of his people; but those
stately structures appeared to announce the prosperity of the
empire, and actually displayed the skill of their architects.
Both the theory and practice of the arts which depend on
mathematical science and mechanical power, were cultivated under
the patronage of the emperors; the fame of Archimedes was
rivalled by Proclus and Anthemius; and if their
miracles had been related by
intelligent spectators, they might now enlarge the speculations,
instead of exciting the distrust, of philosophers. A tradition
has prevailed, that the Roman fleet was reduced to ashes in the
port of Syracuse, by the burning-glasses of Archimedes; and it is
asserted, that a similar expedient was employed by Proclus to
destroy the Gothic vessels in the harbor of Constantinople, and
to protect his benefactor Anastasius against the bold enterprise
of Vitalian. A machine was fixed on the walls of the city,
consisting of a hexagon mirror of polished brass, with many
smaller and movable polygons to receive and reflect the rays of
the meridian sun; and a consuming flame was darted, to the
distance, perhaps of two hundred feet. The truth of these two
extraordinary facts is invalidated by the silence of the most
authentic historians; and the use of burning-glasses was never
adopted in the attack or defence of places. Yet the admirable
experiments of a French philosopher have demonstrated the
possibility of such a mirror; and, since it is possible, I am
more disposed to attribute the art to the greatest mathematicians
of antiquity, than to give the merit of the fiction to the idle
fancy of a monk or a sophist. According to another story, Proclus
applied sulphur to the destruction of the Gothic fleet; in a
modern imagination, the name of sulphur is instantly connected
with the suspicion of gunpowder, and that suspicion is propagated
by the secret arts of his disciple Anthemius. A citizen of
Tralles in Asia had five sons, who were all distinguished in
their respective professions by merit and success. Olympius
excelled in the knowledge and practice of the Roman
jurisprudence. Dioscorus and Alexander became learned physicians;
but the skill of the former was exercised for the benefit of his
fellow-citizens, while his more ambitious brother acquired wealth
and reputation at Rome. The fame of Metrodorus the grammarian,
and of Anthemius the mathematician and architect, reached the
ears of the emperor Justinian, who invited them to
Constantinople; and while the one instructed the rising
generation in the schools of eloquence, the other filled the
capital and provinces with more lasting monuments of his art. In
a trifling dispute relative to the walls or windows of their
contiguous houses, he had been vanquished by the eloquence of his
neighbor Zeno; but the orator was defeated in his turn by the
master of mechanics, whose malicious, though harmless, stratagems
are darkly represented by the ignorance of Agathias. In a lower
room, Anthemius arranged several vessels or caldrons of water,
each of them covered by the wide bottom of a leathern tube, which
rose to a narrow top, and was artificially conveyed among the
joists and rafters of the adjacent building. A fire was kindled
beneath the caldron; the steam of the boiling water ascended
through the tubes; the house was shaken by the efforts of
imprisoned air, and its trembling inhabitants might wonder that
the city was unconscious of the earthquake which they had felt.
At another time, the friends of Zeno, as they sat at table, were
dazzled by the intolerable light which flashed in their eyes from
the reflecting mirrors of Anthemius; they were astonished by the
noise which he produced from the collision of certain minute and
sonorous particles; and the orator declared in tragic style to
the senate, that a mere mortal must yield to the power of an
antagonist, who shook the earth with the trident of Neptune, and
imitated the thunder and lightning of Jove himself. The genius of
Anthemius, and his colleague Isidore the Milesian, was excited
and employed by a prince, whose taste for architecture had
degenerated into a mischievous and costly passion. His favorite
architects submitted their designs and difficulties to Justinian,
and discreetly confessed how much their laborious meditations
were surpassed by the intuitive knowledge of celestial
inspiration of an emperor, whose views were always directed to
the benefit of his people, the glory of his reign, and the
salvation of his soul.
The principal church, which was dedicated by the founder of
Constantinople to St. Sophia, or the eternal wisdom, had been
twice destroyed by fire; after the exile of John Chrysostom, and
during the Nika of the blue and green
factions. No sooner did the tumult subside, than the Christian
populace deplored their sacrilegious rashness; but they might
have rejoiced in the calamity, had they foreseen the glory of the
new temple, which at the end of forty days was strenuously
undertaken by the piety of Justinian. The ruins were cleared
away, a more spacious plan was described, and as it required the
consent of some proprietors of ground, they obtained the most
exorbitant terms from the eager desires and timorous conscience
of the monarch. Anthemius formed the design, and his genius
directed the hands of ten thousand workmen, whose payment in
pieces of fine silver was never delayed beyond the evening. The
emperor himself, clad in a linen tunic, surveyed each day their
rapid progress, and encouraged their diligence by his
familiarity, his zeal, and his rewards. The new Cathedral of St.
Sophia was consecrated by the patriarch, five years, eleven
months, and ten days from the first foundation; and in the midst
of the solemn festival Justinian exclaimed with devout vanity,
"Glory be to God, who hath thought me worthy to accomplish so
great a work; I have vanquished thee, O Solomon!" But the pride
of the Roman Solomon, before twenty years had elapsed, was
humbled by an earthquake, which overthrew the eastern part of the
dome. Its splendor was again restored by the perseverance of the
same prince; and in the thirty-sixth year of his reign, Justinian
celebrated the second dedication of a temple which remains, after
twelve centuries, a stately monument of his fame. The
architecture of St. Sophia, which is now converted into the
principal mosch, has been imitated by the Turkish sultans, and
that venerable pile continues to excite the fond admiration of
the Greeks, and the more rational curiosity of European
travellers. The eye of the spectator is disappointed by an
irregular prospect of half-domes and shelving roofs: the western
front, the principal approach, is destitute of simplicity and
magnificence; and the scale of dimensions has been much surpassed
by several of the Latin cathedrals. But the architect who first
erected and aerial cupola, is entitled
to the praise of bold design and skilful execution. The dome of
St. Sophia, illuminated by four-and-twenty windows, is formed
with so small a curve, that the depth is equal only to one sixth
of its diameter; the measure of that diameter is one hundred and
fifteen feet, and the lofty centre, where a crescent has
supplanted the cross, rises to the perpendicular height of one
hundred and eighty feet above the pavement. The circle which
encompasses the dome, lightly reposes on four strong arches, and
their weight is firmly supported by four massy piles, whose
strength is assisted, on the northern and southern sides, by four
columns of Egyptian granite. A Greek cross, inscribed in a
quadrangle, represents the form of the edifice; the exact breadth
is two hundred and forty-three feet, and two hundred and
sixty-nine may be assigned for the extreme length from the
sanctuary in the east, to the nine western doors, which open into
the vestibule, and from thence into the
narthex or exterior portico. That
portico was the humble station of the penitents. The nave or body
of the church was filled by the congregation of the faithful; but
the two sexes were prudently distinguished, and the upper and
lower galleries were allotted for the more private devotion of
the women. Beyond the northern and southern piles, a balustrade,
terminated on either side by the thrones of the emperor and the
patriarch, divided the nave from the choir; and the space, as far
as the steps of the altar, was occupied by the clergy and
singers. The altar itself, a name which insensibly became
familiar to Christian ears, was placed in the eastern recess,
artificially built in the form of a demi-cylinder; and this
sanctuary communicated by several doors with the sacristy, the
vestry, the baptistery, and the contiguous buildings, subservient
either to the pomp of worship, or the private use of the
ecclesiastical ministers. The memory of past calamities inspired
Justinian with a wise resolution, that no wood, except for the
doors, should be admitted into the new edifice; and the choice of
the materials was applied to the strength, the lightness, or the
splendor of the respective parts. The solid piles which contained
the cupola were composed of huge blocks of freestone, hewn into
squares and triangles, fortified by circles of iron, and firmly
cemented by the infusion of lead and quicklime: but the weight of
the cupola was diminished by the levity of its substance, which
consists either of pumice-stone that floats in the water, or of
bricks from the Isle of Rhodes, five times less ponderous than
the ordinary sort. The whole frame of the edifice was constructed
of brick; but those base materials were concealed by a crust of
marble; and the inside of St. Sophia, the cupola, the two larger,
and the six smaller, semi-domes, the walls, the hundred columns,
and the pavement, delight even the eyes of Barbarians, with a
rich and variegated picture. A poet, who beheld the primitive
lustre of St. Sophia, enumerates the colors, the shades, and the
spots of ten or twelve marbles, jaspers, and porphyries, which
nature had profusely diversified, and which were blended and
contrasted as it were by a skilful painter. The triumph of Christ
was adorned with the last spoils of Paganism, but the greater
part of these costly stones was extracted from the quarries of
Asia Minor, the isles and continent of Greece, Egypt, Africa, and
Gaul. Eight columns of porphyry, which Aurelian had placed in the
temple of the sun, were offered by the piety of a Roman matron;
eight others of green marble were presented by the ambitious zeal
of the magistrates of Ephesus: both are admirable by their size
and beauty, but every order of architecture disclaims their
fantastic capital. A variety of ornaments and figures was
curiously expressed in mosaic; and the images of Christ, of the
Virgin, of saints, and of angels, which have been defaced by
Turkish fanaticism, were dangerously exposed to the superstition
of the Greeks. According to the sanctity of each object, the
precious metals were distributed in thin leaves or in solid
masses. The balustrade of the choir, the capitals of the pillars,
the ornaments of the doors and galleries, were of gilt bronze;
the spectator was dazzled by the glittering aspect of the cupola;
the sanctuary contained forty thousand pounds weight of silver;
and the holy vases and vestments of the altar were of the purest
gold, enriched with inestimable gems. Before the structure of the
church had arisen two cubits above the ground, forty-five
thousand two hundred pounds were already consumed; and the whole
expense amounted to three hundred and twenty thousand: each
reader, according to the measure of his belief, may estimate
their value either in gold or silver; but the sum of one million
sterling is the result of the lowest computation. A magnificent
temple is a laudable monument of national taste and religion; and
the enthusiast who entered the dome of St. Sophia might be
tempted to suppose that it was the residence, or even the
workmanship, of the Deity. Yet how dull is the artifice, how
insignificant is the labor, if it be compared with the formation
of the vilest insect that crawls upon the surface of the
temple!
So minute a description of an edifice which time has
respected, may attest the truth, and excuse the relation, of the
innumerable works, both in the capital and provinces, which
Justinian constructed on a smaller scale and less durable
foundations. In Constantinople alone and the adjacent suburbs, he
dedicated twenty-five churches to the honor of Christ, the
Virgin, and the saints: most of these churches were decorated
with marble and gold; and their various situation was skilfully
chosen in a populous square, or a pleasant grove; on the margin
of the sea-shore, or on some lofty eminence which overlooked the
continents of Europe and Asia. The church of the Holy Apostles at
Constantinople, and that of St. John at Ephesus, appear to have
been framed on the same model: their domes aspired to imitate the
cupolas of St. Sophia; but the altar was more judiciously placed
under the centre of the dome, at the junction of four stately
porticos, which more accurately expressed the figure of the Greek
cross. The Virgin of Jerusalem might exult in the temple erected
by her Imperial votary on a most ungrateful spot, which afforded
neither ground nor materials to the architect. A level was formed
by raising part of a deep valley to the height of the mountain.
The stones of a neighboring quarry were hewn into regular forms;
each block was fixed on a peculiar carriage, drawn by forty of
the strongest oxen, and the roads were widened for the passage of
such enormous weights. Lebanon furnished her loftiest cedars for
the timbers of the church; and the seasonable discovery of a vein
of red marble supplied its beautiful columns, two of which, the
supporters of the exterior portico, were esteemed the largest in
the world. The pious munificence of the emperor was diffused over
the Holy Land; and if reason should condemn the monasteries of
both sexes which were built or restored by Justinian, yet charity
must applaud the wells which he sunk, and the hospitals which he
founded, for the relief of the weary pilgrims. The schismatical
temper of Egypt was ill entitled to the royal bounty; but in
Syria and Africa, some remedies were applied to the disasters of
wars and earthquakes, and both Carthage and Antioch, emerging
from their ruins, might revere the name of their gracious
benefactor. Almost every saint in the calendar acquired the
honors of a temple; almost every city of the empire obtained the
solid advantages of bridges, hospitals, and aqueducts; but the
severe liberality of the monarch disdained to indulge his
subjects in the popular luxury of baths and theatres. While
Justinian labored for the public service, he was not unmindful of
his own dignity and ease. The Byzantine palace, which had been
damaged by the conflagration, was restored with new magnificence;
and some notion may be conceived of the whole edifice, by the
vestibule or hall, which, from the doors perhaps, or the roof,
was surnamed chalce, or the brazen. The
dome of a spacious quadrangle was supported by massy pillars; the
pavement and walls were incrusted with many-colored marbles --
the emerald green of Laconia, the fiery red, and the white
Phrygian stone, intersected with veins of a sea-green hue: the
mosaic paintings of the dome and sides represented the glories of
the African and Italian triumphs. On the Asiatic shore of the
Propontis, at a small distance to the east of Chalcedon, the
costly palace and gardens of Heræum were prepared for the
summer residence of Justinian, and more especially of Theodora.
The poets of the age have celebrated the rare alliance of nature
and art, the harmony of the nymphs of the groves, the fountains,
and the waves: yet the crowd of attendants who followed the court
complained of their inconvenient lodgings, and the nymphs were
too often alarmed by the famous Porphyrio, a whale of ten cubits
in breadth, and thirty in length, who was stranded at the mouth
of the River Sangaris, after he had infested more than half a
century the seas of Constantinople.
The fortifications of Europe and Asia were multiplied by
Justinian; but the repetition of those timid and fruitless
precautions exposes, to a philosophic eye, the debility of the
empire. From Belgrade to the Euxine, from the conflux of the Save
to the mouth of the Danube, a chain of above fourscore fortified
places was extended along the banks of the great river. Single
watch-towers were changed into spacious citadels; vacant walls,
which the engineers contracted or enlarged according to the
nature of the ground, were filled with colonies or garrisons; a
strong fortress defended the ruins of Trajan's bridge, and
several military stations affected to spread beyond the Danube
the pride of the Roman name. But that name was divested of its
terrors; the Barbarians, in their annual inroads, passed, and
contemptuously repassed, before these useless bulwarks; and the
inhabitants of the frontier, instead of reposing under the shadow
of the general defence, were compelled to guard, with incessant
vigilance, their separate habitations. The solitude of ancient
cities, was replenished; the new foundations of Justinian
acquired, perhaps too hastily, the epithets of impregnable and
populous; and the auspicious place of his own nativity attracted
the grateful reverence of the vainest of princes. Under the name
of Justiniana prima, the obscure
village of Tauresium became the seat of an archbishop and a
præfect, whose jurisdiction extended over seven warlike
provinces of Illyricum; and the corrupt apellation of
Giustendil still indicates, about
twenty miles to the south of Sophia, the residence of a Turkish
sanjak. For the use of the emperor's countryman, a cathedral, a
place, and an aqueduct, were speedily constructed; the public and
private edifices were adapted to the greatness of a royal city;
and the strength of the walls resisted, during the lifetime of
Justinian, the unskilful assaults of the Huns and Sclavonians.
Their progress was sometimes retarded, and their hopes of rapine
were disappointed, by the innumerable castles which, in the
provinces of Dacia, Epirus, Thessaly, Macedonia, and Thrace,
appeared to cover the whole face of the country. Six hundred of
these forts were built or repaired by the emperor; but it seems
reasonable to believe, that the far greater part consisted only
of a stone or brick tower, in the midst of a square or circular
area, which was surrounded by a wall and ditch, and afforded in a
moment of danger some protection to the peasants and cattle of
the neighboring villages. Yet these military works, which
exhausted the public treasure, could not remove the just
apprehensions of Justinian and his European subjects. The warm
baths of Anchialus in Thrace were rendered as safe as they were
salutary; but the rich pastures of Thessalonica were foraged by
the Scythian cavalry; the delicious vale of Tempe, three hundred
miles from the Danube, was continually alarmed by the sound of
war; and no unfortified spot, however distant or solitary, could
securely enjoy the blessings of peace. The Straits of
Thermopylæ, which seemed to protect, but which had so often
betrayed, the safety of Greece, were diligently strengthened by
the labors of Justinian. From the edge of the sea-shore, through
the forests and valleys, and as far as the summit of the
Thessalian mountains, a strong wall was continued, which occupied
every practicable entrance. Instead of a hasty crowd of peasants,
a garrison of two thousand soldiers was stationed along the
rampart; granaries of corn and reservoirs of water were provided
for their use; and by a precaution that inspired the cowardice
which it foresaw, convenient fortresses were erected for their
retreat. The walls of Corinth, overthrown by an earthquake, and
the mouldering bulwarks of Athens and Platæa, were
carefully restored; the Barbarians were discouraged by the
prospect of successive and painful sieges: and the naked cities
of Peloponnesus were covered by the fortifications of the Isthmus
of Corinth. At the extremity of Europe, another peninsula, the
Thracian Chersonesus, runs three days' journey into the sea, to
form, with the adjacent shores of Asia, the Straits of the
Hellespont. The intervals between eleven populous towns were
filled by lofty woods, fair pastures, and arable lands; and the
isthmus, of thirty seven stadia or furlongs, had been fortified
by a Spartan general nine hundred years before the reign of
Justinian. In an age of freedom and valor, the slightest rampart
may prevent a surprise; and Procopius appears insensible of the
superiority of ancient times, while he praises the solid
construction and double parapet of a wall, whose long arms
stretched on either side into the sea; but whose strength was
deemed insufficient to guard the Chersonesus, if each city, and
particularly Gallipoli and Sestus, had not been secured by their
peculiar fortifications. The long wall,
as it was emphatically styled, was a work as disgraceful in the
object, as it was respectable in the execution. The riches of a
capital diffuse themselves over the neighboring country, and the
territory of Constantinople a paradise of nature, was adorned
with the luxurious gardens and villas of the senators and opulent
citizens. But their wealth served only to attract the bold and
rapacious Barbarians; the noblest of the Romans, in the bosom of
peaceful indolence, were led away into Scythian captivity, and
their sovereign might view from his palace the hostile flames
which were insolently spread to the gates of the Imperial city.
At the distance only of forty miles, Anastasius was constrained
to establish a last frontier; his long wall, of sixty miles from
the Propontis to the Euxine, proclaimed the impotence of his
arms; and as the danger became more imminent, new fortifications
were added by the indefatigable prudence of Justinian.
Asia Minor, after the submission of the Isaurians, remained
without enemies and without fortifications. Those bold savages,
who had disdained to be the subjects of Gallienus, persisted two
hundred and thirty years in a life of independence and rapine.
The most successful princes respected the strength of the
mountains and the despair of the natives; their fierce spirit was
sometimes soothed with gifts, and sometimes restrained by terror;
and a military count, with three legions, fixed his permanent and
ignominious station in the heart of the Roman provinces. But no
sooner was the vigilance of power relaxed or diverted, than the
light-armed squadrons descended from the hills, and invaded the
peaceful plenty of Asia. Although the Isaurians were not
remarkable for stature or bravery, want rendered them bold, and
experience made them skilful in the exercise of predatory war.
They advanced with secrecy and speed to the attack of villages
and defenceless towns; their flying parties have sometimes
touched the Hellespont, the Euxine, and the gates of Tarsus,
Antioch, or Damascus; and the spoil was lodged in their
inaccessible mountains, before the Roman troops had received
their orders, or the distant province had computed its loss. The
guilt of rebellion and robbery excluded them from the rights of
national enemies; and the magistrates were instructed, by an
edict, that the trial or punishment of an Isaurian, even on the
festival of Easter, was a meritorious act of justice and piety.
If the captives were condemned to domestic slavery, they
maintained, with their sword or dagger, the private quarrel of
their masters; and it was found expedient for the public
tranquillity to prohibit the service of such dangerous retainers.
When their countryman Tarcalissæus or Zeno ascended the
throne, he invited a faithful and formidable band of Isaurians,
who insulted the court and city, and were rewarded by an annual
tribute of five thousand pounds of gold. But the hopes of fortune
depopulated the mountains, luxury enervated the hardiness of
their minds and bodies, and in proportion as they mixed with
mankind, they became less qualified for the enjoyment of poor and
solitary freedom. After the death of Zeno, his successor
Anastasius suppressed their pensions, exposed their persons to
the revenge of the people, banished them from Constantinople, and
prepared to sustain a war, which left only the alternative of
victory or servitude. A brother of the last emperor usurped the
title of Augustus; his cause was powerfully supported by the
arms, the treasures, and the magazines, collected by Zeno; and
the native Isaurians must have formed the smallest portion of the
hundred and fifty thousand Barbarians under his standard, which
was sanctified, for the first time, by the presence of a fighting
bishop. Their disorderly numbers were vanquished in the plains of
Phrygia by the valor and discipline of the Goths; but a war of
six years almost exhausted the courage of the emperor. The
Isaurians retired to their mountains; their fortresses were
successively besieged and ruined; their communication with the
sea was intercepted; the bravest of their leaders died in arms;
the surviving chiefs, before their execution, were dragged in
chains through the hippodrome; a colony of their youth was
transplanted into Thrace, and the remnant of the people submitted
to the Roman government. Yet some generations elapsed before
their minds were reduced to the level of slavery. The populous
villages of Mount Taurus were filled with horsemen and archers:
they resisted the imposition of tributes, but they recruited the
armies of Justinian; and his civil magistrates, the proconsul of
Cappadocia, the count of Isauria, and the prætors of
Lycaonia and Pisidia, were invested with military power to
restrain the licentious practice of rapes and assassinations.
Chapter XL: Reign Of Justinian. -- Part
V.
If we extend our view from the tropic to the mouth of the
Tanais, we may observe, on one hand, the precautions of Justinian
to curb the savages of Æthiopia, and on the other, the long
walls which he constructed in Crimæa for the protection of
his friendly Goths, a colony of three thousand shepherds and
warriors. From that peninsula to Trebizond, the eastern curve of
the Euxine was secured by forts, by alliance, or by religion; and
the possession of Lazica, the Colchos
of ancient, the Mingrelia of modern, geography, soon became the
object of an important war. Trebizond, in after-times the seat of
a romantic empire, was indebted to the liberality of Justinian
for a church, an aqueduct, and a castle, whose ditches are hewn
in the solid rock. From that maritime city, frontier line of five
hundred miles may be drawn to the fortress of Circesium, the last
Roman station on the Euphrates. Above Trebizond immediately, and
five days' journey to the south, the country rises into dark
forests and craggy mountains, as savage though not so lofty as
the Alps and the Pyrenees. In this rigorous climate, where the
snows seldom melt, the fruits are tardy and tasteless, even honey
is poisonous: the most industrious tillage would be confined to
some pleasant valleys; and the pastoral tribes obtained a scanty
sustenance from the flesh and milk of their cattle. The
Chalybians derived their name and
temper from the iron quality of the soil; and, since the days of
Cyrus, they might produce, under the various appellations of
Chadæans and Zanians, an uninterrupted prescription of war
and rapine. Under the reign of Justinian, they acknowledged the
god and the emperor of the Romans, and seven fortresses were
built in the most accessible passages, to exclude the ambition of
the Persian monarch. The principal source of the Euphrates
descends from the Chalybian mountains, and seems to flow towards
the west and the Euxine: bending to the south-west, the river
passes under the walls of Satala and Melitene, (which were
restored by Justinian as the bulwarks of the Lesser Armenia,) and
gradually approaches the Mediterranean Sea; till at length,
repelled by Mount Taurus, the Euphrates inclines its long and
flexible course to the south-east and the Gulf of Persia. Among
the Roman cities beyond the Euphrates, we distinguish two recent
foundations, which were named from Theodosius, and the relics of
the martyrs; and two capitals, Amida and Edessa, which are
celebrated in the history of every age. Their strength was
proportioned by Justinian to the danger of their situation. A
ditch and palisade might be sufficient to resist the artless
force of the cavalry of Scythia; but more elaborate works were
required to sustain a regular siege against the arms and
treasures of the great king. His skilful engineers understood the
methods of conducting deep mines, and of raising platforms to the
level of the rampart: he shook the strongest battlements with his
military engines, and sometimes advanced to the assault with a
line of movable turrets on the backs of elephants. In the great
cities of the East, the disadvantage of space, perhaps of
position, was compensated by the zeal of the people, who seconded
the garrison in the defence of their country and religion; and
the fabulous promise of the Son of God, that Edessa should never
be taken, filled the citizens with valiant confidence, and
chilled the besiegers with doubt and dismay. The subordinate
towns of Armenia and Mesopotamia were diligently strengthened,
and the posts which appeared to have any command of ground or
water were occupied by numerous forts, substantially built of
stone, or more hastily erected with the obvious materials of
earth and brick. The eye of Justinian investigated every spot;
and his cruel precautions might attract the war into some lonely
vale, whose peaceful natives, connected by trade and marriage,
were ignorant of national discord and the quarrels of princes.
Westward of the Euphrates, a sandy desert extends above six
hundred miles to the Red Sea. Nature had interposed a vacant
solitude between the ambition of two rival empires; the Arabians,
till Mahomet arose, were formidable only as robbers; and in the
proud security of peace the fortifications of Syria were
neglected on the most vulnerable side.
But the national enmity, at least the effects of that enmity,
had been suspended by a truce, which continued above fourscore
years. An ambassador from the emperor Zeno accompanied the rash
and unfortunate Perozes, * in his expedition against the
Nepthalites, or white Huns, whose conquests had been stretched
from the Caspian to the heart of India, whose throne was enriched
with emeralds, and whose cavalry was supported by a line of two
thousand elephants. The Persians * were twice circumvented, in a
situation which made valor useless and flight impossible; and the
double victory of the Huns was achieved by military stratagem.
They dismissed their royal captive after he had submitted to
adore the majesty of a Barbarian; and the humiliation was poorly
evaded by the casuistical subtlety of the Magi, who instructed
Perozes to direct his attention to the rising sun. The indignant
successor of Cyrus forgot his danger and his gratitude; he
renewed the attack with headstrong fury, and lost both his army
and his life. The death of Perozes abandoned Persia to her
foreign and domestic enemies; and twelve years of confusion
elapsed before his son Cabades, or Kobad, could embrace any
designs of ambition or revenge. The unkind parsimony of
Anastasius was the motive or pretence of a Roman war; the Huns
and Arabs marched under the Persian standard, and the
fortifications of Armenia and Mesopotamia were, at that time, in
a ruinous or imperfect condition. The emperor returned his thanks
to the governor and people of Martyropolis for the prompt
surrender of a city which could not be successfully defended, and
the conflagration of Theodosiopolis might justify the conduct of
their prudent neighbors. Amida sustained a long and destructive
siege: at the end of three months the loss of fifty thousand of
the soldiers of Cabades was not balanced by any prospect of
success, and it was in vain that the Magi deduced a flattering
prediction from the indecency of the women * on the ramparts, who
had revealed their most secret charms to the eyes of the
assailants. At length, in a silent night, they ascended the most
accessible tower, which was guarded only by some monks,
oppressed, after the duties of a festival, with sleep and wine.
Scaling-ladders were applied at the dawn of day; the presence of
Cabades, his stern command, and his drawn sword, compelled the
Persians to vanquish; and before it was sheathed, fourscore
thousand of the inhabitants had expiated the blood of their
companions. After the siege of Amida, the war continued three
years, and the unhappy frontier tasted the full measure of its
calamities. The gold of Anastasius was offered too late, the
number of his troops was defeated by the number of their
generals; the country was stripped of its inhabitants, and both
the living and the dead were abandoned to the wild beasts of the
desert. The resistance of Edessa, and the deficiency of spoil,
inclined the mind of Cabades to peace: he sold his conquests for
an exorbitant price; and the same line, though marked with
slaughter and devastation, still separated the two empires. To
avert the repetition of the same evils, Anastasius resolved to
found a new colony, so strong, that it should defy the power of
the Persian, so far advanced towards Assyria, that its stationary
troops might defend the province by the menace or operation of
offensive war. For this purpose, the town of Dara, fourteen miles
from Nisibis, and four days' journey from the Tigris, was peopled
and adorned; the hasty works of Anastasius were improved by the
perseverance of Justinian; and, without insisting on places less
important, the fortifications of Dara may represent the military
architecture of the age. The city was surrounded with two walls,
and the interval between them, of fifty paces, afforded a retreat
to the cattle of the besieged. The inner wall was a monument of
strength and beauty: it measured sixty feet from the ground, and
the height of the towers was one hundred feet; the loopholes,
from whence an enemy might be annoyed with missile weapons, were
small, but numerous; the soldiers were planted along the rampart,
under the shelter of double galleries, and a third platform,
spacious and secure, was raised on the summit of the towers. The
exterior wall appears to have been less lofty, but more solid;
and each tower was protected by a quadrangular bulwark. A hard,
rocky soil resisted the tools of the miners, and on the
south-east, where the ground was more tractable, their approach
was retarded by a new work, which advanced in the shape of a
half-moon. The double and treble ditches were filled with a
stream of water; and in the management of the river, the most
skilful labor was employed to supply the inhabitants, to distress
the besiegers, and to prevent the mischiefs of a natural or
artificial inundation. Dara continued more than sixty years to
fulfil the wishes of its founders, and to provoke the jealousy of
the Persians, who incessantly complained, that this impregnable
fortress had been constructed in manifest violation of the treaty
of peace between the two empires. *
Between the Euxine and the Caspian, the countries of Colchos,
Iberia, and Albania, are intersected in every direction by the
branches of Mount Caucasus; and the two principal
gates, or passes, from north to south,
have been frequently confounded in the geography both of the
ancients and moderns. The name of
Caspian or
Albanian gates is properly applied to
Derbend, which occupies a short declivity between the mountains
and the sea: the city, if we give credit to local tradition, had
been founded by the Greeks; and this dangerous entrance was
fortified by the kings of Persia with a mole, double walls, and
doors of iron. The Iberian gates * are
formed by a narrow passage of six miles in Mount Caucasus, which
opens from the northern side of Iberia, or Georgia, into the
plain that reaches to the Tanais and the Volga. A fortress,
designed by Alexander perhaps, or one of his successors, to
command that important pass, had descended by right of conquest
or inheritance to a prince of the Huns, who offered it for a
moderate price to the emperor; but while Anastasius paused, while
he timorously computed the cost and the distance, a more vigilant
rival interposed, and Cabades forcibly occupied the Straits of
Caucasus. The Albanian and Iberian gates excluded the horsemen of
Scythia from the shortest and most practicable roads, and the
whole front of the mountains was covered by the rampart of Gog
and Magog, the long wall which has excited the curiosity of an
Arabian caliph and a Russian conqueror. According to a recent
description, huge stones, seven feet thick, and twenty-one feet
in length or height, are artificially joined without iron or
cement, to compose a wall, which runs above three hundred miles
from the shores of Derbend, over the hills, and through the
valleys of Daghestan and Georgia. Without a vision, such a work
might be undertaken by the policy of Cabades; without a miracle,
it might be accomplished by his son, so formidable to the Romans,
under the name of Chosroes; so dear to the Orientals, under the
appellation of Nushirwan. The Persian monarch held in his hand
the keys both of peace and war; but he stipulated, in every
treaty, that Justinian should contribute to the expense of a
common barrier, which equally protected the two empires from the
inroads of the Scythians.
VII. Justinian suppressed the schools of Athens and the
consulship of Rome, which had given so many sages and heroes to
mankind. Both these institutions had long since degenerated from
their primitive glory; yet some reproach may be justly inflicted
on the avarice and jealousy of a prince, by whose hand such
venerable ruins were destroyed.
Athens, after her Persian triumphs, adopted the philosophy of
Ionia and the rhetoric of Sicily; and these studies became the
patrimony of a city, whose inhabitants, about thirty thousand
males, condensed, within the period of a single life, the genius
of ages and millions. Our sense of the dignity of human nature is
exalted by the simple recollection, that Isocrates was the
companion of Plato and Xenophon; that he assisted, perhaps with
the historian Thucydides, at the first representation of the
dipus of Sophocles and the Iphigenia of Euripides; and that his
pupils Æschines and Demosthenes contended for the crown of
patriotism in the presence of Aristotle, the master of
Theophrastus, who taught at Athens with the founders of the Stoic
and Epicurean sects. The ingenuous youth of Attica enjoyed the
benefits of their domestic education, which was communicated
without envy to the rival cities. Two thousand disciples heard
the lessons of Theophrastus; the schools of rhetoric must have
been still more populous than those of philosophy; and a rapid
succession of students diffused the fame of their teachers as far
as the utmost limits of the Grecian language and name. Those
limits were enlarged by the victories of Alexander; the arts of
Athens survived her freedom and dominion; and the Greek colonies
which the Macedonians planted in Egypt, and scattered over Asia,
undertook long and frequent pilgrimages to worship the Muses in
their favorite temple on the banks of the Ilissus. The Latin
conquerors respectfully listened to the instructions of their
subjects and captives; the names of Cicero and Horace were
enrolled in the schools of Athens; and after the perfect
settlement of the Roman empire, the natives of Italy, of Africa,
and of Britain, conversed in the groves of the academy with their
fellow-students of the East. The studies of philosophy and
eloquence are congenial to a popular state, which encourages the
freedom of inquiry, and submits only to the force of persuasion.
In the republics of Greece and Rome, the art of speaking was the
powerful engine of patriotism or ambition; and the schools of
rhetoric poured forth a colony of statesmen and legislators. When
the liberty of public debate was suppressed, the orator, in the
honorable profession of an advocate, might plead the cause of
innocence and justice; he might abuse his talents in the more
profitable trade of panegyric; and the same precepts continued to
dictate the fanciful declamations of the sophist, and the chaster
beauties of historical composition. The systems which professed
to unfold the nature of God, of man, and of the universe,
entertained the curiosity of the philosophic student; and
according to the temper of his mind, he might doubt with the
Sceptics, or decide with the Stoics, sublimely speculate with
Plato, or severely argue with Aristotle. The pride of the adverse
sects had fixed an unattainable term of moral happiness and
perfection; but the race was glorious and salutary; the disciples
of Zeno, and even those of Epicurus, were taught both to act and
to suffer; and the death of Petronius was not less effectual than
that of Seneca, to humble a tyrant by the discovery of his
impotence. The light of science could not indeed be confined
within the walls of Athens. Her incomparable writers address
themselves to the human race; the living masters emigrated to
Italy and Asia; Berytus, in later times, was devoted to the study
of the law; astronomy and physic were cultivated in the
musæum of Alexandria; but the Attic schools of rhetoric and
philosophy maintained their superior reputation from the
Peloponnesian war to the reign of Justinian. Athens, though
situate in a barren soil, possessed a pure air, a free
navigation, and the monuments of ancient art. That sacred
retirement was seldom disturbed by the business of trade or
government; and the last of the Athenians were distinguished by
their lively wit, the purity of their taste and language, their
social manners, and some traces, at least in discourse, of the
magnanimity of their fathers. In the suburbs of the city, the
academy of the Platonists, the
lycum of the Peripatetics, the
portico of the Stoics, and the
garden of the Epicureans, were planted
with trees and decorated with statues; and the philosophers,
instead of being immured in a cloister, delivered their
instructions in spacious and pleasant walks, which, at different
hours, were consecrated to the exercises of the mind and body.
The genius of the founders still lived in those venerable seats;
the ambition of succeeding to the masters of human reason excited
a generous emulation; and the merit of the candidates was
determined, on each vacancy, by the free voices of an enlightened
people. The Athenian professors were paid by their disciples:
according to their mutual wants and abilities, the price appears
to have varied; and Isocrates himself, who derides the avarice of
the sophists, required, in his school of rhetoric, about thirty
pounds from each of his hundred pupils. The wages of industry are
just and honorable, yet the same Isocrates shed tears at the
first receipt of a stipend: the Stoic might blush when he was
hired to preach the contempt of money; and I should be sorry to
discover that Aristotle or Plato so far degenerated from the
example of Socrates, as to exchange knowledge for gold. But some
property of lands and houses was settled by the permission of the
laws, and the legacies of deceased friends, on the philosophic
chairs of Athens. Epicurus bequeathed to his disciples the
gardens which he had purchased for eighty minæ or two
hundred and fifty pounds, with a fund sufficient for their frugal
subsistence and monthly festivals; and the patrimony of Plato
afforded an annual rent, which, in eight centuries, was gradually
increased from three to one thousand pieces of gold. The schools
of Athens were protected by the wisest and most virtuous of the
Roman princes. The library, which Hadrian founded, was placed in
a portico adorned with pictures, statues, and a roof of
alabaster, and supported by one hundred columns of Phrygian
marble. The public salaries were assigned by the generous spirit
of the Antonines; and each professor of politics, of rhetoric, of
the Platonic, the Peripatetic, the Stoic, and the Epicurean
philosophy, received an annual stipend of ten thousand
drachmæ, or more than three hundred pounds sterling. After
the death of Marcus, these liberal donations, and the privileges
attached to the thrones of science,
were abolished and revived, diminished and enlarged; but some
vestige of royal bounty may be found under the successors of
Constantine; and their arbitrary choice of an unworthy candidate
might tempt the philosophers of Athens to regret the days of
independence and poverty. It is remarkable, that the impartial
favor of the Antonines was bestowed on the four adverse sects of
philosophy, which they considered as equally useful, or at least,
as equally innocent. Socrates had formerly been the glory and the
reproach of his country; and the first lessons of Epicurus so
strangely scandalized the pious ears of the Athenians, that by
his exile, and that of his antagonists, they silenced all vain
disputes concerning the nature of the gods. But in the ensuing
year they recalled the hasty decree, restored the liberty of the
schools, and were convinced by the experience of ages, that the
moral character of philosophers is not affected by the diversity
of their theological speculations.
The Gothic arms were less fatal to the schools of Athens than
the establishment of a new religion, whose ministers superseded
the exercise of reason, resolved every question by an article of
faith, and condemned the infidel or sceptic to eternal flames. In
many a volume of laborious controversy, they exposed the weakness
of the understanding and the corruption of the heart, insulted
human nature in the sages of antiquity, and proscribed the spirit
of philosophical inquiry, so repugnant to the doctrine, or at
least to the temper, of an humble believer. The surviving sects
of the Platonists, whom Plato would have blushed to acknowledge,
extravagantly mingled a sublime theory with the practice of
superstition and magic; and as they remained alone in the midst
of a Christian world, they indulged a secret rancor against the
government of the church and state, whose severity was still
suspended over their heads. About a century after the reign of
Julian, Proclus was permitted to teach in the philosophic chair
of the academy; and such was his industry, that he frequently, in
the same day, pronounced five lessons, and composed seven hundred
lines. His sagacious mind explored the deepest questions of
morals and metaphysics, and he ventured to urge eighteen
arguments against the Christian doctrine of the creation of the
world. But in the intervals of study, he
personally conversed with Pan,
Æsculapius, and Minerva, in whose mysteries he was secretly
initiated, and whose prostrate statues he adored; in the devout
persuasion that the philosopher, who is a citizen of the
universe, should be the priest of its various deities. An eclipse
of the sun announced his approaching end; and his life, with that
of his scholar Isidore, compiled by two of their most learned
disciples, exhibits a deplorable picture of the second childhood
of human reason. Yet the golden chain, as it was fondly styled,
of the Platonic succession, continued forty-four years from the
death of Proclus to the edict of Justinian, which imposed a
perpetual silence on the schools of Athens, and excited the grief
and indignation of the few remaining votaries of Grecian science
and superstition. Seven friends and philosophers, Diogenes and
Hermias, Eulalius and Priscian, Damascius, Isidore, and
Simplicius, who dissented from the religion of their sovereign,
embraced the resolution of seeking in a foreign land the freedom
which was denied in their native country. They had heard, and
they credulously believed, that the republic of Plato was
realized in the despotic government of Persia, and that a patriot
king reigned ever the happiest and most virtuous of nations. They
were soon astonished by the natural discovery, that Persia
resembled the other countries of the globe; that Chosroes, who
affected the name of a philosopher, was vain, cruel, and
ambitious; that bigotry, and a spirit of intolerance, prevailed
among the Magi; that the nobles were haughty, the courtiers
servile, and the magistrates unjust; that the guilty sometimes
escaped, and that the innocent were often oppressed. The
disappointment of the philosophers provoked them to overlook the
real virtues of the Persians; and they were scandalized, more
deeply perhaps than became their profession, with the plurality
of wives and concubines, the incestuous marriages, and the custom
of exposing dead bodies to the dogs and vultures, instead of
hiding them in the earth, or consuming them with fire. Their
repentance was expressed by a precipitate return, and they loudly
declared that they had rather die on the borders of the empire,
than enjoy the wealth and favor of the Barbarian. From this
journey, however, they derived a benefit which reflects the
purest lustre on the character of Chosroes. He required, that the
seven sages who had visited the court of Persia should be
exempted from the penal laws which Justinian enacted against his
Pagan subjects; and this privilege, expressly stipulated in a
treaty of peace, was guarded by the vigilance of a powerful
mediator. Simplicius and his companions ended their lives in
peace and obscurity; and as they left no disciples, they
terminate the long list of Grecian philosophers, who may be
justly praised, notwithstanding their defects, as the wisest and
most virtuous of their contemporaries. The writings of Simplicius
are now extant. His physical and metaphysical commentaries on
Aristotle have passed away with the fashion of the times; but his
moral interpretation of Epictetus is preserved in the library of
nations, as a classic book, most excellently adapted to direct
the will, to purify the heart, and to confirm the understanding,
by a just confidence in the nature both of God and man.
About the same time that Pythagoras first invented the
appellation of philosopher, liberty and the consulship were
founded at Rome by the elder Brutus. The revolutions of the
consular office, which may be viewed in the successive lights of
a substance, a shadow, and a name, have been occasionally
mentioned in the present History. The first magistrates of the
republic had been chosen by the people, to exercise, in the
senate and in the camp, the powers of peace and war, which were
afterwards translated to the emperors. But the tradition of
ancient dignity was long revered by the Romans and Barbarians. A
Gothic historian applauds the consulship of Theodoric as the
height of all temporal glory and greatness; the king of Italy
himself congratulated those annual favorites of fortune who,
without the cares, enjoyed the splendor of the throne; and at the
end of a thousand years, two consuls were created by the
sovereigns of Rome and Constantinople, for the sole purpose of
giving a date to the year, and a festival to the people. But the
expenses of this festival, in which the wealthy and the vain
aspired to surpass their predecessors, insensibly arose to the
enormous sum of fourscore thousand pounds; the wisest senators
declined a useless honor, which involved the certain ruin of
their families, and to this reluctance I should impute the
frequent chasms in the last age of the consular Fasti. The
predecessors of Justinian had assisted from the public treasures
the dignity of the less opulent candidates; the avarice of that
prince preferred the cheaper and more convenient method of advice
and regulation. Seven processions or
spectacles were the number to which his edict confined the horse
and chariot races, the athletic sports, the music, and pantomimes
of the theatre, and the hunting of wild beasts; and small pieces
of silver were discreetly substituted to the gold medals, which
had always excited tumult and drunkenness, when they were
scattered with a profuse hand among the populace. Notwithstanding
these precautions, and his own example, the succession of consuls
finally ceased in the thirteenth year of Justinian, whose
despotic temper might be gratified by the silent extinction of a
title which admonished the Romans of their ancient freedom. Yet
the annual consulship still lived in the minds of the people;
they fondly expected its speedy restoration; they applauded the
gracious condescension of successive princes, by whom it was
assumed in the first year of their reign; and three centuries
elapsed, after the death of Justinian, before that obsolete
dignity, which had been suppressed by custom, could be abolished
by law. The imperfect mode of distinguishing each year by the
name of a magistrate, was usefully supplied by the date of a
permanent æra: the creation of the world, according to the
Septuagint version, was adopted by the Greeks; and the Latins,
since the age of Charlemagne, have computed their time from the
birth of Christ.
Chapter XLI: Conquests Of Justinian, Character Of
Balisarius.
Part I.
Conquests Of Justinian In The West. -- Character And First
Campaigns Of Belisarius -- He Invades And Subdues The Vandal
Kingdom Of Africa -- His Triumph. -- The Gothic War. -- He
Recovers Sicily, Naples, And Rome. -- Siege Of Rome By The Goths.
-- Their Retreat And Losses. -- Surrender Of Ravenna. -- Glory Of
Belisarius. -- His Domestic Shame And Misfortunes.
When Justinian ascended the throne, about fifty years after
the fall of the Western empire, the kingdoms of the Goths and
Vandals had obtained a solid, and, as it might seem, a legal
establishment both in Europe and Africa. The titles, which Roman
victory had inscribed, were erased with equal justice by the
sword of the Barbarians; and their successful rapine derived a
more venerable sanction from time, from treaties, and from the
oaths of fidelity, already repeated by a second or third
generation of obedient subjects. Experience and Christianity had
refuted the superstitious hope, that Rome was founded by the gods
to reign forever over the nations of the earth. But the proud
claim of perpetual and indefeasible dominion, which her soldiers
could no longer maintain, was firmly asserted by her statesmen
and lawyers, whose opinions have been sometimes revived and
propagated in the modern schools of jurisprudence. After Rome
herself had been stripped of the Imperial purple, the princes of
Constantinople assumed the sole and sacred sceptre of the
monarchy; demanded, as their rightful inheritance, the provinces
which had been subdued by the consuls, or possessed by the
Cæsars; and feebly aspired to deliver their faithful
subjects of the West from the usurpation of heretics and
Barbarians. The execution of this splendid design was in some
degree reserved for Justinian. During the five first years of his
reign, he reluctantly waged a costly and unprofitable war against
the Persians; till his pride submitted to his ambition, and he
purchased at the price of four hundred and forty thousand pounds
sterling, the benefit of a precarious truce, which, in the
language of both nations, was dignified with the appellation of
the endless peace. The safety of the
East enabled the emperor to employ his forces against the
Vandals; and the internal state of Africa afforded an honorable
motive, and promised a powerful support, to the Roman arms.
According to the testament of the founder, the African kingdom
had lineally descended to Hilderic, the eldest of the Vandal
princes. A mild disposition inclined the son of a tyrant, the
grandson of a conqueror, to prefer the counsels of clemency and
peace; and his accession was marked by the salutary edict, which
restored two hundred bishops to their churches, and allowed the
free profession of the Athanasian creed. But the Catholics
accepted, with cold and transient gratitude, a favor so
inadequate to their pretensions, and the virtues of Hilderic
offended the prejudices of his countrymen. The Arian clergy
presumed to insinuate that he had renounced the faith, and the
soldiers more loudly complained that he had degenerated from the
courage, of his ancestors. His ambassadors were suspected of a
secret and disgraceful negotiation in the Byzantine court; and
his general, the Achilles, as he was named, of the Vandals, lost
a battle against the naked and disorderly Moors. The public
discontent was exasperated by Gelimer, whose age, descent, and
military fame, gave him an apparent title to the succession: he
assumed, with the consent of the nation, the reins of government;
and his unfortunate sovereign sunk without a struggle from the
throne to a dungeon, where he was strictly guarded with a
faithful counsellor, and his unpopular nephew the Achilles of the
Vandals. But the indulgence which Hilderic had shown to his
Catholic subjects had powerfully recommended him to the favor of
Justinian, who, for the benefit of his own sect, could
acknowledge the use and justice of religious toleration: their
alliance, while the nephew of Justin remained in a private
station, was cemented by the mutual exchange of gifts and
letters; and the emperor Justinian asserted the cause of royalty
and friendship. In two successive embassies, he admonished the
usurper to repent of his treason, or to abstain, at least, from
any further violence which might provoke the displeasure of God
and of the Romans; to reverence the laws of kindred and
succession, and to suffer an infirm old man peaceably to end his
days, either on the throne of Carthage or in the palace of
Constantinople. The passions, or even the prudence, of Gelimer
compelled him to reject these requests, which were urged in the
haughty tone of menace and command; and he justified his ambition
in a language rarely spoken in the Byzantine court, by alleging
the right of a free people to remove or punish their chief
magistrate, who had failed in the execution of the kingly office.
After this fruitless expostulation, the captive monarch was more
rigorously treated, his nephew was deprived of his eyes, and the
cruel Vandal, confident in his strength and distance, derided the
vain threats and slow preparations of the emperor of the East.
Justinian resolved to deliver or revenge his friend, Gelimer to
maintain his usurpation; and the war was preceded, according to
the practice of civilized nations, by the most solemn
protestations, that each party was sincerely desirous of
peace.
The report of an African war was grateful only to the vain and
idle populace of Constantinople, whose poverty exempted them from
tribute, and whose cowardice was seldom exposed to military
service. But the wiser citizens, who judged of the future by the
past, revolved in their memory the immense loss, both of men and
money, which the empire had sustained in the expedition of
Basiliscus. The troops, which, after five laborious campaigns,
had been recalled from the Persian frontier, dreaded the sea, the
climate, and the arms of an unknown enemy. The ministers of the
finances computed, as far as they might compute, the demands of
an African war; the taxes which must be found and levied to
supply those insatiate demands; and the danger, lest their own
lives, or at least their lucrative employments, should be made
responsible for the deficiency of the supply. Inspired by such
selfish motives, (for we may not suspect him of any zeal for the
public good,) John of Cappadocia ventured to oppose in full
council the inclinations of his master. He confessed, that a
victory of such importance could not be too dearly purchased; but
he represented in a grave discourse the certain difficulties and
the uncertain event. "You undertake," said the præfect, "to
besiege Carthage: by land, the distance is not less than one
hundred and forty days' journey; on the sea, a whole year must
elapse before you can receive any intelligence from your fleet.
If Africa should be reduced, it cannot be preserved without the
additional conquest of Sicily and Italy. Success will impose the
obligations of new labors; a single misfortune will attract the
Barbarians into the heart of your exhausted empire." Justinian
felt the weight of this salutary advice; he was confounded by the
unwonted freedom of an obsequious servant; and the design of the
war would perhaps have been relinquished, if his courage had not
been revived by a voice which silenced the doubts of profane
reason. "I have seen a vision," cried an artful or fanatic bishop
of the East. "It is the will of Heaven, O emperor! that you
should not abandon your holy enterprise for the deliverance of
the African church. The God of battles will march before your
standard, and disperse your enemies, who are the enemies of his
Son." The emperor, might be tempted, and his counsellors were
constrained, to give credit to this seasonable revelation: but
they derived more rational hope from the revolt, which the
adherents of Hilderic or Athanasius had already excited on the
borders of the Vandal monarchy. Pudentius, an African subject,
had privately signified his loyal intentions, and a small
military aid restored the province of Tripoli to the obedience of
the Romans. The government of Sardinia had been intrusted to
Godas, a valiant Barbarian he suspended the payment of tribute,
disclaimed his allegiance to the usurper, and gave audience to
the emissaries of Justinian, who found him master of that
fruitful island, at the head of his guards, and proudly invested
with the ensigns of royalty. The forces of the Vandals were
diminished by discord and suspicion; the Roman armies were
animated by the spirit of Belisarius; one of those heroic names
which are familiar to every age and to every nation.
The Africanus of new Rome was born, and perhaps educated,
among the Thracian peasants, without any of those advantages
which had formed the virtues of the elder and younger Scipio; a
noble origin, liberal studies, and the emulation of a free state.
The silence of a loquacious secretary may be admitted, to prove
that the youth of Belisarius could not afford any subject of
praise: he served, most assuredly with valor and reputation,
among the private guards of Justinian; and when his patron became
emperor, the domestic was promoted to military command. After a
bold inroad into Persarmenia, in which his glory was shared by a
colleague, and his progress was checked by an enemy, Belisarius
repaired to the important station of Dara, where he first
accepted the service of Procopius, the faithful companion, and
diligent historian, of his exploits. The Mirranes of Persia
advanced, with forty thousand of her best troops, to raze the
fortifications of Dara; and signified the day and the hour on
which the citizens should prepare a bath for his refreshment,
after the toils of victory. He encountered an adversary equal to
himself, by the new title of General of the East; his superior in
the science of war, but much inferior in the number and quality
of his troops, which amounted only to twenty-five thousand Romans
and strangers, relaxed in their discipline, and humbled by recent
disasters. As the level plain of Dara refused all shelter to
stratagem and ambush, Belisarius protected his front with a deep
trench, which was prolonged at first in perpendicular, and
afterwards in parallel, lines, to cover the wings of cavalry
advantageously posted to command the flanks and rear of the
enemy. When the Roman centre was shaken, their well-timed and
rapid charge decided the conflict: the standard of Persia fell;
the immortals fled; the infantry threw
away their bucklers, and eight thousand of the vanquished were
left on the field of battle. In the next campaign, Syria was
invaded on the side of the desert; and Belisarius, with twenty
thousand men, hastened from Dara to the relief of the province.
During the whole summer, the designs of the enemy were baffled by
his skilful dispositions: he pressed their retreat, occupied each
night their camp of the preceding day, and would have secured a
bloodless victory, if he could have resisted the impatience of
his own troops. Their valiant promise was faintly supported in
the hour of battle; the right wing was exposed by the treacherous
or cowardly desertion of the Christian Arabs; the Huns, a veteran
band of eight hundred warriors, were oppressed by superior
numbers; the flight of the Isaurians was intercepted; but the
Roman infantry stood firm on the left; for Belisarius himself,
dismounting from his horse, showed them that intrepid despair was
their only safety. * They turned their backs to the Euphrates,
and their faces to the enemy: innumerable arrows glanced without
effect from the compact and shelving order of their bucklers; an
impenetrable line of pikes was opposed to the repeated assaults
of the Persian cavalry; and after a resistance of many hours, the
remaining troops were skilfully embarked under the shadow of the
night. The Persian commander retired with disorder and disgrace,
to answer a strict account of the lives of so many soldiers,
which he had consumed in a barren victory. But the fame of
Belisarius was not sullied by a defeat, in which he alone had
saved his army from the consequences of their own rashness: the
approach of peace relieved him from the guard of the eastern
frontier, and his conduct in the sedition of Constantinople amply
discharged his obligations to the emperor. When the African war
became the topic of popular discourse and secret deliberation,
each of the Roman generals was apprehensive, rather than
ambitious, of the dangerous honor; but as soon as Justinian had
declared his preference of superior merit, their envy was
rekindled by the unanimous applause which was given to the choice
of Belisarius. The temper of the Byzantine court may encourage a
suspicion, that the hero was darkly assisted by the intrigues of
his wife, the fair and subtle Antonina, who alternately enjoyed
the confidence, and incurred the hatred, of the empress Theodora.
The birth of Antonina was ignoble; she descended from a family of
charioteers; and her chastity has been stained with the foulest
reproach. Yet she reigned with long and absolute power over the
mind of her illustrious husband; and if Antonina disdained the
merit of conjugal fidelity, she expressed a manly friendship to
Belisarius, whom she accompanied with undaunted resolution in all
the hardships and dangers of a military life.
The preparations for the African war were not unworthy of the
last contest between Rome and Carthage. The pride and flower of
the army consisted of the guards of Belisarius, who, according to
the pernicious indulgence of the times, devoted themselves, by a
particular oath of fidelity, to the service of their patrons.
Their strength and stature, for which they had been curiously
selected, the goodness of their horses and armor, and the
assiduous practice of all the exercises of war, enabled them to
act whatever their courage might prompt; and their courage was
exalted by the social honor of their rank, and the personal
ambition of favor and fortune. Four hundred of the bravest of the
Heruli marched under the banner of the faithful and active
Pharas; their untractable valor was more highly prized than the
tame submission of the Greeks and Syrians; and of such importance
was it deemed to procure a reënforcement of six hundred
Massagetæ, or Huns, that they were allured by fraud and
deceit to engage in a naval expedition. Five thousand horse and
ten thousand foot were embarked at Constantinople, for the
conquest of Africa; but the infantry, for the most part levied in
Thrace and Isauria, yielded to the more prevailing use and
reputation of the cavalry; and the Scythian bow was the weapon on
which the armies of Rome were now reduced to place their
principal dependence. From a laudable desire to assert the
dignity of his theme, Procopius defends the soldiers of his own
time against the morose critics, who confined that respectable
name to the heavy-armed warriors of antiquity, and maliciously
observed, that the word archer is introduced by Homer as a term
of contempt. "Such contempt might perhaps be due to the naked
youths who appeared on foot in the fields of Troy, and lurking
behind a tombstone, or the shield of a friend, drew the
bow-string to their breast, and dismissed a feeble and lifeless
arrow. But our archers (pursues the historian) are mounted on
horses, which they manage with admirable skill; their head and
shoulders are protected by a casque or buckler; they wear greaves
of iron on their legs, and their bodies are guarded by a coat of
mail. On their right side hangs a quiver, a sword on their left,
and their hand is accustomed to wield a lance or javelin in
closer combat. Their bows are strong and weighty; they shoot in
every possible direction, advancing, retreating, to the front, to
the rear, or to either flank; and as they are taught to draw the
bow-string not to the breast, but to the right ear, firm indeed
must be the armor that can resist the rapid violence of their
shaft." Five hundred transports, navigated by twenty thousand
mariners of Egypt, Cilicia, and Ionia, were collected in the
harbor of Constantinople. The smallest of these vessels may be
computed at thirty, the largest at five hundred, tons; and the
fair average will supply an allowance, liberal, but not profuse,
of about one hundred thousand tons, for the reception of
thirty-five thousand soldiers and sailors, of five thousand
horses, of arms, engines, and military stores, and of a
sufficient stock of water and provisions for a voyage, perhaps,
of three months. The proud galleys, which in former ages swept
the Mediterranean with so many hundred oars, had long since
disappeared; and the fleet of Justinian was escorted only by
ninety-two light brigantines, covered from the missile weapons of
the enemy, and rowed by two thousand of the brave and robust
youth of Constantinople. Twenty-two generals are named, most of
whom were afterwards distinguished in the wars of Africa and
Italy: but the supreme command, both by land and sea, was
delegated to Belisarius alone, with a boundless power of acting
according to his discretion, as if the emperor himself were
present. The separation of the naval and military professions is
at once the effect and the cause of the modern improvements in
the science of navigation and maritime war.
In the seventh year of the reign of Justinian, and about the
time of the summer solstice, the whole fleet of six hundred ships
was ranged in martial pomp before the gardens of the palace. The
patriarch pronounced his benediction, the emperor signified his
last commands, the general's trumpet gave the signal of
departure, and every heart, according to its fears or wishes,
explored, with anxious curiosity, the omens of misfortune and
success. The first halt was made at Perinthus or Heraclea, where
Belisarius waited five days to receive some Thracian horses, a
military gift of his sovereign. From thence the fleet pursued
their course through the midst of the Propontis; but as they
struggled to pass the Straits of the Hellespont, an unfavorable
wind detained them four days at Abydus, where the general
exhibited a memorable lesson of firmness and severity. Two of the
Huns, who in a drunken quarrel had slain one of their
fellow-soldiers, were instantly shown to the army suspended on a
lofty gibbet. The national dignity was resented by their
countrymen, who disclaimed the servile laws of the empire, and
asserted the free privilege of Scythia, where a small fine was
allowed to expiate the hasty sallies of intemperance and anger.
Their complaints were specious, their clamors were loud, and the
Romans were not averse to the example of disorder and impunity.
But the rising sedition was appeased by the authority and
eloquence of the general: and he represented to the assembled
troops the obligation of justice, the importance of discipline,
the rewards of piety and virtue, and the unpardonable guilt of
murder, which, in his apprehension, was aggravated rather than
excused by the vice of intoxication. In the navigation from the
Hellespont to Peloponnesus, which the Greeks, after the siege of
Troy, had performed in four days, the fleet of Belisarius was
guided in their course by his master-galley, conspicuous in the
day by the redness of the sails, and in the night by the torches
blazing from the mast head. It was the duty of the pilots, as
they steered between the islands, and turned the Capes of Malea
and Tænarium, to preserve the just order and regular
intervals of such a multitude of ships: as the wind was fair and
moderate, their labors were not unsuccessful, and the troops were
safely disembarked at Methone on the Messenian coast, to repose
themselves for a while after the fatigues of the sea. In this
place they experienced how avarice, invested with authority, may
sport with the lives of thousands which are bravely exposed for
the public service. According to military practice, the bread or
biscuit of the Romans was twice prepared in the oven, and the
diminution of one fourth was cheerfully allowed for the loss of
weight. To gain this miserable profit, and to save the expense of
wood, the præfect John of Cappadocia had given orders that
the flour should be slightly baked by the same fire which warmed
the baths of Constantinople; and when the sacks were opened, a
soft and mouldy paste was distributed to the army. Such
unwholesome food, assisted by the heat of the climate and season,
soon produced an epidemical disease, which swept away five
hundred soldiers. Their health was restored by the diligence of
Belisarius, who provided fresh bread at Methone, and boldly
expressed his just and humane indignation the emperor heard his
complaint; the general was praised but the minister was not
punished. From the port of Methone, the pilots steered along the
western coast of Peloponnesus, as far as the Isle of Zacynthus,
or Zante, before they undertook the voyage (in their eyes a most
arduous voyage) of one hundred leagues over the Ionian Sea. As
the fleet was surprised by a calm, sixteen days were consumed in
the slow navigation; and even the general would have suffered the
intolerable hardship of thirst, if the ingenuity of Antonina had
not preserved the water in glass bottles, which she buried deep
in the sand in a part of the ship impervious to the rays of the
sun. At length the harbor of Caucana, on the southern side of
Sicily, afforded a secure and hospitable shelter. The Gothic
officers who governed the island in the name of the daughter and
grandson of Theodoric, obeyed their imprudent orders, to receive
the troops of Justinian like friends and allies: provisions were
liberally supplied, the cavalry was remounted, and Procopius soon
returned from Syracuse with correct information of the state and
designs of the Vandals. His intelligence determined Belisarius to
hasten his operations, and his wise impatience was seconded by
the winds. The fleet lost sight of Sicily, passed before the Isle
of Malta, discovered the capes of Africa, ran along the coast
with a strong gale from the north-east, and finally cast anchor
at the promontory of Caput Vada, about five days' journey to the
south of Carthage.
If Gelimer had been informed of the approach of the enemy, he
must have delayed the conquest of Sardinia for the immediate
defence of his person and kingdom. A detachment of five thousand
soldiers, and one hundred and twenty galleys, would have joined
the remaining forces of the Vandals; and the descendant of
Genseric might have surprised and oppressed a fleet of deep laden
transports, incapable of action, and of light brigantines that
seemed only qualified for flight. Belisarius had secretly
trembled when he overheard his soldiers, in the passage,
emboldening each other to confess their apprehensions: if they
were once on shore, they hoped to maintain the honor of their
arms; but if they should be attacked at sea, they did not blush
to acknowledge that they wanted courage to contend at the same
time with the winds, the waves, and the Barbarians. The knowledge
of their sentiments decided Belisarius to seize the first
opportunity of landing them on the coast of Africa; and he
prudently rejected, in a council of war, the proposal of sailing
with the fleet and army into the port of Carthage. * Three months
after their departure from Constantinople, the men and horses,
the arms and military stores, were safely disembarked, and five
soldiers were left as a guard on board each of the ships, which
were disposed in the form of a semicircle. The remainder of the
troops occupied a camp on the sea-shore, which they fortified,
according to ancient discipline, with a ditch and rampart; and
the discovery of a source of fresh water, while it allayed the
thirst, excited the superstitious confidence, of the Romans. The
next morning, some of the neighboring gardens were pillaged; and
Belisarius, after chastising the offenders, embraced the slight
occasion, but the decisive moment, of inculcating the maxims of
justice, moderation, and genuine policy. "When I first accepted
the commission of subduing Africa, I depended much less," said
the general, "on the numbers, or even the bravery of my troops,
than on the friendly disposition of the natives, and their
immortal hatred to the Vandals. You alone can deprive me of this
hope; if you continue to extort by rapine what might be purchased
for a little money, such acts of violence will reconcile these
implacable enemies, and unite them in a just and holy league
against the invaders of their country." These exhortations were
enforced by a rigid discipline, of which the soldiers themselves
soon felt and praised the salutary effects. The inhabitants,
instead of deserting their houses, or hiding their corn, supplied
the Romans with a fair and liberal market: the civil officers of
the province continued to exercise their functions in the name of
Justinian: and the clergy, from motives of conscience and
interest, assiduously labored to promote the cause of a Catholic
emperor. The small town of Sullecte, one day's journey from the
camp, had the honor of being foremost to open her gates, and to
resume her ancient allegiance: the larger cities of Leptis and
Adrumetum imitated the example of loyalty as soon as Belisarius
appeared; and he advanced without opposition as far as Grasse, a
palace of the Vandal kings, at the distance of fifty miles from
Carthage. The weary Romans indulged themselves in the refreshment
of shady groves, cool fountains, and delicious fruits; and the
preference which Procopius allows to these gardens over any that
he had seen, either in the East or West, may be ascribed either
to the taste, or the fatigue, or the historian. In three
generations, prosperity and a warm climate had dissolved the
hardy virtue of the Vandals, who insensibly became the most
luxurious of mankind. In their villas and gardens, which might
deserve the Persian name of Paradise,
they enjoyed a cool and elegant repose; and, after the daily use
of the bath, the Barbarians were seated at a table profusely
spread with the delicacies of the land and sea. Their silken
robes loosely flowing, after the fashion of the Medes, were
embroidered with gold; love and hunting were the labors of their
life, and their vacant hours were amused by pantomimes,
chariot-races, and the music and dances of the theatre.
In a march of ten or twelve days, the vigilance of Belisarius
was constantly awake and active against his unseen enemies, by
whom, in every place, and at every hour, he might be suddenly
attacked. An officer of confidence and merit, John the Armenian,
led the vanguard of three hundred horse; six hundred
Massagetæ covered at a certain distance the left flank; and
the whole fleet, steering along the coast, seldom lost sight of
the army, which moved each day about twelve miles, and lodged in
the evening in strong camps, or in friendly towns. The near
approach of the Romans to Carthage filled the mind of Gelimer
with anxiety and terror. He prudently wished to protract the war
till his brother, with his veteran troops, should return from the
conquest of Sardinia; and he now lamented the rash policy of his
ancestors, who, by destroying the fortifications of Africa, had
left him only the dangerous resource of risking a battle in the
neighborhood of his capital. The Vandal conquerors, from their
original number of fifty thousand, were multiplied, without
including their women and children, to one hundred and sixty
thousand fighting men: * and such forces, animated with valor and
union, might have crushed, at their first landing, the feeble and
exhausted bands of the Roman general. But the friends of the
captive king were more inclined to accept the invitations, than
to resist the progress, of Belisarius; and many a proud Barbarian
disguised his aversion to war under the more specious name of his
hatred to the usurper. Yet the authority and promises of Gelimer
collected a formidable army, and his plans were concerted with
some degree of military skill. An order was despatched to his
brother Ammatas, to collect all the forces of Carthage, and to
encounter the van of the Roman army at the distance of ten miles
from the city: his nephew Gibamund, with two thousand horse, was
destined to attack their left, when the monarch himself, who
silently followed, should charge their rear, in a situation which
excluded them from the aid or even the view of their fleet. But
the rashness of Ammatas was fatal to himself and his country. He
anticipated the hour of the attack, outstripped his tardy
followers, and was pierced with a mortal wound, after he had
slain with his own hand twelve of his boldest antagonists. His
Vandals fled to Carthage; the highway, almost ten miles, was
strewed with dead bodies; and it seemed incredible that such
multitudes could be slaughtered by the swords of three hundred
Romans. The nephew of Gelimer was defeated, after a slight
combat, by the six hundred Massagetæ: they did not equal
the third part of his numbers; but each Scythian was fired by the
example of his chief, who gloriously exercised the privilege of
his family, by riding, foremost and alone, to shoot the first
arrow against the enemy. In the mean while, Gelimer himself,
ignorant of the event, and misguided by the windings of the
hills, inadvertently passed the Roman army, and reached the scene
of action where Ammatas had fallen. He wept the fate of his
brother and of Carthage, charged with irresistible fury the
advancing squadrons, and might have pursued, and perhaps decided,
the victory, if he had not wasted those inestimable moments in
the discharge of a vain, though pious, duty to the dead. While
his spirit was broken by this mournful office, he heard the
trumpet of Belisarius, who, leaving Antonina and his infantry in
the camp, pressed forwards with his guards and the remainder of
the cavalry to rally his flying troops, and to restore the
fortune of the day. Much room could not be found, in this
disorderly battle, for the talents of a general; but the king
fled before the hero; and the Vandals, accustomed only to a
Moorish enemy, were incapable of withstanding the arms and
discipline of the Romans. Gelimer retired with hasty steps
towards the desert of Numidia: but he had soon the consolation of
learning that his private orders for the execution of Hilderic
and his captive friends had been faithfully obeyed. The tyrant's
revenge was useful only to his enemies. The death of a lawful
prince excited the compassion of his people; his life might have
perplexed the victorious Romans; and the lieutenant of Justinian,
by a crime of which he was innocent, was relieved from the
painful alternative of forfeiting his honor or relinquishing his
conquests.
Chapter XLI: Conquests Of Justinian, Character Of
Balisarius. -- Part II.
As soon as the tumult had subsided, the several parts of the
army informed each other of the accidents of the day; and
Belisarius pitched his camp on the field of victory, to which the
tenth mile-stone from Carthage had applied the Latin appellation
of Decimus. From a wise suspicion of
the stratagems and resources of the Vandals, he marched the next
day in order of battle, halted in the evening before the gates of
Carthage, and allowed a night of repose, that he might not, in
darkness and disorder, expose the city to the license of the
soldiers, or the soldiers themselves to the secret ambush of the
city. But as the fears of Belisarius were the result of calm and
intrepid reason, he was soon satisfied that he might confide,
without danger, in the peaceful and friendly aspect of the
capital. Carthage blazed with innumerable torches, the signals of
the public joy; the chain was removed that guarded the entrance
of the port; the gates were thrown open, and the people, with
acclamations of gratitude, hailed and invited their Roman
deliverers. The defeat of the Vandals, and the freedom of Africa,
were announced to the city on the eve of St. Cyprian, when the
churches were already adorned and illuminated for the festival of
the martyr whom three centuries of superstition had almost raised
to a local deity. The Arians, conscious that their reign had
expired, resigned the temple to the Catholics, who rescued their
saint from profane hands, performed the holy rites, and loudly
proclaimed the creed of Athanasius and Justinian. One awful hour
reversed the fortunes of the contending parties. The suppliant
Vandals, who had so lately indulged the vices of conquerors,
sought an humble refuge in the sanctuary of the church; while the
merchants of the East were delivered from the deepest dungeon of
the palace by their affrighted keeper, who implored the
protection of his captives, and showed them, through an aperture
in the wall, the sails of the Roman fleet. After their separation
from the army, the naval commanders had proceeded with slow
caution along the coast till they reached the Hermæan
promontory, and obtained the first intelligence of the victory of
Belisarius. Faithful to his instructions, they would have cast
anchor about twenty miles from Carthage, if the more skilful
seamen had not represented the perils of the shore, and the signs
of an impending tempest. Still ignorant of the revolution, they
declined, however, the rash attempt of forcing the chain of the
port; and the adjacent harbor and suburb of Mandracium were
insulted only by the rapine of a private officer, who disobeyed
and deserted his leaders. But the Imperial fleet, advancing with
a fair wind, steered through the narrow entrance of the Goletta,
and occupied, in the deep and capacious lake of Tunis, a secure
station about five miles from the capital. No sooner was
Belisarius informed of their arrival, than he despatched orders
that the greatest part of the mariners should be immediately
landed to join the triumph, and to swell the apparent numbers, of
the Romans. Before he allowed them to enter the gates of
Carthage, he exhorted them, in a discourse worthy of himself and
the occasion, not to disgrace the glory of their arms; and to
remember that the Vandals had been the tyrants, but that they
were the deliverers, of the Africans, who must now be respected
as the voluntary and affectionate subjects of their common
sovereign. The Romans marched through the streets in close ranks
prepared for battle if an enemy had appeared: the strict order
maintained by the general imprinted on their minds the duty of
obedience; and in an age in which custom and impunity almost
sanctified the abuse of conquest, the genius of one man repressed
the passions of a victorious army. The voice of menace and
complaint was silent; the trade of Carthage was not interrupted;
while Africa changed her master and her government, the shops
continued open and busy; and the soldiers, after sufficient
guards had been posted, modestly departed to the houses which
were allotted for their reception. Belisarius fixed his residence
in the palace; seated himself on the throne of Genseric; accepted
and distributed the Barbaric spoil; granted their lives to the
suppliant Vandals; and labored to repair the damage which the
suburb of Mandracium had sustained in the preceding night. At
supper he entertained his principal officers with the form and
magnificence of a royal banquet. The victor was respectfully
served by the captive officers of the household; and in the
moments of festivity, when the impartial spectators applauded the
fortune and merit of Belisarius, his envious flatterers secretly
shed their venom on every word and gesture which might alarm the
suspicions of a jealous monarch. One day was given to these
pompous scenes, which may not be despised as useless, if they
attracted the popular veneration; but the active mind of
Belisarius, which in the pride of victory could suppose a defeat,
had already resolved that the Roman empire in Africa should not
depend on the chance of arms, or the favor of the people. The
fortifications of Carthage * had alone been exempted from the
general proscription; but in the reign of ninety-five years they
were suffered to decay by the thoughtless and indolent Vandals. A
wiser conqueror restored, with incredible despatch, the walls and
ditches of the city. His liberality encouraged the workmen; the
soldiers, the mariners, and the citizens, vied with each other in
the salutary labor; and Gelimer, who had feared to trust his
person in an open town, beheld with astonishment and despair, the
rising strength of an impregnable fortress.
That unfortunate monarch, after the loss of his capital,
applied himself to collect the remains of an army scattered,
rather than destroyed, by the preceding battle; and the hopes of
pillage attracted some Moorish bands to the standard of Gelimer.
He encamped in the fields of Bulla, four days' journey from
Carthage; insulted the capital, which he deprived of the use of
an aqueduct; proposed a high reward for the head of every Roman;
affected to spare the persons and property of his African
subjects, and secretly negotiated with the Arian sectaries and
the confederate Huns. Under these circumstances, the conquest of
Sardinia served only to aggravate his distress: he reflected,
with the deepest anguish, that he had wasted, in that useless
enterprise, five thousand of his bravest troops; and he read,
with grief and shame, the victorious letters of his brother Zano,
* who expressed a sanguine confidence that the king, after the
example of their ancestors, had already chastised the rashness of
the Roman invader. "Alas! my brother," replied Gelimer, "Heaven
has declared against our unhappy nation. While you have subdued
Sardinia, we have lost Africa. No sooner did Belisarius appear
with a handful of soldiers, than courage and prosperity deserted
the cause of the Vandals. Your nephew Gibamund, your brother
Ammatas, have been betrayed to death by the cowardice of their
followers. Our horses, our ships, Carthage itself, and all
Africa, are in the power of the enemy. Yet the Vandals still
prefer an ignominious repose, at the expense of their wives and
children, their wealth and liberty. Nothing now remains, except
the fields of Bulla, and the hope of your valor. Abandon
Sardinia; fly to our relief; restore our empire, or perish by our
side." On the receipt of this epistle, Zano imparted his grief to
the principal Vandals; but the intelligence was prudently
concealed from the natives of the island. The troops embarked in
one hundred and twenty galleys at the port of Cagliari, cast
anchor the third day on the confines of Mauritania, and hastily
pursued their march to join the royal standard in the camp of
Bulla. Mournful was the interview: the two brothers embraced;
they wept in silence; no questions were asked of the Sardinian
victory; no inquiries were made of the African misfortunes: they
saw before their eyes the whole extent of their calamities; and
the absence of their wives and children afforded a melancholy
proof that either death or captivity had been their lot. The
languid spirit of the Vandals was at length awakened and united
by the entreaties of their king, the example of Zano, and the
instant danger which threatened their monarchy and religion. The
military strength of the nation advanced to battle; and such was
the rapid increase, that before their army reached Tricameron,
about twenty miles from Carthage, they might boast, perhaps with
some exaggeration, that they surpassed, in a tenfold proportion,
the diminutive powers of the Romans. But these powers were under
the command of Belisarius; and, as he was conscious of their
superior merit, he permitted the Barbarians to surprise him at an
unseasonable hour. The Romans were instantly under arms; a
rivulet covered their front; the cavalry formed the first line,
which Belisarius supported in the centre, at the head of five
hundred guards; the infantry, at some distance, was posted in the
second line; and the vigilance of the general watched the
separate station and ambiguous faith of the Massagetæ, who
secretly reserved their aid for the conquerors. The historian has
inserted, and the reader may easily supply, the speeches of the
commanders, who, by arguments the most apposite to their
situation, inculcated the importance of victory, and the contempt
of life. Zano, with the troops which had followed him to the
conquest of Sardinia, was placed in the centre; and the throne of
Genseric might have stood, if the multitude of Vandals had
imitated their intrepid resolution. Casting away their lances and
missile weapons, they drew their swords, and expected the charge:
the Roman cavalry thrice passed the rivulet; they were thrice
repulsed; and the conflict was firmly maintained, till Zano fell,
and the standard of Belisarius was displayed. Gelimer retreated
to his camp; the Huns joined the pursuit; and the victors
despoiled the bodies of the slain. Yet no more than fifty Romans,
and eight hundred Vandals were found on the field of battle; so
inconsiderable was the carnage of a day, which extinguished a
nation, and transferred the empire of Africa. In the evening
Belisarius led his infantry to the attack of the camp; and the
pusillanimous flight of Gelimer exposed the vanity of his recent
declarations, that to the vanquished, death was a relief, life a
burden, and infamy the only object of terror. His departure was
secret; but as soon as the Vandals discovered that their king had
deserted them, they hastily dispersed, anxious only for their
personal safety, and careless of every object that is dear or
valuable to mankind. The Romans entered the camp without
resistance; and the wildest scenes of disorder were veiled in the
darkness and confusion of the night. Every Barbarian who met
their swords was inhumanly massacred; their widows and daughters,
as rich heirs, or beautiful concubines, were embraced by the
licentious soldiers; and avarice itself was almost satiated with
the treasures of gold and silver, the accumulated fruits of
conquest or economy in a long period of prosperity and peace. In
this frantic search, the troops, even of Belisarius, forgot their
caution and respect. Intoxicated with lust and rapine, they
explored, in small parties, or alone, the adjacent fields, the
woods, the rocks, and the caverns, that might possibly conceal
any desirable prize: laden with booty, they deserted their ranks,
and wandered without a guide, on the high road to Carthage; and
if the flying enemies had dared to return, very few of the
conquerors would have escaped. Deeply sensible of the disgrace
and danger, Belisarius passed an apprehensive night on the field
of victory: at the dawn of day, he planted his standard on a
hill, recalled his guardians and veterans, and gradually restored
the modesty and obedience of the camp. It was equally the concern
of the Roman general to subdue the hostile, and to save the
prostrate, Barbarian; and the suppliant Vandals, who could be
found only in churches, were protected by his authority,
disarmed, and separately confined, that they might neither
disturb the public peace, nor become the victims of popular
revenge. After despatching a light detachment to tread the
footsteps of Gelimer, he advanced, with his whole army, about ten
days' march, as far as Hippo Regius, which no longer possessed
the relics of St. Augustin. The season, and the certain
intelligence that the Vandal had fled to an inaccessible country
of the Moors, determined Belisarius to relinquish the vain
pursuit, and to fix his winter quarters at Carthage. From thence
he despatched his principal lieutenant, to inform the emperor,
that in the space of three months he had achieved the conquest of
Africa.
Belisarius spoke the language of truth. The surviving Vandals
yielded, without resistance, their arms and their freedom; the
neighborhood of Carthage submitted to his presence; and the more
distant provinces were successively subdued by the report of his
victory. Tripoli was confirmed in her voluntary allegiance;
Sardinia and Corsica surrendered to an officer, who carried,
instead of a sword, the head of the valiant Zano; and the Isles
of Majorca, Minorca, and Yvica consented to remain an humble
appendage of the African kingdom. Cæsarea, a royal city,
which in looser geography may be confounded with the modern
Algiers, was situate thirty days' march to the westward of
Carthage: by land, the road was infested by the Moors; but the
sea was open, and the Romans were now masters of the sea. An
active and discreet tribune sailed as far as the Straits, where
he occupied Septem or Ceuta, which rises opposite to Gibraltar on
the African coast; that remote place was afterwards adorned and
fortified by Justinian; and he seems to have indulged the vain
ambition of extending his empire to the columns of Hercules. He
received the messengers of victory at the time when he was
preparing to publish the Pandects of the Roman laws; and the
devout or jealous emperor celebrated the divine goodness, and
confessed, in silence, the merit of his successful general.
Impatient to abolish the temporal and spiritual tyranny of the
Vandals, he proceeded, without delay, to the full establishment
of the Catholic church. Her jurisdiction, wealth, and immunities,
perhaps the most essential part of episcopal religion, were
restored and amplified with a liberal hand; the Arian worship was
suppressed; the Donatist meetings were proscribed; and the synod
of Carthage, by the voice of two hundred and seventeen bishops,
applauded the just measure of pious retaliation. On such an
occasion, it may not be presumed, that many orthodox prelates
were absent; but the comparative smallness of their number, which
in ancient councils had been twice or even thrice multiplied,
most clearly indicates the decay both of the church and state.
While Justinian approved himself the defender of the faith, he
entertained an ambitious hope, that his victorious lieutenant
would speedily enlarge the narrow limits of his dominion to the
space which they occupied before the invasion of the Moors and
Vandals; and Belisarius was instructed to establish
five dukes or commanders in the
convenient stations of Tripoli, Leptis, Cirta, Cæsarea, and
Sardinia, and to compute the military force of
palatines or
borderers that might be sufficient for
the defence of Africa. The kingdom of the Vandals was not
unworthy of the presence of a Prætorian præfect; and
four consulars, three presidents, were appointed to administer
the seven provinces under his civil jurisdiction. The number of
their subordinate officers, clerks, messengers, or assistants,
was minutely expressed; three hundred and ninety-six for the
præfect himself, fifty for each of his vicegerents; and the
rigid definition of their fees and salaries was more effectual to
confirm the right than to prevent the abuse. These magistrates
might be oppressive, but they were not idle; and the subtile
questions of justice and revenue were infinitely propagated under
the new government, which professed to revive the freedom and
equity of the Roman republic. The conqueror was solicitous to
extract a prompt and plentiful supply from his African subjects;
and he allowed them to claim, even in the third degree, and from
the collateral line, the houses and lands of which their families
had been unjustly despoiled by the Vandals. After the departure
of Belisarius, who acted by a high and special commission, no
ordinary provision was made for a master-general of the forces;
but the office of Prætorian præfect was intrusted to
a soldier; the civil and military powers were united, according
to the practice of Justinian, in the chief governor; and the
representative of the emperor in Africa, as well as in Italy, was
soon distinguished by the appellation of Exarch.
Yet the conquest of Africa was imperfect till her former
sovereign was delivered, either alive or dead, into the hands of
the Romans. Doubtful of the event, Gelimer had given secret
orders that a part of his treasure should be transported to
Spain, where he hoped to find a secure refuge at the court of the
king of the Visigoths. But these intentions were disappointed by
accident, treachery, and the indefatigable pursuit of his
enemies, who intercepted his flight from the sea-shore, and
chased the unfortunate monarch, with some faithful followers, to
the inaccessible mountain of Papua, in the inland country of
Numidia. He was immediately besieged by Pharas, an officer whose
truth and sobriety were the more applauded, as such qualities
could seldom be found among the Heruli, the most corrupt of the
Barbarian tribes. To his vigilance Belisarius had intrusted this
important charge and, after a bold attempt to scale the mountain,
in which he lost a hundred and ten soldiers, Pharas expected,
during a winter siege, the operation of distress and famine on
the mind of the Vandal king. From the softest habits of pleasure,
from the unbounded command of industry and wealth, he was reduced
to share the poverty of the Moors, supportable only to themselves
by their ignorance of a happier condition. In their rude hovels,
of mud and hurdles, which confined the smoke and excluded the
light, they promiscuously slept on the ground, perhaps on a
sheep-skin, with their wives, their children, and their cattle.
Sordid and scanty were their garments; the use of bread and wine
was unknown; and their oaten or barley cakes, imperfectly baked
in the ashes, were devoured almost in a crude state, by the
hungry savages. The health of Gelimer must have sunk under these
strange and unwonted hardships, from whatsoever cause they had
been endured; but his actual misery was imbittered by the
recollection of past greatness, the daily insolence of his
protectors, and the just apprehension, that the light and venal
Moors might be tempted to betray the rights of hospitality. The
knowledge of his situation dictated the humane and friendly
epistle of Pharas. "Like yourself," said the chief of the Heruli,
"I am an illiterate Barbarian, but I speak the language of plain
sense and an honest heart. Why will you persist in hopeless
obstinacy? Why will you ruin yourself, your family, and nation?
The love of freedom and abhorrence of slavery? Alas! my dearest
Gelimer, are you not already the worst of slaves, the slave of
the vile nation of the Moors? Would it not be preferable to
sustain at Constantinople a life of poverty and servitude, rather
than to reign the undoubted monarch of the mountain of Papua? Do
you think it a disgrace to be the subject of Justinian?
Belisarius is his subject; and we ourselves, whose birth is not
inferior to your own, are not ashamed of our obedience to the
Roman emperor. That generous prince will grant you a rich
inheritance of lands, a place in the senate, and the dignity of
patrician: such are his gracious intentions, and you may depend
with full assurance on the word of Belisarius. So long as Heaven
has condemned us to suffer, patience is a virtue; but if we
reject the proffered deliverance, it degenerates into blind and
stupid despair." "I am not insensible" replied the king of the
Vandals, "how kind and rational is your advice. But I cannot
persuade myself to become the slave of an unjust enemy, who has
deserved my implacable hatred. Him I
had never injured either by word or deed: yet he has sent against
me, I know not from whence, a certain Belisarius, who has cast me
headlong from the throne into his abyss of misery. Justinian is a
man; he is a prince; does he not dread for himself a similar
reverse of fortune? I can write no more: my grief oppresses me.
Send me, I beseech you, my dear Pharas, send me, a lyre, a
sponge, and a loaf of bread." From the Vandal messenger, Pharas
was informed of the motives of this singular request. It was long
since the king of Africa had tasted bread; a defluxion had fallen
on his eyes, the effect of fatigue or incessant weeping; and he
wished to solace the melancholy hours, by singing to the lyre the
sad story of his own misfortunes. The humanity of Pharas was
moved; he sent the three extraordinary gifts; but even his
humanity prompted him to redouble the vigilance of his guard,
that he might sooner compel his prisoner to embrace a resolution
advantageous to the Romans, but salutary to himself. The
obstinacy of Gelimer at length yielded to reason and necessity;
the solemn assurances of safety and honorable treatment were
ratified in the emperor's name, by the ambassador of Belisarius;
and the king of the Vandals descended from the mountain. The
first public interview was in one of the suburbs of Carthage; and
when the royal captive accosted his conqueror, he burst into a
fit of laughter. The crowd might naturally believe, that extreme
grief had deprived Gelimer of his senses: but in this mournful
state, unseasonable mirth insinuated to more intelligent
observers, that the vain and transitory scenes of human greatness
are unworthy of a serious thought.
Their contempt was soon justified by a new example of a vulgar
truth; that flattery adheres to power, and envy to superior
merit. The chiefs of the Roman army presumed to think themselves
the rivals of a hero. Their private despatches maliciously
affirmed, that the conqueror of Africa, strong in his reputation
and the public love, conspired to seat himself on the throne of
the Vandals. Justinian listened with too patient an ear; and his
silence was the result of jealousy rather than of confidence. An
honorable alternative, of remaining in the province, or of
returning to the capital, was indeed submitted to the discretion
of Belisarius; but he wisely concluded, from intercepted letters
and the knowledge of his sovereign's temper, that he must either
resign his head, erect his standard, or confound his enemies by
his presence and submission. Innocence and courage decided his
choice; his guards, captives, and treasures, were diligently
embarked; and so prosperous was the navigation, that his arrival
at Constantinople preceded any certain account of his departure
from the port of Carthage. Such unsuspecting loyalty removed the
apprehensions of Justinian; envy was silenced and inflamed by the
public gratitude; and the third Africanus obtained the honors of
a triumph, a ceremony which the city of Constantine had never
seen, and which ancient Rome, since the reign of Tiberius, had
reserved for the auspicious arms of the
Cæsars. From the palace of Belisarius, the procession was
conducted through the principal streets to the hippodrome; and
this memorable day seemed to avenge the injuries of Genseric, and
to expiate the shame of the Romans. The wealth of nations was
displayed, the trophies of martial or effeminate luxury; rich
armor, golden thrones, and the chariots of state which had been
used by the Vandal queen; the massy furniture of the royal
banquet, the splendor of precious stones, the elegant forms of
statues and vases, the more substantial treasure of gold, and the
holy vessels of the Jewish temple, which after their long
peregrination were respectfully deposited in the Christian church
of Jerusalem. A long train of the noblest Vandals reluctantly
exposed their lofty stature and manly countenance. Gelimer slowly
advanced: he was clad in a purple robe, and still maintained the
majesty of a king. Not a tear escaped from his eyes, not a sigh
was heard; but his pride or piety derived some secret consolation
from the words of Solomon, which he repeatedly pronounced,
Vanity! vanity! all is vanity! Instead of ascending a triumphal
car drawn by four horses or elephants, the modest conqueror
marched on foot at the head of his brave companions; his prudence
might decline an honor too conspicuous for a subject; and his
magnanimity might justly disdain what had been so often sullied
by the vilest of tyrants. The glorious procession entered the
gate of the hippodrome; was saluted by the acclamations of the
senate and people; and halted before the throne where Justinian
and Theodora were seated to receive homage of the captive monarch
and the victorious hero. They both performed the customary
adoration; and falling prostrate on the ground, respectfully
touched the footstool of a prince who had not unsheathed his
sword, and of a prostitute who had danced on the theatre; some
gentle violence was used to bend the stubborn spirit of the
grandson of Genseric; and however trained to servitude, the
genius of Belisarius must have secretly rebelled. He was
immediately declared consul for the ensuing year, and the day of
his inauguration resembled the pomp of a second triumph: his
curule chair was borne aloft on the shoulders of captive Vandals;
and the spoils of war, gold cups, and rich girdles, were
profusely scattered among the populace.
Chapter XLI: Conquests Of Justinian, Character Of
Balisarius. -- Part III.
But the purest reward of Belisarius was in the faithful
execution of a treaty for which his honor had been pledged to the
king of the Vandals. The religious scruples of Gelimer, who
adhered to the Arian heresy, were incompatible with the dignity
of senator or patrician: but he received from the emperor an
ample estate in the province of Galatia, where the abdicated
monarch retired, with his family and friends, to a life of peace,
of affluence, and perhaps of content. The daughters of Hilderic
were entertained with the respectful tenderness due to their age
and misfortune; and Justinian and Theodora accepted the honor of
educating and enriching the female descendants of the great
Theodosius. The bravest of the Vandal youth were distributed into
five squadrons of cavalry, which adopted the name of their
benefactor, and supported in the Persian wars the glory of their
ancestors. But these rare exceptions, the reward of birth or
valor, are insufficient to explain the fate of a nation, whose
numbers before a short and bloodless war, amounted to more than
six hundred thousand persons. After the exile of their king and
nobles, the servile crowd might purchase their safety by abjuring
their character, religion, and language; and their degenerate
posterity would be insensibly mingled with the common herd of
African subjects. Yet even in the present age, and in the heart
of the Moorish tribes, a curious traveller has discovered the
white complexion and long flaxen hair of a northern race; and it
was formerly believed, that the boldest of the Vandals fled
beyond the power, or even the knowledge, of the Romans, to enjoy
their solitary freedom on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean.
Africa had been their empire, it became their prison; nor could
they entertain a hope, or even a wish, of returning to the banks
of the Elbe, where their brethren, of a spirit less adventurous,
still wandered in their native forests. It was impossible for
cowards to surmount the barriers of unknown seas and hostile
Barbarians; it was impossible for brave men to expose their
nakedness and defeat before the eyes of their countrymen, to
describe the kingdoms which they had lost, and to claim a share
of the humble inheritance, which, in a happier hour, they had
almost unanimously renounced. In the country between the Elbe and
the Oder, several populous villages of Lusatia are inhabited by
the Vandals: they still preserve their language, their customs,
and the purity of their blood; support, with some impatience, the
Saxon or Prussian yoke; and serve, with secret and voluntary
allegiance, the descendant of their ancient kings, who in his
garb and present fortune is confounded with the meanest of his
vassals. The name and situation of this unhappy people might
indicate their descent from one common stock with the conquerors
of Africa. But the use of a Sclavonian dialect more clearly
represent them as the last remnant of the new colonies, who
succeeded to the genuine Vandals, already scattered or destroyed
in the age of Procopius.
If Belisarius had been tempted to hesitate in his allegiance,
he might have urged, even against the emperor himself, the
indispensable duty of saving Africa from an enemy more barbarous
than the Vandals. The origin of the Moors is involved in
darkness; they were ignorant of the use of letters. Their limits
cannot be precisely defined; a boundless continent was open to
the Libyan shepherds; the change of seasons and pastures
regulated their motions; and their rude huts and slender
furniture were transported with the same case as their arms,
their families, and their cattle, which consisted of sheep, oxen,
and camels. During the vigor of the Roman power, they observed a
respectful distance from Carthage and the sea-shore: under the
feeble reign of the Vandals, they invaded the cities of Numidia,
occupied the sea-coast from Tangier to Cæsarea, and pitched
their camps, with impunity, in the fertile province of Byzacium.
The formidable strength and artful conduct of Belisarius secured
the neutrality of the Moorish princes, whose vanity aspired to
receive, in the emperor's name, the ensigns of their regal
dignity. They were astonished by the rapid event, and trembled in
the presence of their conqueror. But his approaching departure
soon relieved the apprehensions of a savage and superstitious
people; the number of their wives allowed them to disregard the
safety of their infant hostages; and when the Roman general
hoisted sail in the port of Carthage, he heard the cries, and
almost beheld the flames, of the desolated province. Yet he
persisted in his resolution, and leaving only a part of his
guards to reënforce the feeble garrisons, he intrusted the
command of Africa to the eunuch Solomon, who proved himself not
unworthy to be the successor of Belisarius. In the first
invasion, some detachments, with two officers of merit, were
surprised and intercepted; but Solomon speedily assembled his
troops, marched from Carthage into the heart of the country, and
in two great battles destroyed sixty thousand of the Barbarians.
The Moors depended on their multitude, their swiftness, and their
inaccessible mountains; and the aspect and smell of their camels
are said to have produced some confusion in the Roman cavalry.
But as soon as they were commanded to dismount, they derided this
contemptible obstacle: as soon as the columns ascended the hills,
the naked and disorderly crowd was dazzled by glittering arms and
regular evolutions; and the menace of their female prophets was
repeatedly fulfilled, that the Moors should be discomfited by a
beardless antagonist. The victorious
eunuch advanced thirteen days journey from Carthage, to besiege
Mount Aurasius, the citadel, and at the same time the garden, of
Numidia. That range of hills, a branch of the great Atlas,
contains, within a circumference of one hundred and twenty miles,
a rare variety of soil and climate; the intermediate valleys and
elevated plains abound with rich pastures, perpetual streams, and
fruits of a delicious taste and uncommon magnitude. This fair
solitude is decorated with the ruins of Lambesa, a Roman city,
once the seat of a legion, and the residence of forty thousand
inhabitants. The Ionic temple of Æsculapius is encompassed
with Moorish huts; and the cattle now graze in the midst of an
amphitheatre, under the shade of Corinthian columns. A sharp
perpendicular rock rises above the level of the mountain, where
the African princes deposited their wives and treasure; and a
proverb is familiar to the Arabs, that the man may eat fire who
dares to attack the craggy cliffs and inhospitable natives of
Mount Aurasius. This hardy enterprise was twice attempted by the
eunuch Solomon: from the first, he retreated with some disgrace;
and in the second, his patience and provisions were almost
exhausted; and he must again have retired, if he had not yielded
to the impetuous courage of his troops, who audaciously scaled,
to the astonishment of the Moors, the mountain, the hostile camp,
and the summit of the Geminian rock A citadel was erected to
secure this important conquest, and to remind the Barbarians of
their defeat; and as Solomon pursued his march to the west, the
long-lost province of Mauritanian Sitifi was again annexed to the
Roman empire. The Moorish war continued several years after the
departure of Belisarius; but the laurels which he resigned to a
faithful lieutenant may be justly ascribed to his own
triumph.
The experience of past faults, which may sometimes correct the
mature age of an individual, is seldom profitable to the
successive generations of mankind. The nations of antiquity,
careless of each other's safety, were separately vanquished and
enslaved by the Romans. This awful lesson might have instructed
the Barbarians of the West to oppose, with timely counsels and
confederate arms, the unbounded ambition of Justinian. Yet the
same error was repeated, the same consequences were felt, and the
Goths, both of Italy and Spain, insensible of their approaching
danger, beheld with indifference, and even with joy, the rapid
downfall of the Vandals. After the failure of the royal line,
Theudes, a valiant and powerful chief, ascended the throne of
Spain, which he had formerly administered in the name of
Theodoric and his infant grandson. Under his command, the
Visigoths besieged the fortress of Ceuta on the African coast:
but, while they spent the Sabbath day in peace and devotion, the
pious security of their camp was invaded by a sally from the
town; and the king himself, with some difficulty and danger,
escaped from the hands of a sacrilegious enemy. It was not long
before his pride and resentment were gratified by a suppliant
embassy from the unfortunate Gelimer, who implored, in his
distress, the aid of the Spanish monarch. But instead of
sacrificing these unworthy passions to the dictates of generosity
and prudence, Theudes amused the ambassadors till he was secretly
informed of the loss of Carthage, and then dismissed them with
obscure and contemptuous advice, to seek in their native country
a true knowledge of the state of the Vandals. The long
continuance of the Italian war delayed the punishment of the
Visigoths; and the eyes of Theudes were closed before they tasted
the fruits of his mistaken policy. After his death, the sceptre
of Spain was disputed by a civil war. The weaker candidate
solicited the protection of Justinian, and ambitiously subscribed
a treaty of alliance, which deeply wounded the independence and
happiness of his country. Several cities, both on the ocean and
the Mediterranean, were ceded to the Roman troops, who afterwards
refused to evacuate those pledges, as it should seem, either of
safety or payment; and as they were fortified by perpetual
supplies from Africa, they maintained their impregnable stations,
for the mischievous purpose of inflaming the civil and religious
factions of the Barbarians. Seventy years elapsed before this
painful thorn could be extirpated from the bosom of the monarchy;
and as long as the emperors retained any share of these remote
and useless possessions, their vanity might number Spain in the
list of their provinces, and the successors of Alaric in the rank
of their vassals.
The error of the Goths who reigned in Italy was less excusable
than that of their Spanish brethren, and their punishment was
still more immediate and terrible. From a motive of private
revenge, they enabled their most dangerous enemy to destroy their
most valuable ally. A sister of the great Theodoric had been
given in marriage to Thrasimond, the African king: on this
occasion, the fortress of Lilybæum in Sicily was resigned
to the Vandals; and the princess Amalafrida was attended by a
martial train of one thousand nobles, and five thousand Gothic
soldiers, who signalized their valor in the Moorish wars. Their
merit was overrated by themselves, and perhaps neglected by the
Vandals; they viewed the country with envy, and the conquerors
with disdain; but their real or fictitious conspiracy was
prevented by a massacre; the Goths were oppressed, and the
captivity of Amalafrida was soon followed by her secret and
suspicious death. The eloquent pen of Cassiodorus was employed to
reproach the Vandal court with the cruel violation of every
social and public duty; but the vengeance which he threatened in
the name of his sovereign might be derided with impunity, as long
as Africa was protected by the sea, and the Goths were destitute
of a navy. In the blind impotence of grief and indignation, they
joyfully saluted the approach of the Romans, entertained the
fleet of Belisarius in the ports of Sicily, and were speedily
delighted or alarmed by the surprising intelligence, that their
revenge was executed beyond the measure of their hopes, or
perhaps of their wishes. To their friendship the emperor was
indebted for the kingdom of Africa, and the Goths might
reasonably think, that they were entitled to resume the
possession of a barren rock, so recently separated as a nuptial
gift from the island of Sicily. They were soon undeceived by the
haughty mandate of Belisarius, which excited their tardy and
unavailing repentance. "The city and promontory of
Lilybæum," said the Roman general, "belonged to the
Vandals, and I claim them by the right of conquest. Your
submission may deserve the favor of the emperor; your obstinacy
will provoke his displeasure, and must kindle a war, that can
terminate only in your utter ruin. If you compel us to take up
arms, we shall contend, not to regain the possession of a single
city, but to deprive you of all the provinces which you unjustly
withhold from their lawful sovereign." A nation of two hundred
thousand soldiers might have smiled at the vain menace of
Justinian and his lieutenant: but a spirit of discord and
disaffection prevailed in Italy, and the Goths supported, with
reluctance, the indignity of a female reign.
The birth of Amalasontha, the regent and queen of Italy,
united the two most illustrious families of the Barbarians. Her
mother, the sister of Clovis, was descended from the long-haired
kings of the Merovingian race; and the
regal succession of the Amali was
illustrated in the eleventh generation, by her father, the great
Theodoric, whose merit might have ennobled a plebeian origin. The
sex of his daughter excluded her from the Gothic throne; but his
vigilant tenderness for his family and his people discovered the
last heir of the royal line, whose ancestors had taken refuge in
Spain; and the fortunate Eutharic was suddenly exalted to the
rank of a consul and a prince. He enjoyed only a short time the
charms of Amalasontha, and the hopes of the succession; and his
widow, after the death of her husband and father, was left the
guardian of her son Athalaric, and the kingdom of Italy. At the
age of about twenty-eight years, the endowments of her mind and
person had attained their perfect maturity. Her beauty, which, in
the apprehension of Theodora herself, might have disputed the
conquest of an emperor, was animated by manly sense, activity,
and resolution. Education and experience had cultivated her
talents; her philosophic studies were exempt from vanity; and,
though she expressed herself with equal elegance and ease in the
Greek, the Latin, and the Gothic tongue, the daughter of
Theodoric maintained in her counsels a discreet and impenetrable
silence. By a faithful imitation of the virtues, she revived the
prosperity, of his reign; while she strove, with pious care, to
expiate the faults, and to obliterate the darker memory of his
declining age. The children of Boethius and Symmachus were
restored to their paternal inheritance; her extreme lenity never
consented to inflict any corporal or pecuniary penalties on her
Roman subjects; and she generously despised the clamors of the
Goths, who, at the end of forty years, still considered the
people of Italy as their slaves or their enemies. Her salutary
measures were directed by the wisdom, and celebrated by the
eloquence, of Cassiodorus; she solicited and deserved the
friendship of the emperor; and the kingdoms of Europe respected,
both in peace and war, the majesty of the Gothic throne. But the
future happiness of the queen and of Italy depended on the
education of her son; who was destined, by his birth, to support
the different and almost incompatible characters of the chief of
a Barbarian camp, and the first magistrate of a civilized nation.
From the age of ten years, Athalaric was diligently instructed in
the arts and sciences, either useful or ornamental for a Roman
prince; and three venerable Goths were chosen to instil the
principles of honor and virtue into the mind of their young king.
But the pupil who is insensible of the benefits, must abhor the
restraints, of education; and the solicitude of the queen, which
affection rendered anxious and severe, offended the untractable
nature of her son and his subjects. On a solemn festival, when
the Goths were assembled in the palace of Ravenna, the royal
youth escaped from his mother's apartment, and, with tears of
pride and anger, complained of a blow which his stubborn
disobedience had provoked her to inflict. The Barbarians resented
the indignity which had been offered to their king; accused the
regent of conspiring against his life and crown; and imperiously
demanded, that the grandson of Theodoric should be rescued from
the dastardly discipline of women and pedants, and educated, like
a valiant Goth, in the society of his equals and the glorious
ignorance of his ancestors. To this rude clamor, importunately
urged as the voice of the nation, Amalasontha was compelled to
yield her reason, and the dearest wishes of her heart. The king
of Italy was abandoned to wine, to women, and to rustic sports;
and the indiscreet contempt of the ungrateful youth betrayed the
mischievous designs of his favorites and her enemies. Encompassed
with domestic foes, she entered into a secret negotiation with
the emperor Justinian; obtained the assurance of a friendly
reception, and had actually deposited at Dyrachium, in Epirus, a
treasure of forty thousand pounds of gold. Happy would it have
been for her fame and safety, if she had calmly retired from
barbarous faction to the peace and splendor of Constantinople.
But the mind of Amalasontha was inflamed by ambition and revenge;
and while her ships lay at anchor in the port, she waited for the
success of a crime which her passions excused or applauded as an
act of justice. Three of the most dangerous malecontents had been
separately removed under the pretence of trust and command, to
the frontiers of Italy: they were assassinated by her private
emissaries; and the blood of these noble Goths rendered the
queen-mother absolute in the court of Ravenna, and justly odious
to a free people. But if she had lamented the disorders of her
son she soon wept his irreparable loss; and the death of
Athalaric, who, at the age of sixteen, was consumed by premature
intemperance, left her destitute of any firm support or legal
authority. Instead of submitting to the laws of her country which
held as a fundamental maxim, that the succession could never pass
from the lance to the distaff, the daughter of Theodoric
conceived the impracticable design of sharing, with one of her
cousins, the regal title, and of reserving in her own hands the
substance of supreme power. He received the proposal with
profound respect and affected gratitude; and the eloquent
Cassiodorus announced to the senate and the emperor, that
Amalasontha and Theodatus had ascended the throne of Italy. His
birth (for his mother was the sister of Theodoric) might be
considered as an imperfect title; and the choice of Amalasontha
was more strongly directed by her contempt of his avarice and
pusillanimity which had deprived him of the love of the Italians,
and the esteem of the Barbarians. But Theodatus was exasperated
by the contempt which he deserved: her justice had repressed and
reproached the oppression which he exercised against his Tuscan
neighbors; and the principal Goths, united by common guilt and
resentment, conspired to instigate his slow and timid
disposition. The letters of congratulation were scarcely
despatched before the queen of Italy was imprisoned in a small
island of the Lake of Bolsena, where, after a short confinement,
she was strangled in the bath, by the order, or with the
connivance of the new king, who instructed his turbulent subjects
to shed the blood of their sovereigns.
Justinian beheld with joy the dissensions of the Goths; and
the mediation of an ally concealed and promoted the ambitious
views of the conqueror. His ambassadors, in their public
audience, demanded the fortress of Lilybæum, ten Barbarian
fugitives, and a just compensation for the pillage of a small
town on the Illyrian borders; but they secretly negotiated with
Theodatus to betray the province of Tuscany, and tempted
Amalasontha to extricate herself from danger and perplexity, by a
free surrender of the kingdom of Italy. A false and servile
epistle was subscribed, by the reluctant hand of the captive
queen: but the confession of the Roman senators, who were sent to
Constantinople, revealed the truth of her deplorable situation;
and Justinian, by the voice of a new ambassador, most powerfully
interceded for her life and liberty. * Yet the secret
instructions of the same minister were adapted to serve the cruel
jealousy of Theodora, who dreaded the presence and superior
charms of a rival: he prompted, with artful and ambiguous hints,
the execution of a crime so useful to the Romans; received the
intelligence of her death with grief and indignation, and
denounced, in his master's name, immortal war against the
perfidious assassin. In Italy, as well as in Africa, the guilt of
a usurper appeared to justify the arms of Justinian; but the
forces which he prepared, were insufficient for the subversion of
a mighty kingdom, if their feeble numbers had not been multiplied
by the name, the spirit, and the conduct, of a hero. A chosen
troop of guards, who served on horseback, and were armed with
lances and bucklers, attended the person of Belisarius; his
cavalry was composed of two hundred Huns, three hundred Moors,
and four thousand confederates, and the
infantry consisted of only three thousand Isaurians. Steering the
same course as in his former expedition, the Roman consul cast
anchor before Catana in Sicily, to survey the strength of the
island, and to decide whether he should attempt the conquest, or
peaceably pursue his voyage for the African coast. He found a
fruitful land and a friendly people. Notwithstanding the decay of
agriculture, Sicily still supplied the granaries of Rome: the
farmers were graciously exempted from the oppression of military
quarters; and the Goths, who trusted the defence of the island to
the inhabitants, had some reason to complain, that their
confidence was ungratefully betrayed. Instead of soliciting and
expecting the aid of the king of Italy, they yielded to the first
summons a cheerful obedience; and this province, the first fruits
of the Punic war, was again, after a long separation, united to
the Roman empire. The Gothic garrison of Palermo, which alone
attempted to resist, was reduced, after a short siege, by a
singular stratagem. Belisarius introduced his ships into the
deepest recess of the harbor; their boats were laboriously
hoisted with ropes and pulleys to the top-mast head, and he
filled them with archers, who, from that superior station,
commanded the ramparts of the city. After this easy, though
successful campaign, the conqueror entered Syracuse in triumph,
at the head of his victorious bands, distributing gold medals to
the people, on the day which so gloriously terminated the year of
the consulship. He passed the winter season in the palace of
ancient kings, amidst the ruins of a Grecian colony, which once
extended to a circumference of two-and-twenty miles: but in the
spring, about the festival of Easter, the prosecution of his
designs was interrupted by a dangerous revolt of the African
forces. Carthage was saved by the presence of Belisarius, who
suddenly landed with a thousand guards. * Two thousand soldiers
of doubtful faith returned to the standard of their old
commander: and he marched, without hesitation, above fifty miles,
to seek an enemy whom he affected to pity and despise. Eight
thousand rebels trembled at his approach; they were routed at the
first onset, by the dexterity of their master: and this ignoble
victory would have restored the peace of Africa, if the conqueror
had not been hastily recalled to Sicily, to appease a sedition
which was kindled during his absence in his own camp. Disorder
and disobedience were the common malady of the times; the genius
to command, and the virtue to obey, resided only in the mind of
Belisarius.
Chapter XLI: Conquests Of Justinian, Character Of
Balisarius. -- Part IV.
Although Theodatus descended from a race of heroes, he was
ignorant of the art, and averse to the dangers, of war. Although
he had studied the writings of Plato and Tully, philosophy was
incapable of purifying his mind from the basest passions, avarice
and fear. He had purchased a sceptre by ingratitude and murder:
at the first menace of an enemy, he degraded his own majesty and
that of a nation, which already disdained their unworthy
sovereign. Astonished by the recent example of Gelimer, he saw
himself dragged in chains through the streets of Constantinople:
the terrors which Belisarius inspired were heightened by the
eloquence of Peter, the Byzantine ambassador; and that bold and
subtle advocate persuaded him to sign a treaty, too ignominious
to become the foundation of a lasting peace. It was stipulated,
that in the acclamations of the Roman people, the name of the
emperor should be always proclaimed before that of the Gothic
king; and that as often as the statue of Theodatus was erected in
brass on marble, the divine image of Justinian should be placed
on its right hand. Instead of conferring, the king of Italy was
reduced to solicit, the honors of the senate; and the consent of
the emperor was made indispensable before he could execute,
against a priest or senator, the sentence either of death or
confiscation. The feeble monarch resigned the possession of
Sicily; offered, as the annual mark of his dependence, a crown of
gold of the weight of three hundred pounds; and promised to
supply, at the requisition of his sovereign, three thousand
Gothic auxiliaries, for the service of the empire. Satisfied with
these extraordinary concessions, the successful agent of
Justinian hastened his journey to Constantinople; but no sooner
had he reached the Alban villa, than he was recalled by the
anxiety of Theodatus; and the dialogue which passed between the
king and the ambassador deserves to be represented in its
original simplicity. "Are you of opinion that the emperor will
ratify this treaty? Perhaps. If he
refuses, what consequence will ensue?
War. Will such a war, be just or
reasonable? Most assuredly: every one should act
according to his character. What is your meaning?
You are a philosopher -- Justinian is emperor of the
Romans: it would ill become the disciple of Plato to shed the
blood of thousands in his private quarrel: the successor of
Augustus should vindicate his rights, and recover by arms the
ancient provinces of his empire." This reasoning
might not convince, but it was sufficient to alarm and subdue the
weakness of Theodatus; and he soon descended to his last offer,
that for the poor equivalent of a pension of forty-eight thousand
pounds sterling, he would resign the kingdom of the Goths and
Italians, and spend the remainder of his days in the innocent
pleasures of philosophy and agriculture. Both treaties were
intrusted to the hands of the ambassador, on the frail security
of an oath not to produce the second till the first had been
positively rejected. The event may be easily foreseen: Justinian
required and accepted the abdication of the Gothic king. His
indefatigable agent returned from Constantinople to Ravenna, with
ample instructions; and a fair epistle, which praised the wisdom
and generosity of the royal philosopher, granted his pension,
with the assurance of such honors as a subject and a Catholic
might enjoy; and wisely referred the final execution of the
treaty to the presence and authority of Belisarius. But in the
interval of suspense, two Roman generals, who had entered the
province of Dalmatia, were defeated and slain by the Gothic
troops. From blind and abject despair, Theodatus capriciously
rose to groundless and fatal presumption, and dared to receive,
with menace and contempt, the ambassador of Justinian; who
claimed his promise, solicited the allegiance of his subjects,
and boldly asserted the inviolable privilege of his own
character. The march of Belisarius dispelled this visionary
pride; and as the first campaign was employed in the reduction of
Sicily, the invasion of Italy is applied by Procopius to the
second year of the Gothic war.
After Belisarius had left sufficient garrisons in Palermo and
Syracuse, he embarked his troops at Messina, and landed them,
without resistance, on the opposite shores of Rhegium. A Gothic
prince, who had married the daughter of Theodatus, was stationed
with an army to guard the entrance of Italy; but he imitated,
without scruple, the example of a sovereign faithless to his
public and private duties. The perfidious Ebermor deserted with
his followers to the Roman camp, and was dismissed to enjoy the
servile honors of the Byzantine court. From Rhegium to Naples,
the fleet and army of Belisarius, almost always in view of each
other, advanced near three hundred miles along the sea-coast. The
people of Bruttium, Lucania, and Campania, who abhorred the name
and religion of the Goths, embraced the specious excuse, that
their ruined walls were incapable of defence: the soldiers paid a
just equivalent for a plentiful market; and curiosity alone
interrupted the peaceful occupations of the husbandman or
artificer. Naples, which has swelled to a great and populous
capital, long cherished the language and manners of a Grecian
colony; and the choice of Virgil had ennobled this elegant
retreat, which attracted the lovers of repose and study, elegant
retreat, which attracted the lovers of repose and study, from the
noise, the smoke, and the laborious opulence of Rome. As soon as
the place was invested by sea and land, Belisarius gave audience
to the deputies of the people, who exhorted him to disregard a
conquest unworthy of his arms, to seek the Gothic king in a field
of battle, and, after his victory, to claim, as the sovereign of
Rome, the allegiance of the dependent cities. "When I treat with
my enemies," replied the Roman chief, with a haughty smile, "I am
more accustomed to give than to receive counsel; but I hold in
one hand inevitable ruin, and in the other peace and freedom,
such as Sicily now enjoys." The impatience of delay urged him to
grant the most liberal terms; his honor secured their
performance: but Naples was divided into two factions; and the
Greek democracy was inflamed by their orators, who, with much
spirit and some truth, represented to the multitude that the
Goths would punish their defection, and that Belisarius himself
must esteem their loyalty and valor. Their deliberations,
however, were not perfectly free: the city was commanded by eight
hundred Barbarians, whose wives and children were detained at
Ravenna as the pledge of their fidelity; and even the Jews, who
were rich and numerous, resisted, with desperate enthusiasm, the
intolerant laws of Justinian. In a much later period, the
circumference of Naples measured only two thousand three hundred
and sixty three paces: the fortifications were defended by
precipices or the sea; when the aqueducts were intercepted, a
supply of water might be drawn from wells and fountains; and the
stock of provisions was sufficient to consume the patience of the
besiegers. At the end of twenty days, that of Belisarius was
almost exhausted, and he had reconciled himself to the disgrace
of abandoning the siege, that he might march, before the winter
season, against Rome and the Gothic king. But his anxiety was
relieved by the bold curiosity of an Isaurian, who explored the
dry channel of an aqueduct, and secretly reported, that a passage
might be perforated to introduce a file of armed soldiers into
the heart of the city. When the work had been silently executed,
the humane general risked the discovery of his secret by a last
and fruitless admonition of the impending danger. In the darkness
of the night, four hundred Romans entered the aqueduct, raised
themselves by a rope, which they fastened to an olive-tree, into
the house or garden of a solitary matron, sounded their trumpets,
surprised the sentinels, and gave admittance to their companions,
who on all sides scaled the walls, and burst open the gates of
the city. Every crime which is punished by social justice was
practised as the rights of war; the Huns were distinguished by
cruelty and sacrilege, and Belisarius alone appeared in the
streets and churches of Naples to moderate the calamities which
he predicted. "The gold and silver," he repeatedly exclaimed,
"are the just rewards of your valor. But spare the inhabitants;
they are Christians, they are suppliants, they are now your
fellow-subjects. Restore the children to their parents, the wives
to their husbands; and show them by you, generosity of what
friends they have obstinately deprived themselves." The city was
saved by the virtue and authority of its conqueror; and when the
Neapolitans returned to their houses, they found some consolation
in the secret enjoyment of their hidden treasures. The Barbarian
garrison enlisted in the service of the emperor; Apulia and
Calabria, delivered from the odious presence of the Goths,
acknowledged his dominion; and the tusks of the Calydonian boar,
which were still shown at Beneventum, are curiously described by
the historian of Belisarius.
The faithful soldiers and citizens of Naples had expected
their deliverance from a prince, who remained the inactive and
almost indifferent spectator of their ruin. Theodatus secured his
person within the walls of Rome, whilst his cavalry advanced
forty miles on the Appian way, and encamped in the Pomptine
marshes; which, by a canal of nineteen miles in length, had been
recently drained and converted into excellent pastures. But the
principal forces of the Goths were dispersed in Dalmatia,
Venetia, and Gaul; and the feeble mind of their king was
confounded by the unsuccessful event of a divination, which
seemed to presage the downfall of his empire. The most abject
slaves have arraigned the guilt or weakness of an unfortunate
master. The character of Theodatus was rigorously scrutinized by
a free and idle camp of Barbarians, conscious of their privilege
and power: he was declared unworthy of his race, his nation, and
his throne; and their general Vitiges, whose valor had been
signalized in the Illyrian war, was raised with unanimous
applause on the bucklers of his companions. On the first rumor,
the abdicated monarch fled from the justice of his country; but
he was pursued by private revenge. A Goth, whom he had injured in
his love, overtook Theodatus on the Flaminian way, and,
regardless of his unmanly cries, slaughtered him, as he lay,
prostrate on the ground, like a victim (says the historian) at
the foot of the altar. The choice of the people is the best and
purest title to reign over them; yet such is the prejudice of
every age, that Vitiges impatiently wished to return to Ravenna,
where he might seize, with the reluctant hand of the daughter of
Amalasontha, some faint shadow of hereditary right. A national
council was immediately held, and the new monarch reconciled the
impatient spirit of the Barbarians to a measure of disgrace,
which the misconduct of his predecessor rendered wise and
indispensable. The Goths consented to retreat in the presence of
a victorious enemy; to delay till the next spring the operations
of offensive war; to summon their scattered forces; to relinquish
their distant possessions, and to trust even Rome itself to the
faith of its inhabitants. Leuderis, an ancient warrior, was left
in the capital with four thousand soldiers; a feeble garrison,
which might have seconded the zeal, though it was incapable of
opposing the wishes, of the Romans. But a momentary enthusiasm of
religion and patriotism was kindled in their minds. They
furiously exclaimed, that the apostolic throne should no longer
be profaned by the triumph or toleration of Arianism; that the
tombs of the Cæsars should no longer be trampled by the
savages of the North; and, without reflecting, that Italy must
sink into a province of Constantinople, they fondly hailed the
restoration of a Roman emperor as a new æra of freedom and
prosperity. The deputies of the pope and clergy, of the senate
and people, invited the lieutenant of Justinian to accept their
voluntary allegiance, and to enter the city, whose gates would be
thrown open for his reception. As soon as Belisarius had
fortified his new conquests, Naples and Cumæ, he advanced
about twenty miles to the banks of the Vulturnus, contemplated
the decayed grandeur of Capua, and halted at the separation of
the Latin and Appian ways. The work of the censor, after the
incessant use of nine centuries, still preserved its
primæval beauty, and not a flaw could be discovered in the
large polished stones, of which that solid, though narrow road,
was so firmly compacted. Belisarius, however, preferred the Latin
way, which, at a distance from the sea and the marshes, skirted
in a space of one hundred and twenty miles along the foot of the
mountains. His enemies had disappeared: when he made his entrance
through the Asinarian gate, the garrison departed without
molestation along the Flaminian way; and the city, after sixty
years' servitude, was delivered from the yoke of the Barbarians.
Leuderis alone, from a motive of pride or discontent, refused to
accompany the fugitives; and the Gothic chief, himself a trophy
of the victory, was sent with the keys of Rome to the throne of
the emperor Justinian.
The first days, which coincided with the old Saturnalia, were
devoted to mutual congratulation and the public joy; and the
Catholics prepared to celebrate, without a rival, the approaching
festival of the nativity of Christ. In the familiar conversation
of a hero, the Romans acquired some notion of the virtues which
history ascribed to their ancestors; they were edified by the
apparent respect of Belisarius for the successor of St. Peter,
and his rigid discipline secured in the midst of war the
blessings of tranquillity and justice. They applauded the rapid
success of his arms, which overran the adjacent country, as far
as Narni, Perusia, and Spoleto; but they trembled, the senate,
the clergy, and the unwarlike people, as soon as they understood
that he had resolved, and would speedily be reduced, to sustain a
siege against the powers of the Gothic monarchy. The designs of
Vitiges were executed, during the winter season, with diligence
and effect. From their rustic habitations, from their distant
garrisons, the Goths assembled at Ravenna for the defence of
their country; and such were their numbers, that, after an army
had been detached for the relief of Dalmatia, one hundred and
fifty thousand fighting men marched under the royal standard.
According to the degrees of rank or merit, the Gothic king
distributed arms and horses, rich gifts, and liberal promises; he
moved along the Flaminian way, declined the useless sieges of
Perusia and Spoleto, respected he impregnable rock of Narni, and
arrived within two miles of Rome at the foot of the Milvian
bridge. The narrow passage was fortified with a tower, and
Belisarius had computed the value of the twenty days which must
be lost in the construction of another bridge. But the
consternation of the soldiers of the tower, who either fled or
deserted, disappointed his hopes, and betrayed his person into
the most imminent danger. At the head of one thousand horse, the
Roman general sallied from the Flaminian gate to mark the ground
of an advantageous position, and to survey the camp of the
Barbarians; but while he still believed them on the other side of
the Tyber, he was suddenly encompassed and assaulted by their
numerous squadrons. The fate of Italy depended on his life; and
the deserters pointed to the conspicuous horse a bay, with a
white face, which he rode on that memorable day. "Aim at the bay
horse," was the universal cry. Every bow was bent, every javelin
was directed, against that fatal object, and the command was
repeated and obeyed by thousands who were ignorant of its real
motive. The bolder Barbarians advanced to the more honorable
combat of swords and spears; and the praise of an enemy has
graced the fall of Visandus, the standard-bearer, who maintained
his foremost station, till he was pierced with thirteen wounds,
perhaps by the hand of Belisarius himself. The Roman general was
strong, active, and dexterous; on every side he discharged his
weighty and mortal strokes: his faithful guards imitated his
valor, and defended his person; and the Goths, after the loss of
a thousand men, fled before the arms of a hero. They were rashly
pursued to their camp; and the Romans, oppressed by multitudes,
made a gradual, and at length a precipitate retreat to the gates
of the city: the gates were shut against the fugitives; and the
public terror was increased, by the report that Belisarius was
slain. His countenance was indeed disfigured by sweat, dust, and
blood; his voice was hoarse, his strength was almost exhausted;
but his unconquerable spirit still remained; he imparted that
spirit to his desponding companions; and their last desperate
charge was felt by the flying Barbarians, as if a new army,
vigorous and entire, had been poured from the city. The Flaminian
gate was thrown open to a real triumph; but it was not before
Belisarius had visited every post, and provided for the public
safety, that he could be persuaded, by his wife and friends, to
taste the needful refreshments of food and sleep. In the more
improved state of the art of war, a general is seldom required,
or even permitted to display the personal prowess of a soldier;
and the example of Belisarius may be added to the rare examples
of Henry IV., of Pyrrhus, and of Alexander.
After this first and unsuccessful trial of their enemies, the
whole army of the Goths passed the Tyber, and formed the siege of
the city, which continued above a year, till their final
departure. Whatever fancy may conceive, the severe compass of the
geographer defines the circumference of Rome within a line of
twelve miles and three hundred and forty-five paces; and that
circumference, except in the Vatican, has invariably been the
same from the triumph of Aurelian to the peaceful but obscure
reign of the modern popes. But in the day of her greatness, the
space within her walls was crowded with habitations and
inhabitants; and the populous suburbs, that stretched along the
public roads, were darted like so many rays from one common
centre. Adversity swept away these extraneous ornaments, and left
naked and desolate a considerable part even of the seven hills.
Yet Rome in its present state could send into the field about
thirty thousand males of a military age; and, notwithstanding the
want of discipline and exercise, the far greater part, inured to
the hardships of poverty, might be capable of bearing arms for
the defence of their country and religion. The prudence of
Belisarius did not neglect this important resource. His soldiers
were relieved by the zeal and diligence of the people, who
watched while they slept, and labored
while they reposed: he accepted the
voluntary service of the bravest and most indigent of the Roman
youth; and the companies of townsmen sometimes represented, in a
vacant post, the presence of the troops which had been drawn away
to more essential duties. But his just confidence was placed in
the veterans who had fought under his banner in the Persian and
African wars; and although that gallant band was reduced to five
thousand men, he undertook, with such contemptible numbers, to
defend a circle of twelve miles, against an army of one hundred
and fifty thousand Barbarians. In the walls of Rome, which
Belisarius constructed or restored, the materials of ancient
architecture may be discerned; and the whole fortification was
completed, except in a chasm still extant between the Pincian and
Flaminian gates, which the prejudices of the Goths and Romans
left under the effectual guard of St. Peter the apostle.
The battlements or bastions were shaped in sharp angles a
ditch, broad and deep, protected the foot of the rampart; and the
archers on the rampart were assisted by military engines; the
balista, a powerful cross-bow, which
darted short but massy arrows; the
onagri, or wild asses, which, on the
principle of a sling, threw stones and bullets of an enormous
size. A chain was drawn across the Tyber; the arches of the
aqueducts were made impervious, and the mole or sepulchre of
Hadrian was converted, for the first time, to the uses of a
citadel. That venerable structure, which contained the ashes of
the Antonines, was a circular turret rising from a quadrangular
basis; it was covered with the white marble of Paros, and
decorated by the statues of gods and heroes; and the lover of the
arts must read with a sigh, that the works of Praxiteles or
Lysippus were torn from their lofty pedestals, and hurled into
the ditch on the heads of the besiegers. To each of his
lieutenants Belisarius assigned the defence of a gate, with the
wise and peremptory instruction, that, whatever might be the
alarm, they should steadily adhere to their respective posts, and
trust their general for the safety of Rome. The formidable host
of the Goths was insufficient to embrace the ample measure of the
city, of the fourteen gates, seven only were invested from the
Prnestine to the Flaminian way; and Vitiges divided his troops
into six camps, each of which was fortified with a ditch and
rampart. On the Tuscan side of the river, a seventh encampment
was formed in the field or circus of the Vatican, for the
important purpose of commanding the Milvian bridge and the course
of the Tyber; but they approached with devotion the adjacent
church of St. Peter; and the threshold of the holy apostles was
respected during the siege by a Christian enemy. In the ages of
victory, as often as the senate decreed some distant conquest,
the consul denounced hostilities, by unbarring, in solemn pomp,
the gates of the temple of Janus. Domestic war now rendered the
admonition superfluous, and the ceremony was superseded by the
establishment of a new religion. But the brazen temple of Janus
was left standing in the forum; of a size sufficient only to
contain the statue of the god, five cubits in height, of a human
form, but with two faces directed to the east and west. The
double gates were likewise of brass; and a fruitless effort to
turn them on their rusty hinges revealed the scandalous secret
that some Romans were still attached to the superstition of their
ancestors.
Eighteen days were employed by the besiegers, to provide all
the instruments of attack which antiquity had invented. Fascines
were prepared to fill the ditches, scaling-ladders to ascend the
walls. The largest trees of the forest supplied the timbers of
four battering-rams: their heads were armed with iron; they were
suspended by ropes, and each of them was worked by the labor of
fifty men. The lofty wooden turrets moved on wheels or rollers,
and formed a spacious platform of the level of the rampart. On
the morning of the nineteenth day, a general attack was made from
the Prænestine gate to the Vatican: seven Gothic columns,
with their military engines, advanced to the assault; and the
Romans, who lined the ramparts, listened with doubt and anxiety
to the cheerful assurances of their commander. As soon as the
enemy approached the ditch, Belisarius himself drew the first
arrow; and such was his strength and dexterity, that he
transfixed the foremost of the Barbarian leaders.
As shout of applause and victory was reëchoed along the
wall. He drew a second arrow, and the stroke was followed with
the same success and the same acclamation. The Roman general then
gave the word, that the archers should aim at the teams of oxen;
they were instantly covered with mortal wounds; the towers which
they drew remained useless and immovable, and a single moment
disconcerted the laborious projects of the king of the Goths.
After this disappointment, Vitiges still continued, or feigned to
continue, the assault of the Salarian gate, that he might divert
the attention of his adversary, while his principal forces more
strenuously attacked the Prænestine gate and the sepulchre
of Hadrian, at the distance of three miles from each other. Near
the former, the double walls of the Vivarium were low or broken;
the fortifications of the latter were feebly guarded: the vigor
of the Goths was excited by the hope of victory and spoil; and if
a single post had given way, the Romans, and Rome itself, were
irrecoverably lost. This perilous day was the most glorious in
the life of Belisarius. Amidst tumult and dismay, the whole plan
of the attack and defence was distinctly present to his mind; he
observed the changes of each instant, weighed every possible
advantage, transported his person to the scenes of danger, and
communicated his spirit in calm and decisive orders. The contest
was fiercely maintained from the morning to the evening; the
Goths were repulsed on all sides; and each Roman might boast that
he had vanquished thirty Barbarians, if the strange disproportion
of numbers were not counterbalanced by the merit of one man.
Thirty thousand Goths, according to the confession of their own
chiefs, perished in this bloody action; and the multitude of the
wounded was equal to that of the slain. When they advanced to the
assault, their close disorder suffered not a javelin to fall
without effect; and as they retired, the populace of the city
joined the pursuit, and slaughtered, with impunity, the backs of
their flying enemies. Belisarius instantly sallied from the
gates; and while the soldiers chanted his name and victory, the
hostile engines of war were reduced to ashes. Such was the loss
and consternation of the Goths, that, from this day, the siege of
Rome degenerated into a tedious and indolent blockade; and they
were incessantly harassed by the Roman general, who, in frequent
skirmishes, destroyed above five thousand of their bravest
troops. Their cavalry was unpractised in the use of the bow;
their archers served on foot; and this divided force was
incapable of contending with their adversaries, whose lances and
arrows, at a distance, or at hand, were alike formidable. The
consummate skill of Belisarius embraced the favorable
opportunities; and as he chose the ground and the moment, as he
pressed the charge or sounded the retreat, the squadrons which he
detached were seldom unsuccessful. These partial advantages
diffused an impatient ardor among the soldiers and people, who
began to feel the hardships of a siege, and to disregard the
dangers of a general engagement. Each plebeian conceived himself
to be a hero, and the infantry, who, since the decay of
discipline, were rejected from the line of battle, aspired to the
ancient honors of the Roman legion. Belisarius praised the spirit
of his troops, condemned their presumption, yielded to their
clamors, and prepared the remedies of a defeat, the possibility
of which he alone had courage to suspect. In the quarter of the
Vatican, the Romans prevailed; and if the irreparable moments had
not been wasted in the pillage of the camp, they might have
occupied the Milvian bridge, and charged in the rear of the
Gothic host. On the other side of the Tyber, Belisarius advanced
from the Pincian and Salarian gates. But his army, four thousand
soldiers perhaps, was lost in a spacious plain; they were
encompassed and oppressed by fresh multitudes, who continually
relieved the broken ranks of the Barbarians. The valiant leaders
of the infantry were unskilled to conquer; they died: the retreat
(a hasty retreat) was covered by the prudence of the general, and
the victors started back with affright from the formidable aspect
of an armed rampart. The reputation of Belisarius was unsullied
by a defeat; and the vain confidence of the Goths was not less
serviceable to his designs than the repentance and modesty of the
Roman troops.
Chapter XLI: Conquests Of Justinian, Character Of
Balisarius. -- Part V.
From the moment that Belisarius had determined to sustain a
siege, his assiduous care provided Rome against the danger of
famine, more dreadful than the Gothic arms. An extraordinary
supply of corn was imported from Sicily: the harvests of Campania
and Tuscany were forcibly swept for the use of the city; and the
rights of private property were infringed by the strong plea of
the public safety. It might easily be foreseen that the enemy
would intercept the aqueducts; and the cessation of the
water-mills was the first inconvenience, which was speedily
removed by mooring large vessels, and fixing mill-stones in the
current of the river. The stream was soon embarrassed by the
trunks of trees, and polluted with dead bodies; yet so effectual
were the precautions of the Roman general, that the waters of the
Tyber still continued to give motion to the mills and drink to
the inhabitants: the more distant quarters were supplied from
domestic wells; and a besieged city might support, without
impatience, the privation of her public baths. A large portion of
Rome, from the Prænestine gate to the church of St. Paul,
was never invested by the Goths; their excursions were restrained
by the activity of the Moorish troops: the navigation of the
Tyber, and the Latin, Appian, and Ostian ways, were left free and
unmolested for the introduction of corn and cattle, or the
retreat of the inhabitants, who sought refuge in Campania or
Sicily. Anxious to relieve himself from a useless and devouring
multitude, Belisarius issued his peremptory orders for the
instant departure of the women, the children, and slaves;
required his soldiers to dismiss their male and female
attendants, and regulated their allowance that one moiety should
be given in provisions, and the other in money. His foresight was
justified by the increase of the public distress, as soon as the
Goths had occupied two important posts in the neighborhood of
Rome. By the loss of the port, or, as it is now called, the city
of Porto, he was deprived of the country on the right of the
Tyber, and the best communication with the sea; and he reflected,
with grief and anger, that three hundred men, could he have
spared such a feeble band, might have defended its impregnable
works. Seven miles from the capital, between the Appian and the
Latin ways, two principal aqueducts crossing, and again crossing
each other: enclosed within their solid and lofty arches a
fortified space, where Vitiges established a camp of seven
thousand Goths to intercept the convoy of Sicily and Campania.
The granaries of Rome were insensibly exhausted, the adjacent
country had been wasted with fire and sword; such scanty supplies
as might yet be obtained by hasty excursions were the reward of
valor, and the purchase of wealth: the forage of the horses, and
the bread of the soldiers, never failed: but in the last months
of the siege, the people were exposed to the miseries of
scarcity, unwholesome food, and contagious disorders. Belisarius
saw and pitied their sufferings; but he had foreseen, and he
watched the decay of their loyalty, and the progress of their
discontent. Adversity had awakened the Romans from the dreams of
grandeur and freedom, and taught them the humiliating lesson,
that it was of small moment to their real happiness, whether the
name of their master was derived from the Gothic or the Latin
language. The lieutenant of Justinian listened to their just
complaints, but he rejected with disdain the idea of flight or
capitulation; repressed their clamorous impatience for battle;
amused them with the prospect of a sure and speedy relief; and
secured himself and the city from the effects of their despair or
treachery. Twice in each month he changed the station of the
officers to whom the custody of the gates was committed: the
various precautions of patroles, watch words, lights, and music,
were repeatedly employed to discover whatever passed on the
ramparts; out-guards were posted beyond the ditch, and the trusty
vigilance of dogs supplied the more doubtful fidelity of mankind.
A letter was intercepted, which assured the king of the Goths
that the Asinarian gate, adjoining to the Lateran church, should
be secretly opened to his troops. On the proof or suspicion of
treason, several senators were banished, and the pope Sylverius
was summoned to attend the representative of his sovereign, at
his head-quarters in the Pincian palace. The ecclesiastics, who
followed their bishop, were detained in the first or second
apartment, and he alone was admitted to the presence of
Belisarius. The conqueror of Rome and Carthage was modestly
seated at the feet of Antonina, who reclined on a stately couch:
the general was silent, but the voice of reproach and menace
issued from the mouth of his imperious wife. Accused by credible
witnesses, and the evidence of his own subscription, the
successor of St. Peter was despoiled of his pontifical ornaments,
clad in the mean habit of a monk, and embarked, without delay,
for a distant exile in the East. * At the emperor's command, the
clergy of Rome proceeded to the choice of a new bishop; and after
a solemn invocation of the Holy Ghost, elected the deacon
Vigilius, who had purchased the papal throne by a bribe of two
hundred pounds of gold. The profit, and consequently the guilt,
of this simony, was imputed to Belisarius: but the hero obeyed
the orders of his wife; Antonina served the passions of the
empress; and Theodora lavished her treasures, in the vain hope of
obtaining a pontiff hostile or indifferent to the council of
Chalcedon.
The epistle of Belisarius to the emperor announced his
victory, his danger, and his resolution. "According to your
commands, we have entered the dominions of the Goths, and reduced
to your obedience Sicily, Campania, and the city of Rome; but the
loss of these conquests will be more disgraceful than their
acquisition was glorious. Hitherto we have successfully fought
against the multitudes of the Barbarians, but their multitudes
may finally prevail. Victory is the gift of Providence, but the
reputation of kings and generals depends on the success or the
failure of their designs. Permit me to speak with freedom: if you
wish that we should live, send us subsistence; if you desire that
we should conquer, send us arms, horses, and men. The Romans have
received us as friends and deliverers: but in our present
distress, they will be either betrayed
by their confidence, or we shall be oppressed by
their treachery and hatred. For myself,
my life is consecrated to your service: it is yours to reflect,
whether my death in this situation will contribute to the glory
and prosperity of your reign." Perhaps that reign would have been
equally prosperous if the peaceful master of the East had
abstained from the conquest of Africa and Italy: but as Justinian
was ambitious of fame, he made some efforts (they were feeble and
languid) to support and rescue his victorious general. A
reënforcement of sixteen hundred Sclavonians and Huns was
led by Martin and Valerian; and as they reposed during the winter
season in the harbors of Greece, the strength of the men and
horses was not impaired by the fatigues of a sea-voyage; and they
distinguished their valor in the first sally against the
besiegers. About the time of the summer solstice, Euthalius
landed at Terracina with large sums of money for the payment of
the troops: he cautiously proceeded along the Appian way, and
this convoy entered Rome through the gate Capena, while
Belisarius, on the other side, diverted the attention of the
Goths by a vigorous and successful skirmish. These seasonable
aids, the use and reputation of which were dexterously managed by
the Roman general, revived the courage, or at least the hopes, of
the soldiers and people. The historian Procopius was despatched
with an important commission to collect the troops and provisions
which Campania could furnish, or Constantinople had sent; and the
secretary of Belisarius was soon followed by Antonina herself,
who boldly traversed the posts of the enemy, and returned with
the Oriental succors to the relief of her husband and the
besieged city. A fleet of three thousand Isaurians cast anchor in
the Bay of Naples and afterwards at Ostia. Above two thousand
horse, of whom a part were Thracians, landed at Tarentum; and,
after the junction of five hundred soldiers of Campania, and a
train of wagons laden with wine and flour, they directed their
march on the Appian way, from Capua to the neighborhood of Rome.
The forces that arrived by land and sea were united at the mouth
of the Tyber. Antonina convened a council of war: it was resolved
to surmount, with sails and oars, the adverse stream of the
river; and the Goths were apprehensive of disturbing, by any rash
hostilities, the negotiation to which Belisarius had craftily
listened. They credulously believed that they saw no more than
the vanguard of a fleet and army, which already covered the
Ionian Sea and the plains of Campania; and the illusion was
supported by the haughty language of the Roman general, when he
gave audience to the ambassadors of Vitiges. After a specious
discourse to vindicate the justice of his cause, they declared,
that, for the sake of peace, they were disposed to renounce the
possession of Sicily. "The emperor is not less generous," replied
his lieutenant, with a disdainful smile, "in return for a gift
which you no longer possess: he presents you with an ancient
province of the empire; he resigns to the Goths the sovereignty
of the British island." Belisarius rejected with equal firmness
and contempt the offer of a tribute; but he allowed the Gothic
ambassadors to seek their fate from the mouth of Justinian
himself; and consented, with seeming reluctance, to a truce of
three months, from the winter solstice to the equinox of spring.
Prudence might not safely trust either the oaths or hostages of
the Barbarians, and the conscious superiority of the Roman chief
was expressed in the distribution of his troops. As soon as fear
or hunger compelled the Goths to evacuate Alba, Porto, and
Centumcellæ, their place was instantly supplied; the
garrisons of Narni, Spoleto, and Perusia, were reënforced,
and the seven camps of the besiegers were gradually encompassed
with the calamities of a siege. The prayers and pilgrimage of
Datius, bishop of Milan, were not without effect; and he obtained
one thousand Thracians and Isaurians, to assist the revolt of
Liguria against her Arian tyrant. At the same time, John the
Sanguinary, the nephew of Vitalian, was detached with two
thousand chosen horse, first to Alba, on the Fucine Lake, and
afterwards to the frontiers of Picenum, on the Hadriatic Sea. "In
the province," said Belisarius, "the Goths have deposited their
families and treasures, without a guard or the suspicion of
danger. Doubtless they will violate the truce: let them feel your
presence, before they hear of your motions. Spare the Italians;
suffer not any fortified places to remain hostile in your rear;
and faithfully reserve the spoil for an equal and common
partition. It would not be reasonable," he added with a laugh,
"that whilst we are toiling to the destruction of the drones, our
more fortunate brethren should rifle and enjoy the honey."
The whole nation of the Ostrogoths had been assembled for the
attack, and was almost entirely consumed in the siege of Rome. If
any credit be due to an intelligent spectator, one third at least
of their enormous host was destroyed, in frequent and bloody
combats under the walls of the city. The bad fame and pernicious
qualities of the summer air might already be imputed to the decay
of agriculture and population; and the evils of famine and
pestilence were aggravated by their own licentiousness, and the
unfriendly disposition of the country. While Vitiges struggled
with his fortune, while he hesitated between shame and ruin, his
retreat was hastened by domestic alarms. The king of the Goths
was informed by trembling messengers, that John the Sanguinary
spread the devastations of war from the Apennine to the
Hadriatic; that the rich spoils and innumerable captives of
Picenum were lodged in the fortifications of Rimini; and that
this formidable chief had defeated his uncle, insulted his
capital, and seduced, by secret correspondence, the fidelity of
his wife, the imperious daughter of Amalasontha. Yet, before he
retired, Vitiges made a last effort, either to storm or to
surprise the city. A secret passage was discovered in one of the
aqueducts; two citizens of the Vatican were tempted by bribes to
intoxicate the guards of the Aurelian gate; an attack was
meditated on the walls beyond the Tyber, in a place which was not
fortified with towers; and the Barbarians advanced, with torches
and scaling-ladders, to the assault of the Pincian gate. But
every attempt was defeated by the intrepid vigilance of
Belisarius and his band of veterans, who, in the most perilous
moments, did not regret the absence of their companions; and the
Goths, alike destitute of hope and subsistence, clamorously urged
their departure before the truce should expire, and the Roman
cavalry should again be united. One year and nine days after the
commencement of the siege, an army, so lately strong and
triumphant, burnt their tents, and tumultuously repassed the
Milvian bridge. They repassed not with impunity: their thronging
multitudes, oppressed in a narrow passage, were driven headlong
into the Tyber, by their own fears and the pursuit of the enemy;
and the Roman general, sallying from the Pincian gate, inflicted
a severe and disgraceful wound on their retreat. The slow length
of a sickly and desponding host was heavily dragged along the
Flaminian way; from whence the Barbarians were sometimes
compelled to deviate, lest they should encounter the hostile
garrisons that guarded the high road to Rimini and Ravenna. Yet
so powerful was this flying army, that Vitiges spared ten
thousand men for the defence of the cities which he was most
solicitous to preserve, and detached his nephew Uraias, with an
adequate force, for the chastisement of rebellious Milan. At the
head of his principal army, he besieged Rimini, only thirty-three
miles distant from the Gothic capital. A feeble rampart, and a
shallow ditch, were maintained by the skill and valor of John the
Sanguinary, who shared the danger and fatigue of the meanest
soldier, and emulated, on a theatre less illustrious, the
military virtues of his great commander. The towers and
battering-engines of the Barbarians were rendered useless; their
attacks were repulsed; and the tedious blockade, which reduced
the garrison to the last extremity of hunger, afforded time for
the union and march of the Roman forces. A fleet, which had
surprised Ancona, sailed along the coast of the Hadriatic, to the
relief of the besieged city. The eunuch Narses landed in Picenum
with two thousand Heruli and five thousand of the bravest troops
of the East. The rock of the Apennine was forced; ten thousand
veterans moved round the foot of the mountains, under the command
of Belisarius himself; and a new army, whose encampment blazed
with innumerable lights, appeared to
advance along the Flaminian way. Overwhelmed with astonishment
and despair, the Goths abandoned the siege of Rimini, their
tents, their standards, and their leaders; and Vitiges, who gave
or followed the example of flight, never halted till he found a
shelter within the walls and morasses of Ravenna.
To these walls, and to some fortresses destitute of any mutual
support, the Gothic monarchy was now reduced. The provinces of
Italy had embraced the party of the emperor and his army,
gradually recruited to the number of twenty thousand men, must
have achieved an easy and rapid conquest, if their invincible
powers had not been weakened by the discord of the Roman chiefs.
Before the end of the siege, an act of blood, ambiguous and
indiscreet, sullied the fair fame of Belisarius. Presidius, a
loyal Italian, as he fled from Ravenna to Rome, was rudely
stopped by Constantine, the military governor of Spoleto, and
despoiled, even in a church, of two daggers richly inlaid with
gold and precious stones. As soon as the public danger had
subsided, Presidius complained of the loss and injury: his
complaint was heard, but the order of restitution was disobeyed
by the pride and avarice of the offender. Exasperated by the
delay, Presidius boldly arrested the general's horse as he passed
through the forum; and, with the spirit of a citizen, demanded
the common benefit of the Roman laws. The honor of Belisarius was
engaged; he summoned a council; claimed the obedience of his
subordinate officer; and was provoked, by an insolent reply, to
call hastily for the presence of his guards. Constantine, viewing
their entrance as the signal of death, drew his sword, and rushed
on the general, who nimbly eluded the stroke, and was protected
by his friends; while the desperate assassin was disarmed,
dragged into a neighboring chamber, and executed, or rather
murdered, by the guards, at the arbitrary command of Belisarius.
In this hasty act of violence, the guilt of Constantine was no
longer remembered; the despair and death of that valiant officer
were secretly imputed to the revenge of Antonina; and each of his
colleagues, conscious of the same rapine, was apprehensive of the
same fate. The fear of a common enemy suspended the effects of
their envy and discontent; but in the confidence of approaching
victory, they instigated a powerful rival to oppose the conqueror
of Rome and Africa. From the domestic service of the palace, and
the administration of the private revenue, Narses the eunuch was
suddenly exalted to the head of an army; and the spirit of a
hero, who afterwards equalled the merit and glory of Belisarius,
served only to perplex the operations of the Gothic war. To his
prudent counsels, the relief of Rimini was ascribed by the
leaders of the discontented faction, who exhorted Narses to
assume an independent and separate command. The epistle of
Justinian had indeed enjoined his obedience to the general; but
the dangerous exception, "as far as may be advantageous to the
public service," reserved some freedom of judgment to the
discreet favorite, who had so lately departed from the sacred and
familiar conversation of his sovereign. In the exercise of this
doubtful right, the eunuch perpetually dissented from the
opinions of Belisarius; and, after yielding with reluctance to
the siege of Urbino, he deserted his colleague in the night, and
marched away to the conquest of the Æmilian province. The
fierce and formidable bands of the Heruli were attached to the
person of Narses; ten thousand Romans and confederates were
persuaded to march under his banners; every malecontent embraced
the fair opportunity of revenging his private or imaginary
wrongs; and the remaining troops of Belisarius were divided and
dispersed from the garrisons of Sicily to the shores of the
Hadriatic. His skill and perseverance overcame every obstacle:
Urbino was taken, the sieges of Fæsulæ Orvieto, and
Auximum, were undertaken and vigorously prosecuted; and the
eunuch Narses was at length recalled to the domestic cares of the
palace. All dissensions were healed, and all opposition was
subdued, by the temperate authority of the Roman general, to whom
his enemies could not refuse their esteem; and Belisarius
inculcated the salutary lesson that the forces of the state
should compose one body, and be animated by one soul. But in the
interval of discord, the Goths were permitted to breathe; an
important season was lost, Milan was destroyed, and the northern
provinces of Italy were afflicted by an inundation of the
Franks.
When Justinian first meditated the conquest of Italy, he sent
ambassadors to the kings of the Franks, and adjured them, by the
common ties of alliance and religion, to join in the holy
enterprise against the Arians. The Goths, as their want were more
urgent, employed a more effectual mode of persuasion, and vainly
strove, by the gift of lands and money, to purchase the
friendship, or at least the neutrality, of a light and perfidious
nation. But the arms of Belisarius, and the revolt of the
Italians, had no sooner shaken the Gothic monarchy, than
Theodebert of Austrasia, the most powerful and warlike of the
Merovingian kings, was persuaded to succor their distress by an
indirect and seasonable aid. Without expecting the consent of
their sovereign, the thousand Burgundians, his recent subjects,
descended from the Alps, and joined the troops which Vitiges had
sent to chastise the revolt of Milan. After an obstinate siege,
the capital of Liguria was reduced by famine; but no capitulation
could be obtained, except for the safe retreat of the Roman
garrison. Datius, the orthodox bishop, who had seduced his
countrymen to rebellion and ruin, escaped to the luxury and
honors of the Byzantine court; but the clergy, perhaps the Arian
clergy, were slaughtered at the foot of their own altars by the
defenders of the Catholic faith. Three hundred thousand males
were reported to be slain; the female
sex, and the more precious spoil, was resigned to the
Burgundians; and the houses, or at least the walls, of Milan,
were levelled with the ground. The Goths, in their last moments,
were revenged by the destruction of a city, second only to Rome
in size and opulence, in the splendor of its buildings, or the
number of its inhabitants; and Belisarius sympathized alone in
the fate of his deserted and devoted friends. Encouraged by this
successful inroad, Theodebert himself, in the ensuing spring,
invaded the plains of Italy with an army of one hundred thousand
Barbarians. The king, and some chosen followers, were mounted on
horseback, and armed with lances; the infantry, without bows or
spears, were satisfied with a shield, a sword, and a double-edged
battle-axe, which, in their hands, became a deadly and unerring
weapon. Italy trembled at the march of the Franks; and both the
Gothic prince and the Roman general, alike ignorant of their
designs, solicited, with hope and terror, the friendship of these
dangerous allies. Till he had secured the passage of the Po on
the bridge of Pavia, the grandson of Clovis dissembled his
intentions, which he at length declared, by assaulting, almost at
the same instant, the hostile camps of the Romans and Goths.
Instead of uniting their arms, they fled with equal
precipitation; and the fertile, though desolate provinces of
Liguria and Æmilia, were abandoned to a licentious host of
Barbarians, whose rage was not mitigated by any thoughts of
settlement or conquest. Among the cities which they ruined,
Genoa, not yet constructed of marble, is particularly enumerated;
and the deaths of thousands, according to the regular practice of
war, appear to have excited less horror than some idolatrous
sacrifices of women and children, which were performed with
impunity in the camp of the most Christian king. If it were not a
melancholy truth, that the first and most cruel sufferings must
be the lot of the innocent and helpless, history might exult in
the misery of the conquerors, who, in the midst of riches, were
left destitute of bread or wine, reduced to drink the waters of
the Po, and to feed on the flesh of distempered cattle. The
dysentery swept away one third of their army; and the clamors of
his subjects, who were impatient to pass the Alps, disposed
Theodebert to listen with respect to the mild exhortations of
Belisarius. The memory of this inglorious and destructive warfare
was perpetuated on the medals of Gaul; and Justinian, without
unsheathing his sword, assumed the title of conqueror of the
Franks. The Merovingian prince was offended by the vanity of the
emperor; he affected to pity the fallen fortunes of the Goths;
and his insidious offer of a fderal union was fortified by the
promise or menace of descending from the Alps at the head of five
hundred thousand men. His plans of conquest were boundless, and
perhaps chimerical. The king of Austrasia threatened to chastise
Justinian, and to march to the gates of Constantinople: he was
overthrown and slain by a wild bull, as he hunted in the Belgic
or German forests.
Chapter XLI: Conquests Of Justinian, Character Of
Balisarius. -- Part VI.
As soon as Belisarius was delivered from his foreign and
domestic enemies, he seriously applied his forces to the final
reduction of Italy. In the siege of Osimo, the general was nearly
transpierced with an arrow, if the mortal stroke had not been
intercepted by one of his guards, who lost, in that pious office,
the use of his hand. The Goths of Osimo, * four thousand
warriors, with those of Fæsulæ and the Cottian Alps,
were among the last who maintained their independence; and their
gallant resistance, which almost tired the patience, deserved the
esteem, of the conqueror. His prudence refused to subscribe the
safe conduct which they asked, to join their brethren of Ravenna;
but they saved, by an honorable capitulation, one moiety at least
of their wealth, with the free alternative of retiring peaceably
to their estates, or enlisting to serve the emperor in his
Persian wars. The multitudes which yet adhered to the standard of
Vitiges far surpassed the number of the Roman troops; but neither
prayers nor defiance, nor the extreme danger of his most faithful
subjects, could tempt the Gothic king beyond the fortifications
of Ravenna. These fortifications were, indeed, impregnable to the
assaults of art or violence; and when Belisarius invested the
capital, he was soon convinced that famine only could tame the
stubborn spirit of the Barbarians. The sea, the land, and the
channels of the Po, were guarded by the vigilance of the Roman
general; and his morality extended the rights of war to the
practice of poisoning the waters, and secretly firing the
granaries of a besieged city. While he pressed the blockade of
Ravenna, he was surprised by the arrival of two ambassadors from
Constantinople, with a treaty of peace, which Justinian had
imprudently signed, without deigning to consult the author of his
victory. By this disgraceful and precarious agreement, Italy and
the Gothic treasure were divided, and the provinces beyond the Po
were left with the regal title to the successor of Theodoric. The
ambassadors were eager to accomplish their salutary commission;
the captive Vitiges accepted, with transport, the unexpected
offer of a crown; honor was less prevalent among the Goths, than
the want and appetite of food; and the Roman chiefs, who murmured
at the continuance of the war, professed implicit submission to
the commands of the emperor. If Belisarius had possessed only the
courage of a soldier, the laurel would have been snatched from
his hand by timid and envious counsels; but in this decisive
moment, he resolved, with the magnanimity of a statesman, to
sustain alone the danger and merit of generous disobedience. Each
of his officers gave a written opinion that the siege of Ravenna
was impracticable and hopeless: the general then rejected the
treaty of partition, and declared his own resolution of leading
Vitiges in chains to the feet of Justinian. The Goths retired
with doubt and dismay: this peremptory refusal deprived them of
the only signature which they could trust, and filled their minds
with a just apprehension, that a sagacious enemy had discovered
the full extent of their deplorable state. They compared the fame
and fortune of Belisarius with the weakness of their ill-fated
king; and the comparison suggested an extraordinary project, to
which Vitiges, with apparent resignation, was compelled to
acquiesce. Partition would ruin the strength, exile would
disgrace the honor, of the nation; but they offered their arms,
their treasures, and the fortifications of Ravenna, if Belisarius
would disclaim the authority of a master, accept the choice of
the Goths, and assume, as he had deserved, the kingdom of Italy.
If the false lustre of a diadem could have tempted the loyalty of
a faithful subject, his prudence must have foreseen the
inconstancy of the Barbarians, and his rational ambition would
prefer the safe and honorable station of a Roman general. Even
the patience and seeming satisfaction with which he entertained a
proposal of treason, might be susceptible of a malignant
interpretation. But the lieutenant of Justinian was conscious of
his own rectitude; he entered into a dark and crooked path, as it
might lead to the voluntary submission of the Goths; and his
dexterous policy persuaded them that he was disposed to comply
with their wishes, without engaging an oath or a promise for the
performance of a treaty which he secretly abhorred. The day of
the surrender of Ravenna was stipulated by the Gothic
ambassadors: a fleet, laden with provisions, sailed as a welcome
guest into the deepest recess of the harbor: the gates were
opened to the fancied king of Italy; and Belisarius, without
meeting an enemy, triumphantly marched through the streets of an
impregnable city. The Romans were astonished by their success;
the multitudes of tall and robust Barbarians were confounded by
the image of their own patience and the masculine females,
spitting in the faces of their sons and husbands, most bitterly
reproached them for betraying their dominion and freedom to these
pygmies of the south, contemptible in their numbers, diminutive
in their stature. Before the Goths could recover from the first
surprise, and claim the accomplishment of their doubtful hopes,
the victor established his power in Ravenna, beyond the danger of
repentance and revolt.
Vitiges, who perhaps had attempted to escape, was honorably
guarded in his palace; the flower of the Gothic youth was
selected for the service of the emperor; the remainder of the
people was dismissed to their peaceful habitations in the
southern provinces; and a colony of Italians was invited to
replenish the depopulated city. The submission of the capital was
imitated in the towns and villages of Italy, which had not been
subdued, or even visited, by the Romans; and the independent
Goths, who remained in arms at Pavia and Verona, were ambitious
only to become the subjects of Belisarius. But his inflexible
loyalty rejected, except as the substitute of Justinian, their
oaths of allegiance; and he was not offended by the reproach of
their deputies, that he rather chose to be a slave than a
king.
After the second victory of Belisarius, envy again whispered,
Justinian listened, and the hero was recalled. "The remnant of
the Gothic war was no longer worthy of his presence: a gracious
sovereign was impatient to reward his services, and to consult
his wisdom; and he alone was capable of defending the East
against the innumerable armies of Persia." Belisarius understood
the suspicion, accepted the excuse, embarked at Ravenna his
spoils and trophies; and proved, by his ready obedience, that
such an abrupt removal from the government of Italy was not less
unjust than it might have been indiscreet. The emperor received
with honorable courtesy both Vitiges and his more noble consort;
and as the king of the Goths conformed to the Athanasian faith,
he obtained, with a rich inheritance of land in Asia, the rank of
senator and patrician. Every spectator admired, without peril,
the strength and stature of the young Barbarians: they adored the
majesty of the throne, and promised to shed their blood in the
service of their benefactor. Justinian deposited in the Byzantine
palace the treasures of the Gothic monarchy. A flattering senate
was sometime admitted to gaze on the magnificent spectacle; but
it was enviously secluded from the public view: and the conqueror
of Italy renounced, without a murmur, perhaps without a sigh, the
well-earned honors of a second triumph. His glory was indeed
exalted above all external pomp; and the faint and hollow praises
of the court were supplied, even in a servile age, by the respect
and admiration of his country. Whenever he appeared in the
streets and public places of Constantinople, Belisarius attracted
and satisfied the eyes of the people. His lofty stature and
majestic countenance fulfilled their expectations of a hero; the
meanest of his fellow-citizens were emboldened by his gentle and
gracious demeanor; and the martial train which attended his
footsteps left his person more accessible than in a day of
battle. Seven thousand horsemen, matchless for beauty and valor,
were maintained in the service, and at the private expense, of
the general. Their prowess was always conspicuous in single
combats, or in the foremost ranks; and both parties confessed
that in the siege of Rome, the guards of Belisarius had alone
vanquished the Barbarian host. Their numbers were continually
augmented by the bravest and most faithful of the enemy; and his
fortunate captives, the Vandals, the Moors, and the Goths,
emulated the attachment of his domestic followers. By the union
of liberality and justice, he acquired the love of the soldiers,
without alienating the affections of the people. The sick and
wounded were relieved with medicines and money; and still more
efficaciously, by the healing visits and smiles of their
commander. The loss of a weapon or a horse was instantly
repaired, and each deed of valor was rewarded by the rich and
honorable gifts of a bracelet or a collar, which were rendered
more precious by the judgment of Belisarius. He was endeared to
the husbandmen by the peace and plenty which they enjoyed under
the shadow of his standard. Instead of being injured, the country
was enriched by the march of the Roman armies; and such was the
rigid discipline of their camp, that not an apple was gathered
from the tree, not a path could be traced in the fields of corn.
Belisarius was chaste and sober. In the license of a military
life, none could boast that they had seen him intoxicated with
wine: the most beautiful captives of Gothic or Vandal race were
offered to his embraces; but he turned aside from their charms,
and the husband of Antonina was never suspected of violating the
laws of conjugal fidelity. The spectator and historian of his
exploits has observed, that amidst the perils of war, he was
daring without rashness, prudent without fear, slow or rapid
according to the exigencies of the moment; that in the deepest
distress he was animated by real or apparent hope, but that he
was modest and humble in the most prosperous fortune. By these
virtues, he equalled or excelled the ancient masters of the
military art. Victory, by sea and land, attended his arms. He
subdued Africa, Italy, and the adjacent islands; led away
captives the successors of Genseric and Theodoric; filled
Constantinople with the spoils of their palaces; and in the space
of six years recovered half the provinces of the Western empire.
In his fame and merit, in wealth and power, he remained without a
rival, the first of the Roman subjects; the voice of envy could
only magnify his dangerous importance; and the emperor might
applaud his own discerning spirit, which had discovered and
raised the genius of Belisarius.
It was the custom of the Roman triumphs, that a slave should
be placed behind the chariot to remind the conqueror of the
instability of fortune, and the infirmities of human nature.
Procopius, in his Anecdotes, has assumed that servile and
ungrateful office. The generous reader may cast away the libel,
but the evidence of facts will adhere to his memory; and he will
reluctantly confess, that the fame, and even the virtue, of
Belisarius, were polluted by the lust and cruelty of his wife;
and that hero deserved an appellation which may not drop from the
pen of the decent historian. The mother of Antonina was a
theatrical prostitute, and both her father and grandfather
exercised, at Thessalonica and Constantinople, the vile, though
lucrative, profession of charioteers. In the various situations
of their fortune she became the companion, the enemy, the
servant, and the favorite of the empress Theodora: these loose
and ambitious females had been connected by similar pleasures;
they were separated by the jealousy of vice, and at length
reconciled by the partnership of guilt. Before her marriage with
Belisarius, Antonina had one husband and many lovers: Photius,
the son of her former nuptials, was of an age to distinguish
himself at the siege of Naples; and it was not till the autumn of
her age and beauty that she indulged a scandalous attachment to a
Thracian youth. Theodosius had been educated in the Eunomian
heresy; the African voyage was consecrated by the baptism and
auspicious name of the first soldier who embarked; and the
proselyte was adopted into the family of his spiritual parents,
Belisarius and Antonina. Before they touched the shores of
Africa, this holy kindred degenerated into sensual love: and as
Antonina soon overleaped the bounds of modesty and caution, the
Roman general was alone ignorant of his own dishonor. During
their residence at Carthage, he surprised the two lovers in a
subterraneous chamber, solitary, warm, and almost naked. Anger
flashed from his eyes. "With the help of this young man," said
the unblushing Antonina, "I was secreting our most precious
effects from the knowledge of Justinian." The youth resumed his
garments, and the pious husband consented to disbelieve the
evidence of his own senses. From this pleasing and perhaps
voluntary delusion, Belisarius was awakened at Syracuse, by the
officious information of Macedonia; and that female attendant,
after requiring an oath for her security, produced two
chamberlains, who, like herself, had often beheld the adulteries
of Antonina. A hasty flight into Asia saved Theodosius from the
justice of an injured husband, who had signified to one of his
guards the order of his death; but the tears of Antonina, and her
artful seductions, assured the credulous hero of her innocence:
and he stooped, against his faith and judgment, to abandon those
imprudent friends, who had presumed to accuse or doubt the
chastity of his wife. The revenge of a guilty woman is implacable
and bloody: the unfortunate Macedonia, with the two witnesses,
were secretly arrested by the minister of her cruelty; their
tongues were cut out, their bodies were hacked into small pieces,
and their remains were cast into the Sea of Syracuse. A rash
though judicious saying of Constantine, "I would sooner have
punished the adulteress than the boy," was deeply remembered by
Antonina; and two years afterwards, when despair had armed that
officer against his general, her sanguinary advice decided and
hastened his execution. Even the indignation of Photius was not
forgiven by his mother; the exile of her son prepared the recall
of her lover; and Theodosius condescended to accept the pressing
and humble invitation of the conqueror of Italy. In the absolute
direction of his household, and in the important commissions of
peace and war, the favorite youth most rapidly acquired a fortune
of four hundred thousand pounds sterling; and after their return
to Constantinople, the passion of Antonina, at least, continued
ardent and unabated. But fear, devotion, and lassitude perhaps,
inspired Theodosius with more serious thoughts. He dreaded the
busy scandal of the capital, and the indiscreet fondness of the
wife of Belisarius; escaped from her embraces, and retiring to
Ephesus, shaved his head, and took refuge in the sanctuary of a
monastic life. The despair of the new Ariadne could scarcely have
been excused by the death of her husband. She wept, she tore her
hair, she filled the palace with her cries; "she had lost the
dearest of friends, a tender, a faithful, a laborious friend!"
But her warm entreaties, fortified by the prayers of Belisarius,
were insufficient to draw the holy monk from the solitude of
Ephesus. It was not till the general moved forward for the
Persian war, that Theodosius could be tempted to return to
Constantinople; and the short interval before the departure of
Antonina herself was boldly devoted to love and pleasure.
A philosopher may pity and forgive the infirmities of female
nature, from which he receives no real injury: but contemptible
is the husband who feels, and yet endures, his own infamy in that
of his wife. Antonina pursued her son with implacable hatred; and
the gallant Photius was exposed to her secret persecutions in the
camp beyond the Tigris. Enraged by his own wrongs, and by the
dishonor of his blood, he cast away in his turn the sentiments of
nature, and revealed to Belisarius the turpitude of a woman who
had violated all the duties of a mother and a wife. From the
surprise and indignation of the Roman general, his former
credulity appears to have been sincere: he embraced the knees of
the son of Antonina, adjured him to remember his obligations
rather than his birth, and confirmed at the altar their holy vows
of revenge and mutual defence. The dominion of Antonina was
impaired by absence; and when she met her husband, on his return
from the Persian confines, Belisarius, in his first and transient
emotions, confined her person, and threatened her life. Photius
was more resolved to punish, and less prompt to pardon: he flew
to Ephesus; extorted from a trusty eunuch of his another the full
confession of her guilt; arrested Theodosius and his treasures in
the church of St. John the Apostle, and concealed his captives,
whose execution was only delayed, in a secure and sequestered
fortress of Cilicia. Such a daring outrage against public justice
could not pass with impunity; and the cause of Antonina was
espoused by the empress, whose favor she had deserved by the
recent services of the disgrace of a præfect, and the exile
and murder of a pope. At the end of the campaign, Belisarius was
recalled; he complied, as usual, with the Imperial mandate. His
mind was not prepared for rebellion: his obedience, however
adverse to the dictates of honor, was consonant to the wishes of
his heart; and when he embraced his wife, at the command, and
perhaps in the presence, of the empress, the tender husband was
disposed to forgive or to be forgiven. The bounty of Theodora
reserved for her companion a more precious favor. "I have found,"
she said, "my dearest patrician, a pearl of inestimable value; it
has not yet been viewed by any mortal eye; but the sight and the
possession of this jewel are destined for my friend." * As soon
as the curiosity and impatience of Antonina were kindled, the
door of a bed-chamber was thrown open, and she beheld her lover,
whom the diligence of the eunuchs had discovered in his secret
prison. Her silent wonder burst into passionate exclamations of
gratitude and joy, and she named Theodora her queen, her
benefactress, and her savior. The monk of Ephesus was nourished
in the palace with luxury and ambition; but instead of assuming,
as he was promised, the command of the Roman armies, Theodosius
expired in the first fatigues of an amorous interview. The grief
of Antonina could only be assuaged by the sufferings of her son.
A youth of consular rank, and a sickly constitution, was
punished, without a trial, like a malefactor and a slave: yet
such was the constancy of his mind, that Photius sustained the
tortures of the scourge and the rack, without violating the faith
which he had sworn to Belisarius. After this fruitless cruelty,
the son of Antonina, while his mother feasted with the empress,
was buried in her subterraneous prisons, which admitted not the
distinction of night and day. He twice escaped to the most
venerable sanctuaries of Constantinople, the churches of St.
Sophia, and of the Virgin: but his tyrants were insensible of
religion as of pity; and the helpless youth, amidst the clamors
of the clergy and people, was twice dragged from the altar to the
dungeon. His third attempt was more successful. At the end of
three years, the prophet Zachariah, or some mortal friend,
indicated the means of an escape: he eluded the spies and guards
of the empress, reached the holy sepulchre of Jerusalem, embraced
the profession of a monk; and the abbot Photius was employed,
after the death of Justinian, to reconcile and regulate the
churches of Egypt. The son of Antonina suffered all that an enemy
can inflict: her patient husband imposed on himself the more
exquisite misery of violating his promise and deserting his
friend.
In the succeeding campaign, Belisarius was again sent against
the Persians: he saved the East, but he offended Theodora, and
perhaps the emperor himself. The malady of Justinian had
countenanced the rumor of his death; and the Roman general, on
the supposition of that probable event spoke the free language of
a citizen and a soldier. His colleague Buzes, who concurred in
the same sentiments, lost his rank, his liberty, and his health,
by the persecution of the empress: but the disgrace of Belisarius
was alleviated by the dignity of his own character, and the
influence of his wife, who might wish to humble, but could not
desire to ruin, the partner of her fortunes. Even his removal was
colored by the assurance, that the sinking state of Italy would
be retrieved by the single presence of its conqueror. But no
sooner had he returned, alone and defenceless, than a hostile
commission was sent to the East, to seize his treasures and
criminate his actions; the guards and veterans, who followed his
private banner, were distributed among the chiefs of the army,
and even the eunuchs presumed to cast lots for the partition of
his martial domestics. When he passed with a small and sordid
retinue through the streets of Constantinople, his forlorn
appearance excited the amazement and compassion of the people.
Justinian and Theodora received him with cold ingratitude; the
servile crowd, with insolence and contempt; and in the evening he
retired with trembling steps to his deserted palace. An
indisposition, feigned or real, had confined Antonina to her
apartment; and she walked disdainfully silent in the adjacent
portico, while Belisarius threw himself on his bed, and expected,
in an agony of grief and terror, the death which he had so often
braved under the walls of Rome. Long after sunset a messenger was
announced from the empress: he opened, with anxious curiosity,
the letter which contained the sentence of his fate. "You cannot
be ignorant how much you have deserved my displeasure. I am not
insensible of the services of Antonina. To her merits and
intercession I have granted your life, and permit you to retain a
part of your treasures, which might be justly forfeited to the
state. Let your gratitude, where it is due, be displayed, not in
words, but in your future behavior." I know not how to believe or
to relate the transports with which the hero is said to have
received this ignominious pardon. He fell prostrate before his
wife, he kissed the feet of his savior, and he devoutly promised
to live the grateful and submissive slave of Antonina. A fine of
one hundred and twenty thousand pounds sterling was levied on the
fortunes of Belisarius; and with the office of count, or master
of the royal stables, he accepted the conduct of the Italian war.
At his departure from Constantinople, his friends, and even the
public, were persuaded that as soon as he regained his freedom,
he would renounce his dissimulation, and that his wife, Theodora,
and perhaps the emperor himself, would be sacrificed to the just
revenge of a virtuous rebel. Their hopes were deceived; and the
unconquerable patience and loyalty of Belisarius appear either
below or
above the character of a man.
Chapter XLII: State Of The Barbaric
World.
Part I.
State Of The Barbaric World. -- Establishment Of The Lombards
On the Danube. -- Tribes And Inroads Of The Sclavonians. --
Origin, Empire, And Embassies Of The Turks. -- The Flight Of The
Avars. -- Chosroes I, Or Nushirvan, King Of Persia. -- His
Prosperous Reign And Wars With The Romans. -- The Colchian Or
Lazic War. -- The Æthiopians.
Our estimate of personal merit, is relative to the common
faculties of mankind. The aspiring efforts of genius, or virtue,
either in active or speculative life, are measured, not so much
by their real elevation, as by the height to which they ascend
above the level of their age and country; and the same stature,
which in a people of giants would pass unnoticed, must appear
conspicuous in a race of pygmies. Leonidas, and his three hundred
companions, devoted their lives at Thermopylæ; but the
education of the infant, the boy, and the man, had prepared, and
almost insured, this memorable sacrifice; and each Spartan would
approve, rather than admire, an act of duty, of which himself and
eight thousand of his fellow-citizens were equally capable. The
great Pompey might inscribe on his trophies, that he had defeated
in battle two millions of enemies, and reduced fifteen hundred
cities from the Lake Mæotis to the Red Sea: but the fortune
of Rome flew before his eagles; the nations were oppressed by
their own fears, and the invincible legions which he commanded,
had been formed by the habits of conquest and the discipline of
ages. In this view, the character of Belisarius may be deservedly
placed above the heroes of the ancient republics. His
imperfections flowed from the contagion of the times; his virtues
were his own, the free gift of nature or reflection; he raised
himself without a master or a rival; and so inadequate were the
arms committed to his hand, that his sole advantage was derived
from the pride and presumption of his adversaries. Under his
command, the subjects of Justinian often deserved to be called
Romans: but the unwarlike appellation of Greeks was imposed as a
term of reproach by the haughty Goths; who affected to blush,
that they must dispute the kingdom of Italy with a nation of
tragedians pantomimes, and pirates. The climate of Asia has
indeed been found less congenial than that of Europe to military
spirit: those populous countries were enervated by luxury,
despotism, and superstition; and the monks were more expensive
and more numerous than the soldiers of the East. The regular
force of the empire had once amounted to six hundred and
forty-five thousand men: it was reduced, in the time of
Justinian, to one hundred and fifty thousand; and this number,
large as it may seem, was thinly scattered over the sea and land;
in Spain and Italy, in Africa and Egypt, on the banks of the
Danube, the coast of the Euxine, and the frontiers of Persia. The
citizen was exhausted, yet the soldier was unpaid; his poverty
was mischievously soothed by the privilege of rapine and
indolence; and the tardy payments were detained and intercepted
by the fraud of those agents who usurp, without courage or
danger, the emoluments of war. Public and private distress
recruited the armies of the state; but in the field, and still
more in the presence of the enemy, their numbers were always
defective. The want of national spirit was supplied by the
precarious faith and disorderly service of Barbarian mercenaries.
Even military honor, which has often survived the loss of virtue
and freedom, was almost totally extinct. The generals, who were
multiplied beyond the example of former times, labored only to
prevent the success, or to sully the reputation of their
colleagues; and they had been taught by experience, that if merit
sometimes provoked the jealousy, error, or even guilt, would
obtain the indulgence, of a gracious emperor. In such an age, the
triumphs of Belisarius, and afterwards of Narses, shine with
incomparable lustre; but they are encompassed with the darkest
shades of disgrace and calamity. While the lieutenant of
Justinian subdued the kingdoms of the Goths and Vandals, the
emperor, timid, though ambitious, balanced the forces of the
Barbarians, fomented their divisions by flattery and falsehood,
and invited by his patience and liberality the repetition of
injuries. The keys of Carthage, Rome, and Ravenna, were presented
to their conqueror, while Antioch was destroyed by the Persians,
and Justinian trembled for the safety of Constantinople.
Even the Gothic victories of Belisarius were prejudicial to
the state, since they abolished the important barrier of the
Upper Danube, which had been so faithfully guarded by Theodoric
and his daughter. For the defence of Italy, the Goths evacuated
Pannonia and Noricum, which they left in a peaceful and
flourishing condition: the sovereignty was claimed by the emperor
of the Romans; the actual possession was abandoned to the
boldness of the first invader. On the opposite banks of the
Danube, the plains of Upper Hungary and the Transylvanian hills
were possessed, since the death of Attila, by the tribes of the
Gepidæ, who respected the Gothic arms, and despised, not
indeed the gold of the Romans, but the secret motive of their
annual subsidies. The vacant fortifications of the river were
instantly occupied by these Barbarians; their standards were
planted on the walls of Sirmium and Belgrade; and the ironical
tone of their apology aggravated this insult on the majesty of
the empire. "So extensive, O Cæsar, are your dominions, so
numerous are your cities, that you are continually seeking for
nations to whom, either in peace or in war, you may relinquish
these useless possessions. The Gepidæ are your brave and
faithful allies; and if they have anticipated your gifts, they
have shown a just confidence in your bounty." Their presumption
was excused by the mode of revenge which Justinian embraced.
Instead of asserting the rights of a sovereign for the protection
of his subjects, the emperor invited a strange people to invade
and possess the Roman provinces between the Danube and the Alps
and the ambition of the Gepidæ was checked by the rising
power and fame of the Lombards. This corrupt appellation has been
diffused in the thirteenth century by the merchants and bankers,
the Italian posterity of these savage warriors: but the original
name of Langobards is expressive only
of the peculiar length and fashion of their beards. I am not
disposed either to question or to justify their Scandinavian
origin; nor to pursue the migrations of the Lombards through
unknown regions and marvellous adventures. About the time of
Augustus and Trajan, a ray of historic light breaks on the
darkness of their antiquities, and they are discovered, for the
first time, between the Elbe and the Oder. Fierce, beyond the
example of the Germans, they delighted to propagate the
tremendous belief, that their heads were formed like the heads of
dogs, and that they drank the blood of their enemies, whom they
vanquished in battle. The smallness of their numbers was
recruited by the adoption of their bravest slaves; and alone,
amidst their powerful neighbors, they defended by arms their
high-spirited independence. In the tempests of the north, which
overwhelmed so many names and nations, this little bark of the
Lombards still floated on the surface: they gradually descended
towards the south and the Danube, and, at the end of four hundred
years, they again appear with their ancient valor and renown.
Their manners were not less ferocious. The assassination of a
royal guest was executed in the presence, and by the command, of
the king's daughter, who had been provoked by some words of
insult, and disappointed by his diminutive stature; and a
tribute, the price of blood, was imposed on the Lombards, by his
brother the king of the Heruli. Adversity revived a sense of
moderation and justice, and the insolence of conquest was
chastised by the signal defeat and irreparable dispersion of the
Heruli, who were seated in the southern provinces of Poland. The
victories of the Lombards recommended them to the friendship of
the emperors; and at the solicitations of Justinian, they passed
the Danube, to reduce, according to their treaty, the cities of
Noricum and the fortresses of Pannonia. But the spirit of rapine
soon tempted them beyond these ample limits; they wandered along
the coast of the Hadriatic as far as Dyrrachium, and presumed,
with familiar rudeness to enter the towns and houses of their
Roman allies, and to seize the captives who had escaped from
their audacious hands. These acts of hostility, the sallies, as
it might be pretended, of some loose adventurers, were disowned
by the nation, and excused by the emperor; but the arms of the
Lombards were more seriously engaged by a contest of thirty
years, which was terminated only by the extirpation of the
Gepidæ. The hostile nations often pleaded their cause
before the throne of Constantinople; and the crafty Justinian, to
whom the Barbarians were almost equally odious, pronounced a
partial and ambiguous sentence, and dexterously protracted the
war by slow and ineffectual succors. Their strength was
formidable, since the Lombards, who sent into the field several
myriads of soldiers, still claimed, as
the weaker side, the protection of the Romans. Their spirit was
intrepid; yet such is the uncertainty of courage, that the two
armies were suddenly struck with a panic; they fled from each
other, and the rival kings remained with their guards in the
midst of an empty plain. A short truce was obtained; but their
mutual resentment again kindled; and the remembrance of their
shame rendered the next encounter more desperate and bloody Forty
thousand of the Barbarians perished in the decisive battle, which
broke the power of the Gepidæ, transferred the fears and
wishes of Justinian, and first displayed the character of Alboin,
the youthful prince of the Lombards, and the future conqueror of
Italy.
The wild people who dwelt or wandered in the plains of Russia,
Lithuania, and Poland, might be reduced, in the age of Justinian,
under the two great families of the Bulgarians and the
Sclavonians. According to the Greek writers, the former, who
touched the Euxine and the Lake Mæotis, derived from the
Huns their name or descent; and it is needless to renew the
simple and well-known picture of Tartar manners. They were bold
and dexterous archers, who drank the milk, and feasted on the
flesh, of their fleet and indefatigable horses; whose flocks and
herds followed, or rather guided, the motions of their roving
camps; to whose inroads no country was remote or impervious, and
who were practised in flight, though incapable of fear. The
nation was divided into two powerful and hostile tribes, who
pursued each other with fraternal hatred. They eagerly disputed
the friendship, or rather the gifts, of the emperor; and the
distinctions which nature had fixed between the faithful dog and
the rapacious wolf was applied by an ambassador who received only
verbal instructions from the mouth of his illiterate prince. The
Bulgarians, of whatsoever species, were equally attracted by
Roman wealth: they assumed a vague dominion over the Sclavonian
name, and their rapid marches could only be stopped by the Baltic
Sea, or the extreme cold and poverty of the north. But the same
race of Sclavonians appears to have maintained, in every age, the
possession of the same countries. Their numerous tribes, however
distant or adverse, used one common language, (it was harsh and
irregular,) and where known by the resemblance of their form,
which deviated from the swarthy Tartar, and approached without
attaining the lofty stature and fair complexion of the German.
Four thousand six hundred villages were scattered over the
provinces of Russia and Poland, and their huts were hastily built
of rough timber, in a country deficient both in stone and iron.
Erected, or rather concealed, in the depth of forests, on the
banks of rivers, or the edges of morasses, we may not perhaps,
without flattery, compare them to the architecture of the beaver;
which they resembled in a double issue, to the land and water,
for the escape of the savage inhabitant, an animal less cleanly,
less diligent, and less social, than that marvellous quadruped.
The fertility of the soil, rather than the labor of the natives,
supplied the rustic plenty of the Sclavonians. Their sheep and
horned cattle were large and numerous, and the fields which they
sowed with millet or panic afforded, in place of bread, a coarse
and less nutritive food. The incessant rapine of their neighbors
compelled them to bury this treasure in the earth; but on the
appearance of a stranger, it was freely imparted by a people,
whose unfavorable character is qualified by the epithets of
chaste, patient, and hospitable. As their supreme god, they
adored an invisible master of the thunder. The rivers and the
nymphs obtained their subordinate honors, and the popular worship
was expressed in vows and sacrifice. The Sclavonians disdained to
obey a despot, a prince, or even a magistrate; but their
experience was too narrow, their passions too headstrong, to
compose a system of equal law or general defence. Some voluntary
respect was yielded to age and valor; but each tribe or village
existed as a separate republic, and all must be persuaded where
none could be compelled. They fought on foot, almost naked, and
except an unwieldy shield, without any defensive armor; their
weapons of offence were a bow, a quiver of small poisoned arrows,
and a long rope, which they dexterously threw from a distance,
and entangled their enemy in a running noose. In the field, the
Sclavonian infantry was dangerous by their speed, agility, and
hardiness: they swam, they dived, they remained under water,
drawing their breath through a hollow cane; and a river or lake
was often the scene of their unsuspected ambuscade. But these
were the achievements of spies or stragglers; the military art
was unknown to the Sclavonians; their name was obscure, and their
conquests were inglorious.
I have marked the faint and general outline of the Sclavonians
and Bulgarians, without attempting to define their intermediate
boundaries, which were not accurately known or respected by the
Barbarians themselves. Their importance was measured by their
vicinity to the empire; and the level country of Moldavia and
Wallachia was occupied by the Antes, a Sclavonian tribe, which
swelled the titles of Justinian with an epithet of conquest.
Against the Antes he erected the fortifications of the Lower
Danube; and labored to secure the alliance of a people seated in
the direct channel of northern inundation, an interval of two
hundred miles between the mountains of Transylvania and the
Euxine Sea. But the Antes wanted power and inclination to stem
the fury of the torrent; and the light-armed Sclavonians, from a
hundred tribes, pursued with almost equal speed the footsteps of
the Bulgarian horse. The payment of one piece of gold for each
soldier procured a safe and easy retreat through the country of
the Gepidæ, who commanded the passage of the Upper Danube.
The hopes or fears of the Barbarians; their intense union or
discord; the accident of a frozen or shallow stream; the prospect
of harvest or vintage; the prosperity or distress of the Romans;
were the causes which produced the uniform repetition of annual
visits, tedious in the narrative, and destructive in the event.
The same year, and possibly the same month, in which Ravenna
surrendered, was marked by an invasion of the Huns or Bulgarians,
so dreadful, that it almost effaced the memory of their past
inroads. They spread from the suburbs of Constantinople to the
Ionian Gulf, destroyed thirty-two cities or castles, erased
Potidæa, which Athens had built, and Philip had besieged,
and repassed the Danube, dragging at their horses' heels one
hundred and twenty thousand of the subjects of Justinian. In a
subsequent inroad they pierced the wall of the Thracian
Chersonesus, extirpated the habitations and the inhabitants,
boldly traversed the Hellespont, and returned to their
companions, laden with the spoils of Asia. Another party, which
seemed a multitude in the eyes of the Romans, penetrated, without
opposition, from the Straits of Thermopylæ to the Isthmus
of Corinth; and the last ruin of Greece has appeared an object
too minute for the attention of history. The works which the
emperor raised for the protection, but at the expense of his
subjects, served only to disclose the weakness of some neglected
part; and the walls, which by flattery had been deemed
impregnable, were either deserted by the garrison, or scaled by
the Barbarians. Three thousand Sclavonians, who insolently
divided themselves into two bands, discovered the weakness and
misery of a triumphant reign. They passed the Danube and the
Hebrus, vanquished the Roman generals who dared to oppose their
progress, and plundered, with impunity, the cities of Illyricum
and Thrace, each of which had arms and numbers to overwhelm their
contemptible assailants. Whatever praise the boldness of the
Sclavonians may deserve, it is sullied by the wanton and
deliberate cruelty which they are accused of exercising on their
prisoners. Without distinction of rank, or age, or sex, the
captives were impaled or flayed alive, or suspended between four
posts, and beaten with clubs till they expired, or enclosed in
some spacious building, and left to perish in the flames with the
spoil and cattle which might impede the march of these savage
victors. Perhaps a more impartial narrative would reduce the
number, and qualify the nature, of these horrid acts; and they
might sometimes be excused by the cruel laws of retaliation. In
the siege of Topirus, whose obstinate defence had enraged the
Sclavonians, they massacred fifteen thousand males; but they
spared the women and children; the most valuable captives were
always reserved for labor or ransom; the servitude was not
rigorous, and the terms of their deliverance were speedy and
moderate. But the subject, or the historian of Justinian, exhaled
his just indignation in the language of complaint and reproach;
and Procopius has confidently affirmed, that in a reign of
thirty-two years, each annual inroad of the Barbarians consumed
two hundred thousand of the inhabitants of the Roman empire. The
entire population of Turkish Europe, which nearly corresponds
with the provinces of Justinian, would perhaps be incapable of
supplying six millions of persons, the result of this incredible
estimate.
In the midst of these obscure calamities, Europe felt the
shock of revolution, which first revealed to the world the name
and nation of the Turks. * Like Romulus, the founder of that
martial people was suckled by a she-wolf, who afterwards made him
the father of a numerous progeny; and the representation of that
animal in the banners of the Turks preserved the memory, or
rather suggested the idea, of a fable, which was invented,
without any mutual intercourse, by the shepherds of Latium and
those of Scythia. At the equal distance of two thousand miles
from the Caspian, the Icy, the Chinese, and the Bengal Seas, a
ridge of mountains is conspicuous, the centre, and perhaps the
summit, of Asia; which, in the language of different nations, has
been styled Imaus, and Caf, and Altai, and the Golden Mountains,
and the Girdle of the Earth. The sides of the hills were
productive of minerals; and the iron forges, for the purpose of
war, were exercised by the Turks, the most despised portion of
the slaves of the great khan of the Geougen. But their servitude
could only last till a leader, bold and eloquent, should arise to
persuade his countrymen that the same arms which they forged for
their masters, might become, in their own hands, the instruments
of freedom and victory. They sallied from the mountains; a
sceptre was the reward of his advice; and the annual ceremony, in
which a piece of iron was heated in the fire, and a smith's
hammer * was successively handled by the prince and his nobles,
recorded for ages the humble profession and rational pride of the
Turkish nation. Bertezena, their first leader, signalized their
valor and his own in successful combats against the neighboring
tribes; but when he presumed to ask in marriage the daughter of
the great khan, the insolent demand of a slave and a mechanic was
contemptuously rejected. The disgrace was expiated by a more
noble alliance with a princess of China; and the decisive battle
which almost extirpated the nation of the Geougen, established in
Tartary the new and more powerful empire of the Turks. * They
reigned over the north; but they confessed the vanity of
conquest, by their faithful attachment to the mountain of their
fathers. The royal encampment seldom lost sight of Mount Altai,
from whence the River Irtish descends to water the rich pastures
of the Calmucks, which nourish the largest sheep and oxen in the
world. The soil is fruitful, and the climate mild and temperate:
the happy region was ignorant of earthquake and pestilence; the
emperor's throne was turned towards the East, and a golden wolf
on the top of a spear seemed to guard the entrance of his tent.
One of the successors of Bertezena was tempted by the luxury and
superstition of China; but his design of building cities and
temples was defeated by the simple wisdom of a Barbarian
counsellor. "The Turks," he said, "are not equal in number to one
hundredth part of the inhabitants of China. If we balance their
power, and elude their armies, it is because we wander without
any fixed habitations in the exercise of war and hunting. Are we
strong? we advance and conquer: are we feeble? we retire and are
concealed. Should the Turks confine themselves within the walls
of cities, the loss of a battle would be the destruction of their
empire. The bonzes preach only patience, humility, and the
renunciation of the world. Such, O king! is not the religion of
heroes." They entertained, with less reluctance, the doctrines of
Zoroaster; but the greatest part of the nation acquiesced,
without inquiry, in the opinions, or rather in the practice, of
their ancestors. The honors of sacrifice were reserved for the
supreme deity; they acknowledged, in rude hymns, their
obligations to the air, the fire, the water, and the earth; and
their priests derived some profit from the art of divination.
Their unwritten laws were rigorous and impartial: theft was
punished with a tenfold restitution; adultery, treason, and
murder, with death; and no chastisement could be inflicted too
severe for the rare and inexpiable guilt of cowardice. As the
subject nations marched under the standard of the Turks, their
cavalry, both men and horses, were proudly computed by millions;
one of their effective armies consisted of four hundred thousand
soldiers, and in less than fifty years they were connected in
peace and war with the Romans, the Persians, and the Chinese. In
their northern limits, some vestige may be discovered of the form
and situation of Kamptchatka, of a people of hunters and
fishermen, whose sledges were drawn by dogs, and whose
habitations were buried in the earth. The Turks were ignorant of
astronomy; but the observation taken by some learned Chinese,
with a gnomon of eight feet, fixes the royal camp in the latitude
of forty-nine degrees, and marks their extreme progress within
three, or at least ten degrees, of the polar circle. Among their
southern conquests the most splendid was that of the
Nephthalites, or white Huns, a polite and warlike people, who
possessed the commercial cities of Bochara and Samarcand, who had
vanquished the Persian monarch, and carried their victorious arms
along the banks, and perhaps to the mouth, of the Indus. On the
side of the West, the Turkish cavalry advanced to the Lake
Mæotis. They passed that lake on the ice. The khan who
dwelt at the foot of Mount Altai issued his commands for the
siege of Bosphorus, a city the voluntary subject of Rome, and
whose princes had formerly been the friends of Athens. To the
east, the Turks invaded China, as often as the vigor of the
government was relaxed: and I am taught to read in the history of
the times, that they mowed down their patient enemies like hemp
or grass; and that the mandarins applauded the wisdom of an
emperor who repulsed these Barbarians with golden lances. This
extent of savage empire compelled the Turkish monarch to
establish three subordinate princes of his own blood, who soon
forgot their gratitude and allegiance. The conquerors were
enervated by luxury, which is always fatal except to an
industrious people; the policy of China solicited the vanquished
nations to resume their independence and the power of the Turks
was limited to a period of two hundred years. The revival of
their name and dominion in the southern countries of Asia are the
events of a later age; and the dynasties, which succeeded to
their native realms, may sleep in oblivion; since
their history bears no relation to the
decline and fall of the Roman empire.
Chapter XLII: State Of The Barbaric World. -- Part
II.
In the rapid career of conquest, the Turks attacked and
subdued the nation of the Ogors or Varchonites * on the banks of
the River Til, which derived the epithet of Black from its dark
water or gloomy forests. The khan of the Ogors was slain with
three hundred thousand of his subjects, and their bodies were
scattered over the space of four days' journey: their surviving
countrymen acknowledged the strength and mercy of the Turks; and
a small portion, about twenty thousand warriors, preferred exile
to servitude. They followed the well-known road of the Volga,
cherished the error of the nations who confounded them with the
Avars, and spread the terror of that false though famous
appellation, which had not, however, saved its lawful proprietors
from the yoke of the Turks. After a long and victorious march,
the new Avars arrived at the foot of Mount Caucasus, in the
country of the Alani and Circassians, where they first heard of
the splendor and weakness of the Roman empire. They humbly
requested their confederate, the prince of the Alani, to lead
them to this source of riches; and their ambassador, with the
permission of the governor of Lazica, was transported by the
Euxine Sea to Constantinople. The whole city was poured forth to
behold with curiosity and terror the aspect of a strange people:
their long hair, which hung in tresses down their backs, was
gracefully bound with ribbons, but the rest of their habit
appeared to imitate the fashion of the Huns. When they were
admitted to the audience of Justinian, Candish, the first of the
ambassadors, addressed the Roman emperor in these terms: "You see
before you, O mighty prince, the representatives of the strongest
and most populous of nations, the invincible, the irresistible
Avars. We are willing to devote ourselves to your service: we are
able to vanquish and destroy all the enemies who now disturb your
repose. But we expect, as the price of our alliance, as the
reward of our valor, precious gifts, annual subsidies, and
fruitful possessions." At the time of this embassy, Justinian had
reigned above thirty, he had lived above seventy-five years: his
mind, as well as his body, was feeble and languid; and the
conqueror of Africa and Italy, careless of the permanent interest
of his people, aspired only to end his days in the bosom even of
inglorious peace. In a studied oration, he imparted to the senate
his resolution to dissemble the insult, and to purchase the
friendship of the Avars; and the whole senate, like the mandarins
of China, applauded the incomparable wisdom and foresight of
their sovereign. The instruments of luxury were immediately
prepared to captivate the Barbarians; silken garments, soft and
splendid beds, and chains and collars incrusted with gold. The
ambassadors, content with such liberal reception, departed from
Constantinople, and Valentin, one of the emperor's guards, was
sent with a similar character to their camp at the foot of Mount
Caucasus. As their destruction or their success must be alike
advantageous to the empire, he persuaded them to invade the
enemies of Rome; and they were easily tempted, by gifts and
promises, to gratify their ruling inclinations. These fugitives,
who fled before the Turkish arms, passed the Tanais and
Borysthenes, and boldly advanced into the heart of Poland and
Germany, violating the law of nations, and abusing the rights of
victory. Before ten years had elapsed, their camps were seated on
the Danube and the Elbe, many Bulgarian and Sclavonian names were
obliterated from the earth, and the remainder of their tribes are
found, as tributaries and vassals, under the standard of the
Avars. The chagan, the peculiar title of their king, still
affected to cultivate the friendship of the emperor; and
Justinian entertained some thoughts of fixing them in Pannonia,
to balance the prevailing power of the Lombards. But the virtue
or treachery of an Avar betrayed the secret enmity and ambitious
designs of their countrymen; and they loudly complained of the
timid, though jealous policy, of detaining their ambassadors, and
denying the arms which they had been allowed to purchase in the
capital of the empire.
Perhaps the apparent change in the dispositions of the
emperors may be ascribed to the embassy which was received from
the conquerors of the Avars. The immense distance which eluded
their arms could not extinguish their resentment: the Turkish
ambassadors pursued the footsteps of the vanquished to the Jaik,
the Volga, Mount Caucasus, the Euxine and Constantinople, and at
length appeared before the successor of Constantine, to request
that he would not espouse the cause of rebels and fugitives. Even
commerce had some share in this remarkable negotiation: and the
Sogdoites, who were now the tributaries of the Turks, embraced
the fair occasion of opening, by the north of the Caspian, a new
road for the importation of Chinese silk into the Roman empire.
The Persian, who preferred the navigation of Ceylon, had stopped
the caravans of Bochara and Samarcand: their silk was
contemptuously burnt: some Turkish ambassadors died in Persia,
with a suspicion of poison; and the great khan permitted his
faithful vassal Maniach, the prince of the Sogdoites, to propose,
at the Byzantine court, a treaty of alliance against their common
enemies. Their splendid apparel and rich presents, the fruit of
Oriental luxury, distinguished Maniach and his colleagues from
the rude savages of the North: their letters, in the Scythian
character and language, announced a people who had attained the
rudiments of science: they enumerated the conquests, they offered
the friendship and military aid of the Turks; and their sincerity
was attested by direful imprecations (if they were guilty of
falsehood) against their own head, and the head of Disabul their
master. The Greek prince entertained with hospitable regard the
ambassadors of a remote and powerful monarch: the sight of
silk-worms and looms disappointed the hopes of the Sogdoites; the
emperor renounced, or seemed to renounce, the fugitive Avars, but
he accepted the alliance of the Turks; and the ratification of
the treaty was carried by a Roman minister to the foot of Mount
Altai. Under the successors of Justinian, the friendship of the
two nations was cultivated by frequent and cordial intercourse;
the most favored vassals were permitted to imitate the example of
the great khan, and one hundred and six Turks, who, on various
occasions, had visited Constantinople, departed at the same time
for their native country. The duration and length of the journey
from the Byzantine court to Mount Altai are not specified: it
might have been difficult to mark a road through the nameless
deserts, the mountains, rivers, and morasses of Tartary; but a
curious account has been preserved of the reception of the Roman
ambassadors at the royal camp. After they had been purified with
fire and incense, according to a rite still practised under the
sons of Zingis, * they were introduced to the presence of
Disabul. In a valley of the Golden Mountain, they found the great
khan in his tent, seated in a chair with wheels, to which a horse
might be occasionally harnessed. As soon as they had delivered
their presents, which were received by the proper officers, they
exposed, in a florid oration, the wishes of the Roman emperor,
that victory might attend the arms of the Turks, that their reign
might be long and prosperous, and that a strict alliance, without
envy or deceit, might forever be maintained between the two most
powerful nations of the earth. The answer of Disabul corresponded
with these friendly professions, and the ambassadors were seated
by his side, at a banquet which lasted the greatest part of the
day: the tent was surrounded with silk hangings, and a Tartar
liquor was served on the table, which possessed at least the
intoxicating qualities of wine. The entertainment of the
succeeding day was more sumptuous; the silk hangings of the
second tent were embroidered in various figures; and the royal
seat, the cups, and the vases, were of gold. A third pavilion was
supported by columns of gilt wood; a bed of pure and massy gold
was raised on four peacocks of the same metal: and before the
entrance of the tent, dishes, basins, and statues of solid
silver, and admirable art, were ostentatiously piled in wagons,
the monuments of valor rather than of industry. When Disabul led
his armies against the frontiers of Persia, his Roman allies
followed many days the march of the Turkish camp, nor were they
dismissed till they had enjoyed their precedency over the envoy
of the great king, whose loud and intemperate clamors interrupted
the silence of the royal banquet. The power and ambition of
Chosroes cemented the union of the Turks and Romans, who touched
his dominions on either side: but those distant nations,
regardless of each other, consulted the dictates of interest,
without recollecting the obligations of oaths and treaties. While
the successor of Disabul celebrated his father's obsequies, he
was saluted by the ambassadors of the emperor Tiberius, who
proposed an invasion of Persia, and sustained, with firmness, the
angry and perhaps the just reproaches of that haughty Barbarian.
"You see my ten fingers," said the great khan, and he applied
them to his mouth. "You Romans speak with as many tongues, but
they are tongues of deceit and perjury. To me you hold one
language, to my subjects another; and the nations are
successively deluded by your perfidious eloquence. You
precipitate your allies into war and danger, you enjoy their
labors, and you neglect your benefactors. Hasten your return,
inform your master that a Turk is incapable of uttering or
forgiving falsehood, and that he shall speedily meet the
punishment which he deserves. While he solicits my friendship
with flattering and hollow words, he is sunk to a confederate of
my fugitive Varchonites. If I condescend to march against those
contemptible slaves, they will tremble at the sound of our whips;
they will be trampled, like a nest of ants, under the feet of my
innumerable cavalry. I am not ignorant of the road which they
have followed to invade your empire; nor can I be deceived by the
vain pretence, that Mount Caucasus is the impregnable barrier of
the Romans. I know the course of the Niester, the Danube, and the
Hebrus; the most warlike nations have yielded to the arms of the
Turks; and from the rising to the setting sun, the earth is my
inheritance." Notwithstanding this menace, a sense of mutual
advantage soon renewed the alliance of the Turks and Romans: but
the pride of the great khan survived his resentment; and when he
announced an important conquest to his friend the emperor
Maurice, he styled himself the master of the seven races, and the
lord of the seven climates of the world.
Disputes have often arisen between the sovereigns of Asia for
the title of king of the world; while the contest has proved that
it could not belong to either of the competitors. The kingdom of
the Turks was bounded by the Oxus or Gihon; and
Touran was separated by that great
river from the rival monarchy of Iran,
or Persia, which in a smaller compass contained perhaps a larger
measure of power and population. The Persians, who alternately
invaded and repulsed the Turks and the Romans, were still ruled
by the house of Sassan, which ascended the throne three hundred
years before the accession of Justinian. His contemporary,
Cabades, or Kobad, had been successful in war against the emperor
Anastasius; but the reign of that prince was distracted by civil
and religious troubles. A prisoner in the hands of his subjects,
an exile among the enemies of Persia, he recovered his liberty by
prostituting the honor of his wife, and regained his kingdom with
the dangerous and mercenary aid of the Barbarians, who had slain
his father. His nobles were suspicious that Kobad never forgave
the authors of his expulsion, or even those of his restoration.
The people was deluded and inflamed by the fanaticism of Mazdak,
who asserted the community of women, and the equality of mankind,
whilst he appropriated the richest lands and most beautiful
females to the use of his sectaries. The view of these disorders,
which had been fomented by his laws and example, imbittered the
declining age of the Persian monarch; and his fears were
increased by the consciousness of his design to reverse the
natural and customary order of succession, in favor of his third
and most favored son, so famous under the names of Chosroes and
Nushirvan. To render the youth more illustrious in the eyes of
the nations, Kobad was desirous that he should be adopted by the
emperor Justin: * the hope of peace inclined the Byzantine court
to accept this singular proposal; and Chosroes might have
acquired a specious claim to the inheritance of his Roman parent.
But the future mischief was diverted by the advice of the
quæstor Proclus: a difficulty was started, whether the
adoption should be performed as a civil or military rite; the
treaty was abruptly dissolved; and the sense of this indignity
sunk deep into the mind of Chosroes, who had already advanced to
the Tigris on his road to Constantinople. His father did not long
survive the disappointment of his wishes: the testament of their
deceased sovereign was read in the assembly of the nobles; and a
powerful faction, prepared for the event, and regardless of the
priority of age, exalted Chosroes to the throne of Persia. He
filled that throne during a prosperous period of forty-eight
years; and the Justice of Nushirvan is celebrated as the theme of
immortal praise by the nations of the East.
But the justice of kings is understood by themselves, and even
by their subjects, with an ample indulgence for the gratification
of passion and interest. The virtue of Chosroes was that of a
conqueror, who, in the measures of peace and war, is excited by
ambition, and restrained by prudence; who confounds the greatness
with the happiness of a nation, and calmly devotes the lives of
thousands to the fame, or even the amusement, of a single man. In
his domestic administration, the just Nushirvan would merit in
our feelings the appellation of a tyrant. His two elder brothers
had been deprived of their fair expectations of the diadem: their
future life, between the supreme rank and the condition of
subjects, was anxious to themselves and formidable to their
master: fear as well as revenge might tempt them to rebel: the
slightest evidence of a conspiracy satisfied the author of their
wrongs; and the repose of Chosroes was secured by the death of
these unhappy princes, with their families and adherents. One
guiltless youth was saved and dismissed by the compassion of a
veteran general; and this act of humanity, which was revealed by
his son, overbalanced the merit of reducing twelve nations to the
obedience of Persia. The zeal and prudence of Mebodes had fixed
the diadem on the head of Chosroes himself; but he delayed to
attend the royal summons, till he had performed the duties of a
military review: he was instantly commanded to repair to the iron
tripod, which stood before the gate of the palace, where it was
death to relieve or approach the victim; and Mebodes languished
several days before his sentence was pronounced, by the
inflexible pride and calm ingratitude of the son of Kobad. But
the people, more especially in the East, is disposed to forgive,
and even to applaud, the cruelty which strikes at the loftiest
heads; at the slaves of ambition, whose voluntary choice has
exposed them to live in the smiles, and to perish by the frown,
of a capricious monarch. In the execution of the laws which he
had no temptation to violate; in the punishment of crimes which
attacked his own dignity, as well as the happiness of
individuals; Nushirvan, or Chosroes, deserved the appellation of
just. His government was firm,
rigorous, and impartial. It was the first labor of his reign to
abolish the dangerous theory of common or equal possessions: the
lands and women which the sectaries of Mazdak has usurped were
restored to their lawful owners; and the temperate * chastisement
of the fanatics or impostors confirmed the domestic rights of
society. Instead of listening with blind confidence to a favorite
minister, he established four viziers over the four great
provinces of his empire, Assyria, Media, Persia, and Bactriana.
In the choice of judges, præfects, and counsellors, he
strove to remove the mask which is always worn in the presence of
kings: he wished to substitute the natural order of talents for
the accidental distinctions of birth and fortune; he professed,
in specious language, his intention to prefer those men who
carried the poor in their bosoms, and to banish corruption from
the seat of justice, as dogs were excluded from the temples of
the Magi. The code of laws of the first Artaxerxes was revived
and published as the rule of the magistrates; but the assurance
of speedy punishment was the best security of their virtue. Their
behavior was inspected by a thousand eyes, their words were
overheard by a thousand ears, the secret or public agents of the
throne; and the provinces, from the Indian to the Arabian
confines, were enlightened by the frequent visits of a sovereign,
who affected to emulate his celestial brother in his rapid and
salutary career. Education and agriculture he viewed as the two
objects most deserving of his care. In every city of Persia
orphans, and the children of the poor, were maintained and
instructed at the public expense; the daughters were given in
marriage to the richest citizens of their own rank, and the sons,
according to their different talents, were employed in mechanic
trades, or promoted to more honorable service. The deserted
villages were relieved by his bounty; to the peasants and farmers
who were found incapable of cultivating their lands, he
distributed cattle, seed, and the instruments of husbandry; and
the rare and inestimable treasure of fresh water was
parsimoniously managed, and skilfully dispersed over the arid
territory of Persia. The prosperity of that kingdom was the
effect and evidence of his virtues; his vices are those of
Oriental despotism; but in the long competition between Chosroes
and Justinian, the advantage both of merit and fortune is almost
always on the side of the Barbarian.
To the praise of justice Nushirvan united the reputation of
knowledge; and the seven Greek philosophers, who visited his
court, were invited and deceived by the strange assurance, that a
disciple of Plato was seated on the Persian throne. Did they
expect, that a prince, strenuously exercised in the toils of war
and government, should agitate, with dexterity like their own,
the abstruse and profound questions which amused the leisure of
the schools of Athens? Could they hope that the precepts of
philosophy should direct the life, and control the passions, of a
despot, whose infancy had been taught to consider his absolute
and fluctuating will as the only rule of moral obligation? The
studies of Chosroes were ostentatious and superficial: but his
example awakened the curiosity of an ingenious people, and the
light of science was diffused over the dominions of Persia. At
Gondi Sapor, in the neighborhood of the royal city of Susa, an
academy of physic was founded, which insensibly became a liberal
school of poetry, philosophy, and rhetoric. The annals of the
monarchy were composed; and while recent and authentic history
might afford some useful lessons both to the prince and people,
the darkness of the first ages was embellished by the giants, the
dragons, and the fabulous heroes of Oriental romance. Every
learned or confident stranger was enriched by the bounty, and
flattered by the conversation, of the monarch: he nobly rewarded
a Greek physician, by the deliverance of three thousand,
captives; and the sophists, who contended for his favor, were
exasperated by the wealth and insolence of Uranius, their more
successful rival. Nushirvan believed, or at least respected, the
religion of the Magi; and some traces of persecution may be
discovered in his reign. Yet he allowed himself freely to compare
the tenets of the various sects; and the theological disputes, in
which he frequently presided, diminished the authority of the
priest, and enlightened the minds of the people. At his command,
the most celebrated writers of Greece and India were translated
into the Persian language; a smooth and elegant idiom,
recommended by Mahomet to the use of paradise; though it is
branded with the epithets of savage and unmusical, by the
ignorance and presumption of Agathias. Yet the Greek historian
might reasonably wonder that it should be found possible to
execute an entire version of Plato and Aristotle in a foreign
dialect, which had not been framed to express the spirit of
freedom and the subtilties of philosophic disquisition. And, if
the reason of the Stagyrite might be equally dark, or equally
intelligible in every tongue, the dramatic art and verbal
argumentation of the disciple of Socrates, appear to be
indissolubly mingled with the grace and perfection of his Attic
style. In the search of universal knowledge, Nushirvan was
informed, that the moral and political fables of Pilpay, an
ancient Brachman, were preserved with jealous reverence among the
treasures of the kings of India. The physician Perozes was
secretly despatched to the banks of the Ganges, with instructions
to procure, at any price, the communication of this valuable
work. His dexterity obtained a transcript, his learned diligence
accomplished the translation; and the fables of Pilpay were read
and admired in the assembly of Nushirvan and his nobles. The
Indian original, and the Persian copy, have long since
disappeared; but this venerable monument has been saved by the
curiosity of the Arabian caliphs, revived in the modern Persic,
the Turkish, the Syriac, the Hebrew, and the Greek idioms, and
transfused through successive versions into the modern languages
of Europe. In their present form, the peculiar character, the
manners and religion of the Hindoos, are completely obliterated;
and the intrinsic merit of the fables of Pilpay is far inferior
to the concise elegance of Phædrus, and the native graces
of La Fontaine. Fifteen moral and political sentences are
illustrated in a series of apologues: but the composition is
intricate, the narrative prolix, and the precept obvious and
barren. Yet the Brachman may assume the merit of
inventinga pleasing fiction, which
adorns the nakedness of truth, and alleviates, perhaps, to a
royal ear, the harshness of instruction. With a similar design,
to admonish kings that they are strong only in the strength of
their subjects, the same Indians invented the game of chess,
which was likewise introduced into Persia under the reign of
Nushirvan.
Chapter XLII: State Of The Barbaric World. -- Part
III.
The son of Kobad found his kingdom involved in a war with the
successor of Constantine; and the anxiety of his domestic
situation inclined him to grant the suspension of arms, which
Justinian was impatient to purchase. Chosroes saw the Roman
ambassadors at his feet. He accepted eleven thousand pounds of
gold, as the price of an endless or
indefinite peace: some mutual exchanges were regulated; the
Persian assumed the guard of the gates of Caucasus, and the
demolition of Dara was suspended, on condition that it should
never be made the residence of the general of the East. This
interval of repose had been solicited, and was diligently
improved, by the ambition of the emperor: his African conquests
were the first fruits of the Persian treaty; and the avarice of
Chosroes was soothed by a large portion of the spoils of
Carthage, which his ambassadors required in a tone of pleasantry
and under the color of friendship. But the trophies of Belisarius
disturbed the slumbers of the great king; and he heard with
astonishment, envy, and fear, that Sicily, Italy, and Rome
itself, had been reduced, in three rapid campaigns, to the
obedience of Justinian. Unpractised in the art of violating
treaties, he secretly excited his bold and subtle vassal
Almondar. That prince of the Saracens, who resided at Hira, had
not been included in the general peace, and still waged an
obscure war against his rival Arethas, the chief of the tribe of
Gassan, and confederate of the empire. The subject of their
dispute was an extensive sheep-walk in the desert to the south of
Palmyra. An immemorial tribute for the license of pasture
appeared to attest the rights of Almondar, while the Gassanite
appealed to the Latin name of strata, a paved road, as an
unquestionable evidence of the sovereignty and labors of the
Romans. The two monarchs supported the cause of their respective
vassals; and the Persian Arab, without expecting the event of a
slow and doubtful arbitration, enriched his flying camp with the
spoil and captives of Syria. Instead of repelling the arms,
Justinian attempted to seduce the fidelity of Almondar, while he
called from the extremities of the earth the nations of
Æthiopia and Scythia to invade the dominions of his rival.
But the aid of such allies was distant and precarious, and the
discovery of this hostile correspondence justified the complaints
of the Goths and Armenians, who implored, almost at the same
time, the protection of Chosroes. The descendants of Arsaces, who
were still numerous in Armenia, had been provoked to assert the
last relics of national freedom and hereditary rank; and the
ambassadors of Vitiges had secretly traversed the empire to
expose the instant, and almost inevitable, danger of the kingdom
of Italy. Their representations were uniform, weighty, and
effectual. "We stand before your throne, the advocates of your
interest as well as of our own. The ambitious and faithless
Justinian aspires to be the sole master of the world. Since the
endless peace, which betrayed the common freedom of mankind, that
prince, your ally in words, your enemy in actions, has alike
insulted his friends and foes, and has filled the earth with
blood and confusion. Has he not violated the privileges of
Armenia, the independence of Colchos, and the wild liberty of the
Tzanian mountains? Has he not usurped, with equal avidity, the
city of Bosphorus on the frozen Mæotis, and the vale of
palm-trees on the shores of the Red Sea? The Moors, the Vandals,
the Goths, have been successively oppressed, and each nation has
calmly remained the spectator of their neighbor's ruin. Embrace,
O king! the favorable moment; the East is left without defence,
while the armies of Justinian and his renowned general are
detained in the distant regions of the West. If you hesitate or
delay, Belisarius and his victorious troops will soon return from
the Tyber to the Tigris, and Persia may enjoy the wretched
consolation of being the last devoured." By such arguments,
Chosroes was easily persuaded to imitate the example which he
condemned: but the Persian, ambitious of military fame, disdained
the inactive warfare of a rival, who issued his sanguinary
commands from the secure station of the Byzantine palace.
Whatever might be the provocations of Chosroes, he abused the
confidence of treaties; and the just reproaches of dissimulation
and falsehood could only be concealed by the lustre of his
victories. The Persian army, which had been assembled in the
plains of Babylon, prudently declined the strong cities of
Mesopotamia, and followed the western bank of the Euphrates, till
the small, though populous, town of Dura * presumed to arrest the
progress of the great king. The gates of Dura, by treachery and
surprise, were burst open; and as soon as Chosroes had stained
his cimeter with the blood of the inhabitants, he dismissed the
ambassador of Justinian to inform his master in what place he had
left the enemy of the Romans. The conqueror still affected the
praise of humanity and justice; and as he beheld a noble matron
with her infant rudely dragged along the ground, he sighed, he
wept, and implored the divine justice to punish the author of
these calamities. Yet the herd of twelve thousand captives was
ransomed for two hundred pounds of gold; the neighboring bishop
of Sergiopolis pledged his faith for the payment: and in the
subsequent year the unfeeling avarice of Chosroes exacted the
penalty of an obligation which it was generous to contract and
impossible to discharge. He advanced into the heart of Syria: but
a feeble enemy, who vanished at his approach, disappointed him of
the honor of victory; and as he could not hope to establish his
dominion, the Persian king displayed in this inroad the mean and
rapacious vices of a robber. Hierapolis, Berrhæa or Aleppo,
Apamea and Chalcis, were successively besieged: they redeemed
their safety by a ransom of gold or silver, proportioned to their
respective strength and opulence; and their new master enforced,
without observing, the terms of capitulation. Educated in the
religion of the Magi, he exercised, without remorse, the
lucrative trade of sacrilege; and, after stripping of its gold
and gems a piece of the true cross, he generously restored the
naked relic to the devotion of the Christians of Apamea. No more
than fourteen years had elapsed since Antioch was ruined by an
earthquake; but the queen of the East, the new Theopolis, had
been raised from the ground by the liberality of Justinian; and
the increasing greatness of the buildings and the people already
erased the memory of this recent disaster. On one side, the city
was defended by the mountain, on the other by the River Orontes;
but the most accessible part was commanded by a superior
eminence: the proper remedies were rejected, from the despicable
fear of discovering its weakness to the enemy; and Germanus, the
emperor's nephew, refused to trust his person and dignity within
the walls of a besieged city. The people of Antioch had inherited
the vain and satirical genius of their ancestors: they were
elated by a sudden reënforcement of six thousand soldiers;
they disdained the offers of an easy capitulation and their
intemperate clamors insulted from the ramparts the majesty of the
great king. Under his eye the Persian myriads mounted with
scaling-ladders to the assault; the Roman mercenaries fled
through the opposite gate of Daphne; and the generous assistance
of the youth of Antioch served only to aggravate the miseries of
their country. As Chosroes, attended by the ambassadors of
Justinian, was descending from the mountain, he affected, in a
plaintive voice, to deplore the obstinacy and ruin of that
unhappy people; but the slaughter still raged with unrelenting
fury; and the city, at the command of a Barbarian, was delivered
to the flames. The cathedral of Antioch was indeed preserved by
the avarice, not the piety, of the conqueror: a more honorable
exemption was granted to the church of St. Julian, and the
quarter of the town where the ambassadors resided; some distant
streets were saved by the shifting of the wind, and the walls
still subsisted to protect, and soon to betray, their new
inhabitants. Fanaticism had defaced the ornaments of Daphne, but
Chosroes breathed a purer air amidst her groves and fountains;
and some idolaters in his train might sacrifice with impunity to
the nymphs of that elegant retreat. Eighteen miles below Antioch,
the River Orontes falls into the Mediterranean. The haughty
Persian visited the term of his conquests; and, after bathing
alone in the sea, he offered a solemn sacrifice of thanksgiving
to the sun, or rather to the Creator of the sun, whom the Magi
adored. If this act of superstition offended the prejudices of
the Syrians, they were pleased by the courteous and even eager
attention with which he assisted at the games of the circus; and
as Chosroes had heard that the blue
faction was espoused by the emperor, his peremptory command
secured the victory of the green
charioteer. From the discipline of his camp the people derived
more solid consolation; and they interceded in vain for the life
of a soldier who had too faithfully copied the rapine of the just
Nushirvan. At length, fatigued, though unsatiated, with the spoil
of Syria, * he slowly moved to the Euphrates, formed a temporary
bridge in the neighborhood of Barbalissus, and defined the space
of three days for the entire passage of his numerous host. After
his return, he founded, at the distance of one day's journey from
the palace of Ctesiphon, a new city, which perpetuated the joint
names of Chosroes and of Antioch. The Syrian captives recognized
the form and situation of their native abodes: baths and a
stately circus were constructed for their use; and a colony of
musicians and charioteers revived in Assyria the pleasures of a
Greek capital. By the munificence of the royal founder, a liberal
allowance was assigned to these fortunate exiles; and they
enjoyed the singular privilege of bestowing freedom on the slaves
whom they acknowledged as their kinsmen. Palestine, and the holy
wealth of Jerusalem, were the next objects that attracted the
ambition, or rather the avarice, of Chosroes. Constantinople, and
the palace of the Cæsars, no longer appeared impregnable or
remote; and his aspiring fancy already covered Asia Minor with
the troops, and the Black Sea with the navies, of Persia.
These hopes might have been realized, if the conqueror of
Italy had not been seasonably recalled to the defence of the
East. While Chosroes pursued his ambitious designs on the coast
of the Euxine, Belisarius, at the head of an army without pay or
discipline, encamped beyond the Euphrates, within six miles of
Nisibis. He meditated, by a skilful operation, to draw the
Persians from their impregnable citadel, and improving his
advantage in the field, either to intercept their retreat, or
perhaps to enter the gates with the flying Barbarians. He
advanced one day's journey on the territories of Persia, reduced
the fortress of Sisaurane, and sent the governor, with eight
hundred chosen horsemen, to serve the emperor in his Italian
wars. He detached Arethas and his Arabs, supported by twelve
hundred Romans, to pass the Tigris, and to ravage the harvests of
Assyria, a fruitful province, long exempt from the calamities of
war. But the plans of Belisarius were disconcerted by the
untractable spirit of Arethas, who neither returned to the camp,
nor sent any intelligence of his motions. The Roman general was
fixed in anxious expectation to the same spot; the time of action
elapsed, the ardent sun of Mesopotamia inflamed with fevers the
blood of his European soldiers; and the stationary troops and
officers of Syria affected to tremble for the safety of their
defenceless cities. Yet this diversion had already succeeded in
forcing Chosroes to return with loss and precipitation; and if
the skill of Belisarius had been seconded by discipline and
valor, his success might have satisfied the sanguine wishes of
the public, who required at his hands the conquest of Ctesiphon,
and the deliverance of the captives of Antioch. At the end of the
campaign, he was recalled to Constantinople by an ungrateful
court, but the dangers of the ensuing spring restored his
confidence and command; and the hero, almost alone, was
despatched, with the speed of post-horses, to repel, by his name
and presence, the invasion of Syria. He found the Roman generals,
among whom was a nephew of Justinian, imprisoned by their fears
in the fortifications of Hierapolis. But instead of listening to
their timid counsels, Belisarius commanded them to follow him to
Europus, where he had resolved to collect his forces, and to
execute whatever God should inspire him to achieve against the
enemy. His firm attitude on the banks of the Euphrates restrained
Chosroes from advancing towards Palestine; and he received with
art and dignity the ambassadors, or rather spies, of the Persian
monarch. The plain between Hierapolis and the river was covered
with the squadrons of cavalry, six thousand hunters, tall and
robust, who pursued their game without the apprehension of an
enemy. On the opposite bank the ambassadors descried a thousand
Armenian horse, who appeared to guard the passage of the
Euphrates. The tent of Belisarius was of the coarsest linen, the
simple equipage of a warrior who disdained the luxury of the
East. Around his tent, the nations who marched under his standard
were arranged with skilful confusion. The Thracians and Illyrians
were posted in the front, the Heruli and Goths in the centre; the
prospect was closed by the Moors and Vandals, and their loose
array seemed to multiply their numbers. Their dress was light and
active; one soldier carried a whip, another a sword, a third a
bow, a fourth, perhaps, a battle axe, and the whole picture
exhibited the intrepidity of the troops and the vigilance of the
general. Chosroes was deluded by the address, and awed by the
genius, of the lieutenant of Justinian. Conscious of the merit,
and ignorant of the force, of his antagonist, he dreaded a
decisive battle in a distant country, from whence not a Persian
might return to relate the melancholy tale. The great king
hastened to repass the Euphrates; and Belisarius pressed his
retreat, by affecting to oppose a measure so salutary to the
empire, and which could scarcely have been prevented by an army
of a hundred thousand men. Envy might suggest to ignorance and
pride, that the public enemy had been suffered to escape: but the
African and Gothic triumphs are less glorious than this safe and
bloodless victory, in which neither fortune, nor the valor of the
soldiers, can subtract any part of the general's renown. The
second removal of Belisarius from the Persian to the Italian war
revealed the extent of his personal merit, which had corrected or
supplied the want of discipline and courage. Fifteen generals,
without concert or skill, led through the mountains of Armenia an
army of thirty thousand Romans, inattentive to their signals,
their ranks, and their ensigns. Four thousand Persians,
intrenched in the camp of Dubis, vanquished, almost without a
combat, this disorderly multitude; their useless arms were
scattered along the road, and their horses sunk under the fatigue
of their rapid flight. But the Arabs of the Roman party prevailed
over their brethren; the Armenians returned to their allegiance;
the cities of Dara and Edessa resisted a sudden assault and a
regular siege, and the calamities of war were suspended by those
of pestilence. A tacit or formal agreement between the two
sovereigns protected the tranquillity of the Eastern frontier;
and the arms of Chosroes were confined to the Colchian or Lazic
war, which has been too minutely described by the historians of
the times.
The extreme length of the Euxine Sea from Constantinople to
the mouth of the Phasis, may be computed as a voyage of nine
days, and a measure of seven hundred miles. From the Iberian
Caucasus, the most lofty and craggy mountains of Asia, that river
descends with such oblique vehemence, that in a short space it is
traversed by one hundred and twenty bridges. Nor does the stream
become placid and navigable, till it reaches the town of
Sarapana, five days' journey from the Cyrus, which flows from the
same hills, but in a contrary direction to the Caspian Lake. The
proximity of these rivers has suggested the practice, or at least
the idea, of wafting the precious merchandise of India down the
Oxus, over the Caspian, up the Cyrus, and with the current of the
Phasis into the Euxine and Mediterranean Seas. As it successively
collects the streams of the plain of Colchos, the Phasis moves
with diminished speed, though accumulated weight. At the mouth it
is sixty fathom deep, and half a league broad, but a small woody
island is interposed in the midst of the channel; the water, so
soon as it has deposited an earthy or metallic sediment, floats
on the surface of the waves, and is no longer susceptible of
corruption. In a course of one hundred miles, forty of which are
navigable for large vessels, the Phasis divides the celebrated
region of Colchos, or Mingrelia, which, on three sides, is
fortified by the Iberian and Armenian mountains, and whose
maritime coast extends about two hundred miles from the
neighborhood of Trebizond to Dioscurias and the confines of
Circassia. Both the soil and climate are relaxed by excessive
moisture: twenty-eight rivers, besides the Phasis and his
dependent streams, convey their waters to the sea; and the
hollowness of the ground appears to indicate the subterraneous
channels between the Euxine and the Caspian. In the fields where
wheat or barley is sown, the earth is too soft to sustain the
action of the plough; but the gom, a
small grain, not unlike the millet or coriander seed, supplies
the ordinary food of the people; and the use of bread is confined
to the prince and his nobles. Yet the vintage is more plentiful
than the harvest; and the bulk of the stems, as well as the
quality of the wine, display the unassisted powers of nature. The
same powers continually tend to overshadow the face of the
country with thick forests; the timber of the hills, and the flax
of the plains, contribute to the abundance of naval stores; the
wild and tame animals, the horse, the ox, and the hog, are
remarkably prolific, and the name of the pheasant is expressive
of his native habitation on the banks of the Phasis. The gold
mines to the south of Trebizond, which are still worked with
sufficient profit, were a subject of national dispute between
Justinian and Chosroes; and it is not unreasonable to believe,
that a vein of precious metal may be equally diffused through the
circle of the hills, although these secret treasures are
neglected by the laziness, or concealed by the prudence, of the
Mingrelians. The waters, impregnated with particles of gold, are
carefully strained through sheep-skins or fleeces; but this
expedient, the groundwork perhaps of a marvellous fable, affords
a faint image of the wealth extracted from a virgin earth by the
power and industry of ancient kings. Their silver palaces and
golden chambers surpass our belief; but the fame of their riches
is said to have excited the enterprising avarice of the
Argonauts. Tradition has affirmed, with some color of reason,
that Egypt planted on the Phasis a learned and polite colony,
which manufactured linen, built navies, and invented geographical
maps. The ingenuity of the moderns has peopled, with flourishing
cities and nations, the isthmus between the Euxine and the
Caspian; and a lively writer, observing the resemblance of
climate, and, in his apprehension, of trade, has not hesitated to
pronounce Colchos the Holland of antiquity.
But the riches of Colchos shine only through the darkness of
conjecture or tradition; and its genuine history presents a
uniform scene of rudeness and poverty. If one hundred and thirty
languages were spoken in the market of Dioscurias, they were the
imperfect idioms of so many savage tribes or families,
sequestered from each other in the valleys of Mount Caucasus; and
their separation, which diminished the importance, must have
multiplied the number, of their rustic capitals. In the present
state of Mingrelia, a village is an assemblage of huts within a
wooden fence; the fortresses are seated in the depths of forests;
the princely town of Cyta, or Cotatis, consists of two hundred
houses, and a stone edifice appertains only to the magnificence
of kings. Twelve ships from Constantinople, and about sixty
barks, laden with the fruits of industry, annually cast anchor on
the coast; and the list of Colchian exports is much increased,
since the natives had only slaves and hides to offer in exchange
for the corn and salt which they purchased from the subjects of
Justinian. Not a vestige can be found of the art, the knowledge,
or the navigation, of the ancient Colchians: few Greeks desired
or dared to pursue the footsteps of the Argonauts; and even the
marks of an Egyptian colony are lost on a nearer approach. The
rite of circumcision is practised only by the Mahometans of the
Euxine; and the curled hair and swarthy complexion of Africa no
longer disfigure the most perfect of the human race. It is in the
adjacent climates of Georgia, Mingrelia, and Circassia, that
nature has placed, at least to our eyes, the model of beauty in
the shape of the limbs, the color of the skin, the symmetry of
the features, and the expression of the countenance. According to
the destination of the two sexes, the men seemed formed for
action, the women for love; and the perpetual supply of females
from Mount Caucasus has purified the blood, and improved the
breed, of the southern nations of Asia. The proper district of
Mingrelia, a portion only of the ancient Colchos, has long
sustained an exportation of twelve thousand slaves. The number of
prisoners or criminals would be inadequate to the annual demand;
but the common people are in a state of servitude to their lords;
the exercise of fraud or rapine is unpunished in a lawless
community; and the market is continually replenished by the abuse
of civil and paternal authority. Such a trade, which reduces the
human species to the level of cattle, may tend to encourage
marriage and population, since the multitude of children enriches
their sordid and inhuman parent. But this source of impure wealth
must inevitably poison the national manners, obliterate the sense
of honor and virtue, and almost extinguish the instincts of
nature: the Christians of Georgia and
Mingrelia are the most dissolute of mankind; and their children,
who, in a tender age, are sold into foreign slavery, have already
learned to imitate the rapine of the father and the prostitution
of the mother. Yet, amidst the rudest ignorance, the untaught
natives discover a singular dexterity both of mind and hand; and
although the want of union and discipline exposes them to their
more powerful neighbors, a bold and intrepid spirit has animated
the Colchians of every age. In the host of Xerxes, they served on
foot; and their arms were a dagger or a javelin, a wooden casque,
and a buckler of raw hides. But in their own country the use of
cavalry has more generally prevailed: the meanest of the peasants
disdained to walk; the martial nobles are possessed, perhaps, of
two hundred horses; and above five thousand are numbered in the
train of the prince of Mingrelia. The Colchian government has
been always a pure and hereditary kingdom; and the authority of
the sovereign is only restrained by the turbulence of his
subjects. Whenever they were obedient, he could lead a numerous
army into the field; but some faith is requisite to believe, that
the single tribe of the Suanians as composed of two hundred
thousand soldiers, or that the population of Mingrelia now
amounts to four millions of inhabitants.
Chapter XLII: State Of The Barbaric World. -- Part
III.
It was the boast of the Colchians, that their ancestors had
checked the victories of Sesostris; and the defeat of the
Egyptian is less incredible than his successful progress as far
as the foot of Mount Caucasus. They sunk without any memorable
effort, under the arms of Cyrus; followed in distant wars the
standard of the great king, and presented him every fifth year
with one hundred boys, and as many virgins, the fairest produce
of the land. Yet he accepted this gift
like the gold and ebony of India, the frankincense of the Arabs,
or the negroes and ivory of Æthiopia: the Colchians were
not subject to the dominion of a satrap, and they continued to
enjoy the name as well as substance of national independence.
After the fall of the Persian empire, Mithridates, king of
Pontus, added Colchos to the wide circle of his dominions on the
Euxine; and when the natives presumed to request that his son
might reign over them, he bound the ambitious youth in chains of
gold, and delegated a servant in his place. In pursuit of
Mithridates, the Romans advanced to the banks of the Phasis, and
their galleys ascended the river till they reached the camp of
Pompey and his legions. But the senate, and afterwards the
emperors, disdained to reduce that distant and useless conquest
into the form of a province. The family of a Greek rhetorician
was permitted to reign in Colchos and the adjacent kingdoms from
the time of Mark Antony to that of Nero; and after the race of
Polemo was extinct, the eastern Pontus, which preserved his name,
extended no farther than the neighborhood of Trebizond. Beyond
these limits the fortifications of Hyssus, of Apsarus, of the
Phasis, of Dioscurias or Sebastopolis, and of Pityus, were
guarded by sufficient detachments of horse and foot; and six
princes of Colchos received their diadems from the lieutenants of
Cæsar. One of these lieutenants, the eloquent and
philosophic Arrian, surveyed, and has described, the Euxine
coast, under the reign of Hadrian. The garrison which he reviewed
at the mouth of the Phasis consisted of four hundred chosen
legionaries; the brick walls and towers, the double ditch, and
the military engines on the rampart, rendered this place
inaccessible to the Barbarians: but the new suburbs which had
been built by the merchants and veterans, required, in the
opinion of Arrian, some external defence. As the strength of the
empire was gradually impaired, the Romans stationed on the Phasis
were neither withdrawn nor expelled; and the tribe of the Lazi,
whose posterity speak a foreign dialect, and inhabit the sea
coast of Trebizond, imposed their name and dominion on the
ancient kingdom of Colchos. Their independence was soon invaded
by a formidable neighbor, who had acquired, by arms and treaties,
the sovereignty of Iberia. The dependent king of Lazica received
his sceptre at the hands of the Persian monarch, and the
successors of Constantine acquiesced in this injurious claim,
which was proudly urged as a right of immemorial prescription. In
the beginning of the sixth century, their influence was restored
by the introduction of Christianity, which the Mingrelians still
profess with becoming zeal, without understanding the doctrines,
or observing the precepts, of their religion. After the decease
of his father, Zathus was exalted to the regal dignity by the
favor of the great king; but the pious youth abhorred the
ceremonies of the Magi, and sought, in the palace of
Constantinople, an orthodox baptism, a noble wife, and the
alliance of the emperor Justin. The king of Lazica was solemnly
invested with the diadem, and his cloak and tunic of white silk,
with a gold border, displayed, in rich embroidery, the figure of
his new patron; who soothed the jealousy of the Persian court,
and excused the revolt of Colchos, by the venerable names of
hospitality and religion. The common interest of both empires
imposed on the Colchians the duty of guarding the passes of Mount
Caucasus, where a wall of sixty miles is now defended by the
monthly service of the musketeers of Mingrelia.
But this honorable connection was soon corrupted by the
avarice and ambition of the Romans. Degraded from the rank of
allies, the Lazi were incessantly reminded, by words and actions,
of their dependent state. At the distance of a day's journey
beyond the Apsarus, they beheld the rising fortress of Petra,
which commanded the maritime country to the south of the Phasis.
Instead of being protected by the valor, Colchos was insulted by
the licentiousness, of foreign mercenaries; the benefits of
commerce were converted into base and vexatious monopoly; and
Gubazes, the native prince, was reduced to a pageant of royalty,
by the superior influence of the officers of Justinian.
Disappointed in their expectations of Christian virtue, the
indignant Lazi reposed some confidence in the justice of an
unbeliever. After a private assurance that their ambassadors
should not be delivered to the Romans, they publicly solicited
the friendship and aid of Chosroes. The sagacious monarch
instantly discerned the use and importance of Colchos; and
meditated a plan of conquest, which was renewed at the end of a
thousand years by Shah Abbas, the wisest and most powerful of his
successors. His ambition was fired by the hope of launching a
Persian navy from the Phasis, of commanding the trade and
navigation of the Euxine Sea, of desolating the coast of Pontus
and Bithynia, of distressing, perhaps of attacking,
Constantinople, and of persuading the Barbarians of Europe to
second his arms and counsels against the common enemy of mankind.
Under the pretence of a Scythian war, he silently led his troops
to the frontiers of Iberia; the Colchian guides were prepared to
conduct them through the woods and along the precipices of Mount
Caucasus; and a narrow path was laboriously formed into a safe
and spacious highway, for the march of cavalry, and even of
elephants. Gubazes laid his person and diadem at the feet of the
king of Persia; his Colchians imitated the submission of their
prince; and after the walls of Petra had been shaken, the Roman
garrison prevented, by a capitulation, the impending fury of the
last assault. But the Lazi soon discovered, that their impatience
had urged them to choose an evil more intolerable than the
calamities which they strove to escape. The monopoly of salt and
corn was effectually removed by the loss of those valuable
commodities. The authority of a Roman legislator, was succeeded
by the pride of an Oriental despot, who beheld, with equal
disdain, the slaves whom he had exalted, and the kings whom he
had humbled before the footstool of his throne. The adoration of
fire was introduced into Colchos by the zeal of the Magi: their
intolerant spirit provoked the fervor of a Christian people; and
the prejudice of nature or education was wounded by the impious
practice of exposing the dead bodies of their parents, on the
summit of a lofty tower, to the crows and vultures of the air.
Conscious of the increasing hatred, which retarded the execution
of his great designs, the just Nashirvan had secretly given
orders to assassinate the king of the Lazi, to transplant the
people into some distant land, and to fix a faithful and warlike
colony on the banks of the Phasis. The watchful jealousy of the
Colchians foresaw and averted the approaching ruin. Their
repentance was accepted at Constantinople by the prudence, rather
than clemency, of Justinian; and he commanded Dagisteus, with
seven thousand Romans, and one thousand of the Zani, * to expel
the Persians from the coast of the Euxine.
The siege of Petra, which the Roman general, with the aid of
the Lazi, immediately undertook, is one of the most remarkable
actions of the age. The city was seated on a craggy rock, which
hung over the sea, and communicated by a steep and narrow path
with the land. Since the approach was difficult, the attack might
be deemed impossible: the Persian conqueror had strengthened the
fortifications of Justinian; and the places least inaccessible
were covered by additional bulwarks. In this important fortress,
the vigilance of Chosroes had deposited a magazine of offensive
and defensive arms, sufficient for five times the number, not
only of the garrison, but of the besiegers themselves. The stock
of flour and salt provisions was adequate to the consumption of
five years; the want of wine was supplied by vinegar; and of
grain from whence a strong liquor was extracted, and a triple
aqueduct eluded the diligence, and even the suspicions, of the
enemy. But the firmest defence of Petra was placed in the valor
of fifteen hundred Persians, who resisted the assaults of the
Romans, whilst, in a softer vein of earth, a mine was secretly
perforated. The wall, supported by slender and temporary props,
hung tottering in the air; but Dagisteus delayed the attack till
he had secured a specific recompense; and the town was relieved
before the return of his messenger from Constantinople. The
Persian garrison was reduced to four hundred men, of whom no more
than fifty were exempt from sickness or wounds; yet such had been
their inflexible perseverance, that they concealed their losses
from the enemy, by enduring, without a murmur, the sight and
putrefying stench of the dead bodies of their eleven hundred
companions. After their deliverance, the breaches were hastily
stopped with sand-bags; the mine was replenished with earth; a
new wall was erected on a frame of substantial timber; and a
fresh garrison of three thousand men was stationed at Petra to
sustain the labors of a second siege. The operations, both of the
attack and defence, were conducted with skilful obstinacy; and
each party derived useful lessons from the experience of their
past faults. A battering-ram was invented, of light construction
and powerful effect: it was transported and worked by the hands
of forty soldiers; and as the stones were loosened by its
repeated strokes, they were torn with long iron hooks from the
wall. From those walls, a shower of darts was incessantly poured
on the heads of the assailants; but they were most dangerously
annoyed by a fiery composition of sulphur and bitumen, which in
Colchos might with some propriety be named the oil of Medea. Of
six thousand Romans who mounted the scaling-ladders, their
general Bessas was the first, a gallant veteran of seventy years
of age: the courage of their leader, his fall, and extreme
danger, animated the irresistible effort of his troops; and their
prevailing numbers oppressed the strength, without subduing the
spirit, of the Persian garrison. The fate of these valiant men
deserves to be more distinctly noticed. Seven hundred had
perished in the siege, two thousand three hundred survived to
defend the breach. One thousand and seventy were destroyed with
fire and sword in the last assault; and if seven hundred and
thirty were made prisoners, only eighteen among them were found
without the marks of honorable wounds. The remaining five hundred
escaped into the citadel, which they maintained without any hopes
of relief, rejecting the fairest terms of capitulation and
service, till they were lost in the flames. They died in
obedience to the commands of their prince; and such examples of
loyalty and valor might excite their countrymen to deeds of equal
despair and more prosperous event. The instant demolition of the
works of Petra confessed the astonishment and apprehension of the
conqueror.
A Spartan would have praised and pitied the virtue of these
heroic slaves; but the tedious warfare and alternate success of
the Roman and Persian arms cannot detain the attention of
posterity at the foot of Mount Caucasus. The advantages obtained
by the troops of Justinian were more frequent and splendid; but
the forces of the great king were continually supplied, till they
amounted to eight elephants and seventy thousand men, including
twelve thousand Scythian allies, and above three thousand
Dilemites, who descended by their free choice from the hills of
Hyrcania, and were equally formidable in close or in distant
combat. The siege of Archæopolis, a name imposed or
corrupted by the Greeks, was raised with some loss and
precipitation; but the Persians occupied the passes of Iberia:
Colchos was enslaved by their forts and garrisons; they devoured
the scanty sustenance of the people; and the prince of the Lazi
fled into the mountains. In the Roman camp, faith and discipline
were unknown; and the independent leaders, who were invested with
equal power, disputed with each other the preeminence of vice and
corruption. The Persians followed, without a murmur, the commands
of a single chief, who implicitly obeyed the instructions of
their supreme lord. Their general was distinguished among the
heroes of the East by his wisdom in council, and his valor in the
field. The advanced age of Mermeroes, and the lameness of both
his feet, could not diminish the activity of his mind, or even of
his body; and, whilst he was carried in a litter in the front of
battle, he inspired terror to the enemy, and a just confidence to
the troops, who, under his banners, were always successful. After
his death, the command devolved to Nacoragan, a proud satrap,
who, in a conference with the Imperial chiefs, had presumed to
declare that he disposed of victory as absolutely as of the ring
on his finger. Such presumption was the natural cause and
forerunner of a shameful defeat. The Romans had been gradually
repulsed to the edge of the sea-shore; and their last camp, on
the ruins of the Grecian colony of Phasis, was defended on all
sides by strong intrenchments, the river, the Euxine, and a fleet
of galleys. Despair united their counsels and invigorated their
arms: they withstood the assault of the Persians and the flight
of Nacoragan preceded or followed the slaughter of ten thousand
of his bravest soldiers. He escaped from the Romans to fall into
the hands of an unforgiving master who severely chastised the
error of his own choice: the unfortunate general was flayed
alive, and his skin, stuffed into the human form, was exposed on
a mountain; a dreadful warning to those who might hereafter be
intrusted with the fame and fortune of Persia. Yet the prudence
of Chosroes insensibly relinquished the prosecution of the
Colchian war, in the just persuasion, that it is impossible to
reduce, or, at least, to hold a distant country against the
wishes and efforts of its inhabitants. The fidelity of Gubazes
sustained the most rigorous trials. He patiently endured the
hardships of a savage life, and rejected with disdain, the
specious temptations of the Persian court. * The king of the Lazi
had been educated in the Christian religion; his mother was the
daughter of a senator; during his youth he had served ten years a
silentiary of the Byzantine palace, and the arrears of an unpaid
salary were a motive of attachment as well as of complaint. But
the long continuance of his sufferings extorted from him a naked
representation of the truth; and truth was an unpardonable libel
on the lieutenants of Justinian, who, amidst the delays of a
ruinous war, had spared his enemies and trampled on his allies.
Their malicious information persuaded the emperor that his
faithless vassal already meditated a second defection: an order
was surprised to send him prisoner to Constantinople; a
treacherous clause was inserted, that he might be lawfully killed
in case of resistance; and Gubazes, without arms, or suspicion of
danger, was stabbed in the security of a friendly interview. In
the first moments of rage and despair, the Colchians would have
sacrificed their country and religion to the gratification of
revenge. But the authority and eloquence of the wiser few
obtained a salutary pause: the victory of the Phasis restored the
terror of the Roman arms, and the emperor was solicitous to
absolve his own name from the imputation of so foul a murder. A
judge of senatorial rank was commissioned to inquire into the
conduct and death of the king of the Lazi. He ascended a stately
tribunal, encompassed by the ministers of justice and punishment:
in the presence of both nations, this extraordinary cause was
pleaded, according to the forms of civil jurisprudence, and some
satisfaction was granted to an injured people, by the sentence
and execution of the meaner criminals.
In peace, the king of Persia continually sought the pretences
of a rupture: but no sooner had he taken up arms, than he
expressed his desire of a safe and honorable treaty. During the
fiercest hostilities, the two monarchs entertained a deceitful
negotiation; and such was the superiority of Chosroes, that
whilst he treated the Roman ministers with insolence and
contempt, he obtained the most unprecedented honors for his own
ambassadors at the Imperial court. The successor of Cyrus assumed
the majesty of the Eastern sun, and graciously permitted his
younger brother Justinian to reign over the West, with the pale
and reflected splendor of the moon. This gigantic style was
supported by the pomp and eloquence of Isdigune, one of the royal
chamberlains. His wife and daughters, with a train of eunuchs and
camels, attended the march of the ambassador: two satraps with
golden diadems were numbered among his followers: he was guarded
by five hundred horse, the most valiant of the Persians; and the
Roman governor of Dara wisely refused to admit more than twenty
of this martial and hostile caravan. When Isdigune had saluted
the emperor, and delivered his presents, he passed ten months at
Constantinople without discussing any serious affairs. Instead of
being confined to his palace, and receiving food and water from
the hands of his keepers, the Persian ambassador, without spies
or guards, was allowed to visit the capital; and the freedom of
conversation and trade enjoyed by his domestics, offended the
prejudices of an age which rigorously practised the law of
nations, without confidence or courtesy. By an unexampled
indulgence, his interpreter, a servant below the notice of a
Roman magistrate, was seated, at the table of Justinian, by the
side of his master: and one thousand pounds of gold might be
assigned for the expense of his journey and entertainment. Yet
the repeated labors of Isdigune could procure only a partial and
imperfect truce, which was always purchased with the treasures,
and renewed at the solicitation, of the Byzantine court Many
years of fruitless desolation elapsed before Justinian and
Chosroes were compelled, by mutual lassitude, to consult the
repose of their declining age. At a conference held on the
frontier, each party, without expecting to gain credit, displayed
the power, the justice, and the pacific intentions, of their
respective sovereigns; but necessity and interest dictated the
treaty of peace, which was concluded for a term of fifty years,
diligently composed in the Greek and Persian languages, and
attested by the seals of twelve interpreters. The liberty of
commerce and religion was fixed and defined; the allies of the
emperor and the great king were included in the same benefits and
obligations; and the most scrupulous precautions were provided to
prevent or determine the accidental disputes that might arise on
the confines of two hostile nations. After twenty years of
destructive though feeble war, the limits still remained without
alteration; and Chosroes was persuaded to renounce his dangerous
claim to the possession or sovereignty of Colchos and its
dependent states. Rich in the accumulated treasures of the East,
he extorted from the Romans an annual payment of thirty thousand
pieces of gold; and the smallness of the sum revealed the
disgrace of a tribute in its naked deformity. In a previous
debate, the chariot of Sesostris, and the wheel of fortune, were
applied by one of the ministers of Justinian, who observed that
the reduction of Antioch, and some Syrian cities, had elevated
beyond measure the vain and ambitious spirit of the Barbarian.
"You are mistaken," replied the modest Persian: "the king of
kings, the lord of mankind, looks down with contempt on such
petty acquisitions; and of the ten nations, vanquished by his
invincible arms, he esteems the Romans as the least formidable."
According to the Orientals, the empire of Nushirvan extended from
Ferganah, in Transoxiana, to Yemen or Arabia Fælix. He
subdued the rebels of Hyrcania, reduced the provinces of Cabul
and Zablestan on the banks of the Indus, broke the power of the
Euthalites, terminated by an honorable treaty the Turkish war,
and admitted the daughter of the great khan into the number of
his lawful wives. Victorious and respected among the princes of
Asia, he gave audience, in his palace of Madain, or Ctesiphon, to
the ambassadors of the world. Their gifts or tributes, arms, rich
garments, gems, slaves or aromatics, were humbly presented at the
foot of his throne; and he condescended to accept from the king
of India ten quintals of the wood of aloes, a maid seven cubits
in height, and a carpet softer than silk, the skin, as it was
reported, of an extraordinary serpent.
Justinian had been reproached for his alliance with the
Æthiopians, as if he attempted to introduce a people of
savage negroes into the system of civilized society. But the
friends of the Roman empire, the Axumites, or Abyssinians, may be
always distinguished from the original natives of Africa. The
hand of nature has flattened the noses of the negroes, covered
their heads with shaggy wool, and tinged their skin with inherent
and indelible blackness. But the olive complexion of the
Abyssinians, their hair, shape, and features, distinctly mark
them as a colony of Arabs; and this descent is confirmed by the
resemblance of language and manners the report of an ancient
emigration, and the narrow interval between the shores of the Red
Sea. Christianity had raised that nation above the level of
African barbarism: their intercourse with Egypt, and the
successors of Constantine, had communicated the rudiments of the
arts and sciences; their vessels traded to the Isle of Ceylon,
and seven kingdoms obeyed the Negus or supreme prince of
Abyssinia. The independence of the Homerites, who reigned in the
rich and happy Arabia, was first violated by an Æthiopian
conqueror: he drew his hereditary claim from the queen of Sheba,
and his ambition was sanctified by religious zeal. The Jews,
powerful and active in exile, had seduced the mind of Dunaan,
prince of the Homerites. They urged him to retaliate the
persecution inflicted by the Imperial laws on their unfortunate
brethren: some Roman merchants were injuriously treated; and
several Christians of Negra were honored with the crown of
martyrdom. The churches of Arabia implored the protection of the
Abyssinian monarch. The Negus passed the Red Sea with a fleet and
army, deprived the Jewish proselyte of his kingdom and life, and
extinguished a race of princes, who had ruled above two thousand
years the sequestered region of myrrh and frankincense. The
conqueror immediately announced the victory of the gospel,
requested an orthodox patriarch, and so warmly professed his
friendship to the Roman empire, that Justinian was flattered by
the hope of diverting the silk trade through the channel of
Abyssinia, and of exciting the forces of Arabia against the
Persian king. Nonnosus, descended from a family of ambassadors,
was named by the emperor to execute this important commission. He
wisely declined the shorter, but more dangerous, road, through
the sandy deserts of Nubia; ascended the Nile, embarked on the
Red Sea, and safely landed at the African port of Adulis. From
Adulis to the royal city of Axume is no more than fifty leagues,
in a direct line; but the winding passes of the mountains
detained the ambassador fifteen days; and as he traversed the
forests, he saw, and vaguely computed, about five thousand wild
elephants. The capital, according to his report, was large and
populous; and the village of Axume is
still conspicuous by the regal coronations, by the ruins of a
Christian temple, and by sixteen or seventeen obelisks inscribed
with Grecian characters. But the Negus gave audience in the open
field, seated on a lofty chariot, which was drawn by four
elephants, superbly caparisoned, and surrounded by his nobles and
musicians. He was clad in a linen garment and cap, holding in his
hand two javelins and a light shield; and, although his nakedness
was imperfectly covered, he displayed the Barbaric pomp of gold
chains, collars, and bracelets, richly adorned with pearls and
precious stones. The ambassador of Justinian knelt; the Negus
raised him from the ground, embraced Nonnosus, kissed the seal,
perused the letter, accepted the Roman alliance, and, brandishing
his weapons, denounced implacable war against the worshipers of
fire. But the proposal of the silk trade was eluded; and
notwithstanding the assurances, and perhaps the wishes, of the
Abyssinians, these hostile menaces evaporated without effect. The
Homerites were unwilling to abandon their aromatic groves, to
explore a sandy desert, and to encounter, after all their
fatigues, a formidable nation from whom they had never received
any personal injuries. Instead of enlarging his conquests, the
king of Æthiopia was incapable of defending his
possessions. Abrahah, § the slave of a Roman merchant of
Adulis, assumed the sceptre of the Homerites,; the troops of
Africa were seduced by the luxury of the climate; and Justinian
solicited the friendship of the usurper, who honored with a
slight tribute the supremacy of his prince. After a long series
of prosperity, the power of Abrahah was overthrown before the
gates of Mecca; and his children were despoiled by the Persian
conqueror; and the Æthiopians were finally expelled from
the continent of Asia. This narrative of obscure and remote
events is not foreign to the decline and fall of the Roman
empire. If a Christian power had been maintained in Arabia,
Mahomet must have been crushed in his cradle, and Abyssinia would
have prevented a revolution which has changed the civil and
religious state of the world. *
Chapter XLIII: Last Victory And Death Of Belisarius,
Death Of Justinian.
Part I.
Rebellions Of Africa. -- Restoration Of The Gothic Kingdom By
Totila. -- Loss And Recovery Of Rome. -- Final Conquest Of Italy
By Narses. -- Extinction Of The Ostrogoths. -- Defeat Of The
Franks And Alemanni. -- Last Victory, Disgrace, And Death Of
Belisarius. -- Death And Character Of Justinian. -- Comet,
Earthquakes, And Plague.
The review of the nations from the Danube to the Nile has
exposed, on every side, the weakness of the Romans; and our
wonder is reasonably excited that they should presume to enlarge
an empire whose ancient limits they were incapable of defending.
But the wars, the conquests, and the triumphs of Justinian, are
the feeble and pernicious efforts of old age, which exhaust the
remains of strength, and accelerate the decay of the powers of
life. He exulted in the glorious act of restoring Africa and
Italy to the republic; but the calamities which followed the
departure of Belisarius betrayed the impotence of the conqueror,
and accomplished the ruin of those unfortunate countries.
From his new acquisitions, Justinian expected that his
avarice, as well as pride, should be richly gratified. A
rapacious minister of the finances closely pursued the footsteps
of Belisarius; and as the old registers of tribute had been burnt
by the Vandals, he indulged his fancy in a liberal calculation
and arbitrary assessment of the wealth of Africa. The increase of
taxes, which were drawn away by a distant sovereign, and a
general resumption of the patrimony or crown lands, soon
dispelled the intoxication of the public joy: but the emperor was
insensible to the modest complaints of the people, till he was
awakened and alarmed by the clamors of military discontent. Many
of the Roman soldiers had married the widows and daughters of the
Vandals. As their own, by the double right of conquest and
inheritance, they claimed the estates which Genseric had assigned
to his victorious troops. They heard with disdain the cold and
selfish representations of their officers, that the liberality of
Justinian had raised them from a savage or servile condition;
that they were already enriched by the spoils of Africa, the
treasure, the slaves, and the movables of the vanquished
Barbarians; and that the ancient and lawful patrimony of the
emperors would be applied only to the support of that government
on which their own safety and reward must ultimately depend. The
mutiny was secretly inflamed by a thousand soldiers, for the most
part Heruli, who had imbibed the doctrines, and were instigated
by the clergy, of the Arian sect; and the cause of perjury and
rebellion was sanctified by the dispensing powers of fanaticism.
The Arians deplored the ruin of their church, triumphant above a
century in Africa; and they were justly provoked by the laws of
the conqueror, which interdicted the baptism of their children,
and the exercise of all religious worship. Of the Vandals chosen
by Belisarius, the far greater part, in the honors of the Eastern
service, forgot their country and religion. But a generous band
of four hundred obliged the mariners, when they were in sight of
the Isle of Lesbos, to alter their course: they touched on
Peloponnesus, ran ashore on a desert coast of Africa, and boldly
erected, on Mount Aurasius, the standard of independence and
revolt. While the troops of the provinces disclaimed the commands
of their superiors, a conspiracy was formed at Carthage against
the life of Solomon, who filled with honor the place of
Belisarius; and the Arians had piously resolved to sacrifice the
tyrant at the foot of the altar, during the awful mysteries of
the festival of Easter. Fear or remorse restrained the daggers of
the assassins, but the patience of Solomon emboldened their
discontent; and, at the end of ten days, a furious sedition was
kindled in the Circus, which desolated Africa above ten years.
The pillage of the city, and the indiscriminate slaughter of its
inhabitants, were suspended only by darkness, sleep, and
intoxication: the governor, with seven companions, among whom was
the historian Procopius, escaped to Sicily: two thirds of the
army were involved in the guilt of treason; and eight thousand
insurgents, assembling in the field of Bulla, elected Stoza for
their chief, a private soldier, who possessed in a superior
degree the virtues of a rebel. Under the mask of freedom, his
eloquence could lead, or at least impel, the passions of his
equals. He raised himself to a level with Belisarius, and the
nephew of the emperor, by daring to encounter them in the field;
and the victorious generals were compelled to acknowledge that
Stoza deserved a purer cause, and a more legitimate command.
Vanquished in battle, he dexterously employed the arts of
negotiation; a Roman army was seduced from their allegiance, and
the chiefs who had trusted to his faithless promise were murdered
by his order in a church of Numidia. When every resource, either
of force or perfidy, was exhausted, Stoza, with some desperate
Vandals, retired to the wilds of Mauritania, obtained the
daughter of a Barbarian prince, and eluded the pursuit of his
enemies, by the report of his death. The personal weight of
Belisarius, the rank, the spirit, and the temper, of Germanus,
the emperor's nephew, and the vigor and success of the second
administration of the eunuch Solomon, restored the modesty of the
camp, and maintained for a while the tranquillity of Africa. But
the vices of the Byzantine court were felt in that distant
province; the troops complained that they were neither paid nor
relieved, and as soon as the public disorders were sufficiently
mature, Stoza was again alive, in arms, and at the gates of
Carthage. He fell in a single combat, but he smiled in the
agonies of death, when he was informed that his own javelin had
reached the heart of his antagonist. * The example of Stoza, and
the assurance that a fortunate soldier had been the first king,
encouraged the ambition of Gontharis, and he promised, by a
private treaty, to divide Africa with the Moors, if, with their
dangerous aid, he should ascend the throne of Carthage. The
feeble Areobindus, unskilled in the affairs of peace and war, was
raised, by his marriage with the niece of Justinian, to the
office of exarch. He was suddenly oppressed by a sedition of the
guards, and his abject supplications, which provoked the
contempt, could not move the pity, of the inexorable tyrant.
After a reign of thirty days, Gontharis himself was stabbed at a
banquet by the hand of Artaban; and it is singular enough, that
an Armenian prince, of the royal family of Arsaces, should
reestablish at Carthage the authority of the Roman empire. In the
conspiracy which unsheathed the dagger of Brutus against the life
of Cæsar, every circumstance is curious and important to
the eyes of posterity; but the guilt or merit of these loyal or
rebellious assassins could interest only the contemporaries of
Procopius, who, by their hopes and fears, their friendship or
resentment, were personally engaged in the revolutions of
Africa.
That country was rapidly sinking into the state of barbarism
from whence it had been raised by the Phnician colonies and Roman
laws; and every step of intestine discord was marked by some
deplorable victory of savage man over civilized society. The
Moors, though ignorant of justice, were impatient of oppression:
their vagrant life and boundless wilderness disappointed the
arms, and eluded the chains, of a conqueror; and experience had
shown, that neither oaths nor obligations could secure the
fidelity of their attachment. The victory of Mount Auras had awed
them into momentary submission; but if they respected the
character of Solomon, they hated and despised the pride and
luxury of his two nephews, Cyrus and Sergius, on whom their uncle
had imprudently bestowed the provincial governments of Tripoli
and Pentapolis. A Moorish tribe encamped under the walls of
Leptis, to renew their alliance, and receive from the governor
the customary gifts. Fourscore of their deputies were introduced
as friends into the city; but on the dark suspicion of a
conspiracy, they were massacred at the table of Sergius, and the
clamor of arms and revenge was reëchoed through the valleys
of Mount Atlas from both the Syrtes to the Atlantic Ocean. A
personal injury, the unjust execution or murder of his brother,
rendered Antalas the enemy of the Romans. The defeat of the
Vandals had formerly signalized his valor; the rudiments of
justice and prudence were still more conspicuous in a Moor; and
while he laid Adrumetum in ashes, he calmly admonished the
emperor that the peace of Africa might be secured by the recall
of Solomon and his unworthy nephews. The exarch led forth his
troops from Carthage: but, at the distance of six days' journey,
in the neighborhood of Tebeste, he was astonished by the superior
numbers and fierce aspect of the Barbarians. He proposed a
treaty; solicited a reconciliation; and offered to bind himself
by the most solemn oaths. "By what oaths can he bind himself?"
interrupted the indignant Moors. "Will he swear by the Gospels,
the divine books of the Christians? It was on those books that
the faith of his nephew Sergius was pledged to eighty of our
innocent and unfortunate brethren. Before we trust them a second
time, let us try their efficacy in the chastisement of perjury
and the vindication of their own honor." Their honor was
vindicated in the field of Tebeste, by the death of Solomon, and
the total loss of his army. * The arrival of fresh troops and
more skilful commanders soon checked the insolence of the Moors:
seventeen of their princes were slain in the same battle; and the
doubtful and transient submission of their tribes was celebrated
with lavish applause by the people of Constantinople. Successive
inroads had reduced the province of Africa to one third of the
measure of Italy; yet the Roman emperors continued to reign above
a century over Carthage and the fruitful coast of the
Mediterranean. But the victories and the losses of Justinian were
alike pernicious to mankind; and such was the desolation of
Africa, that in many parts a stranger might wander whole days
without meeting the face either of a friend or an enemy. The
nation of the Vandals had disappeared: they once amounted to a
hundred and sixty thousand warriors, without including the
children, the women, or the slaves. Their numbers were infinitely
surpassed by the number of the Moorish families extirpated in a
relentless war; and the same destruction was retaliated on the
Romans and their allies, who perished by the climate, their
mutual quarrels, and the rage of the Barbarians. When Procopius
first landed, he admired the populousness of the cities and
country, strenuously exercised in the labors of commerce and
agriculture. In less than twenty years, that busy scene was
converted into a silent solitude; the wealthy citizens escaped to
Sicily and Constantinople; and the secret historian has
confidently affirmed, that five millions of Africans were
consumed by the wars and government of the emperor Justinian.
The jealousy of the Byzantine court had not permitted
Belisarius to achieve the conquest of Italy; and his abrupt
departure revived the courage of the Goths, who respected his
genius, his virtue, and even the laudable motive which had urged
the servant of Justinian to deceive and reject them. They had
lost their king, (an inconsiderable loss,) their capital, their
treasures, the provinces from Sicily to the Alps, and the
military force of two hundred thousand Barbarians, magnificently
equipped with horses and arms. Yet all was not lost, as long as
Pavia was defended by one thousand Goths, inspired by a sense of
honor, the love of freedom, and the memory of their past
greatness. The supreme command was unanimously offered to the
brave Uraias; and it was in his eyes alone that the disgrace of
his uncle Vitiges could appear as a reason of exclusion. His
voice inclined the election in favor of Hildibald, whose personal
merit was recommended by the vain hope that his kinsman Theudes,
the Spanish monarch, would support the common interest of the
Gothic nation. The success of his arms in Liguria and Venetia
seemed to justify their choice; but he soon declared to the world
that he was incapable of forgiving or commanding his benefactor.
The consort of Hildibald was deeply wounded by the beauty, the
riches, and the pride, of the wife of Uraias; and the death of
that virtuous patriot excited the indignation of a free people. A
bold assassin executed their sentence by striking off the head of
Hildibald in the midst of a banquet; the Rugians, a foreign
tribe, assumed the privilege of election: and Totila, * the
nephew of the late king, was tempted, by revenge, to deliver
himself and the garrison of Trevigo into the hands of the Romans.
But the gallant and accomplished youth was easily persuaded to
prefer the Gothic throne before the service of Justinian; and as
soon as the palace of Pavia had been purified from the Rugian
usurper, he reviewed the national force of five thousand
soldiers, and generously undertook the restoration of the kingdom
of Italy.
The successors of Belisarius, eleven generals of equal rank,
neglected to crush the feeble and disunited Goths, till they were
roused to action by the progress of Totila and the reproaches of
Justinian. The gates of Verona were secretly opened to Artabazus,
at the head of one hundred Persians in the service of the empire.
The Goths fled from the city. At the distance of sixty furlongs
the Roman generals halted to regulate the division of the spoil.
While they disputed, the enemy discovered the real number of the
victors: the Persians were instantly overpowered, and it was by
leaping from the wall that Artabazus preserved a life which he
lost in a few days by the lance of a Barbarian, who had defied
him to single combat. Twenty thousand Romans encountered the
forces of Totila, near Faenza, and on the hills of Mugello, of
the Florentine territory. The ardor of freedmen, who fought to
regain their country, was opposed to the languid temper of
mercenary troops, who were even destitute of the merits of strong
and well-disciplined servitude. On the first attack, they
abandoned their ensigns, threw down their arms, and dispersed on
all sides with an active speed, which abated the loss, whilst it
aggravated the shame, of their defeat. The king of the Goths, who
blushed for the baseness of his enemies, pursued with rapid steps
the path of honor and victory. Totila passed the Po, * traversed
the Apennine, suspended the important conquest of Ravenna,
Florence, and Rome, and marched through the heart of Italy, to
form the siege or rather the blockade, of Naples. The Roman
chiefs, imprisoned in their respective cities, and accusing each
other of the common disgrace, did not presume to disturb his
enterprise. But the emperor, alarmed by the distress and danger
of his Italian conquests, despatched to the relief of Naples a
fleet of galleys and a body of Thracian and Armenian soldiers.
They landed in Sicily, which yielded its copious stores of
provisions; but the delays of the new commander, an unwarlike
magistrate, protracted the sufferings of the besieged; and the
succors, which he dropped with a timid and tardy hand, were
successively intercepted by the armed vessels stationed by Totila
in the Bay of Naples. The principal officer of the Romans was
dragged, with a rope round his neck, to the foot of the wall,
from whence, with a trembling voice, he exhorted the citizens to
implore, like himself, the mercy of the conqueror. They requested
a truce, with a promise of surrendering the city, if no effectual
relief should appear at the end of thirty days. Instead of
one month, the audacious Barbarian
granted them three, in the just
confidence that famine would anticipate the term of their
capitulation. After the reduction of Naples and Cumæ, the
provinces of Lucania, Apulia, and Calabria, submitted to the king
of the Goths. Totila led his army to the gates of Rome, pitched
his camp at Tibur, or Tivoli, within twenty miles of the capital,
and calmly exhorted the senate and people to compare the tyranny
of the Greeks with the blessings of the Gothic reign.
The rapid success of Totila may be partly ascribed to the
revolution which three years' experience had produced in the
sentiments of the Italians. At the command, or at least in the
name, of a Catholic emperor, the pope, their spiritual father,
had been torn from the Roman church, and either starved or
murdered on a desolate island. The virtues of Belisarius were
replaced by the various or uniform vices of eleven chiefs, at
Rome, Ravenna, Florence, Perugia, Spoleto, &c., who abused
their authority for the indulgence of lust or avarice. The
improvement of the revenue was committed to Alexander, a subtle
scribe, long practised in the fraud and oppression of the
Byzantine schools, and whose name of
Psalliction, the
scissors, was drawn from the dexterous
artifice with which he reduced the size without defacing the
figure, of the gold coin. Instead of expecting the restoration of
peace and industry, he imposed a heavy assessment on the fortunes
of the Italians. Yet his present or future demands were less
odious than a prosecution of arbitrary rigor against the persons
and property of all those who, under the Gothic kings, had been
concerned in the receipt and expenditure of the public money. The
subjects of Justinian, who escaped these partial vexations, were
oppressed by the irregular maintenance of the soldiers, whom
Alexander defrauded and despised; and their hasty sallies in
quest of wealth, or subsistence, provoked the inhabitants of the
country to await or implore their deliverance from the virtues of
a Barbarian. Totila was chaste and temperate; and none were
deceived, either friends or enemies, who depended on his faith or
his clemency. To the husbandmen of Italy the Gothic king issued a
welcome proclamation, enjoining them to pursue their important
labors, and to rest assured, that, on the payment of the ordinary
taxes, they should be defended by his valor and discipline from
the injuries of war. The strong towns he successively attacked;
and as soon as they had yielded to his arms, he demolished the
fortifications, to save the people from the calamities of a
future siege, to deprive the Romans of the arts of defence, and
to decide the tedious quarrel of the two nations, by an equal and
honorable conflict in the field of battle. The Roman captives and
deserters were tempted to enlist in the service of a liberal and
courteous adversary; the slaves were attracted by the firm and
faithful promise, that they should never be delivered to their
masters; and from the thousand warriors of Pavia, a new people,
under the same appellation of Goths, was insensibly formed in the
camp of Totila. He sincerely accomplished the articles of
capitulation, without seeking or accepting any sinister advantage
from ambiguous expressions or unforeseen events: the garrison of
Naples had stipulated that they should be transported by sea; the
obstinacy of the winds prevented their voyage, but they were
generously supplied with horses, provisions, and a safe-conduct
to the gates of Rome. The wives of the senators, who had been
surprised in the villas of Campania, were restored, without a
ransom, to their husbands; the violation of female chastity was
inexorably chastised with death; and in the salutary regulation
of the edict of the famished Neapolitans, the conqueror assumed
the office of a humane and attentive physician. The virtues of
Totila are equally laudable, whether they proceeded from true
policy, religious principle, or the instinct of humanity: he
often harangued his troops; and it was his constant theme, that
national vice and ruin are inseparably connected; that victory is
the fruit of moral as well as military virtue; and that the
prince, and even the people, are responsible for the crimes which
they neglect to punish.
The return of Belisarius to save the country which he had
subdued, was pressed with equal vehemence by his friends and
enemies; and the Gothic war was imposed as a trust or an exile on
the veteran commander. A hero on the banks of the Euphrates, a
slave in the palace of Constantinople, he accepted with
reluctance the painful task of supporting his own reputation, and
retrieving the faults of his successors. The sea was open to the
Romans: the ships and soldiers were assembled at Salona, near the
palace of Diocletian: he refreshed and reviewed his troops at
Pola in Istria, coasted round the head of the Adriatic, entered
the port of Ravenna, and despatched orders rather than supplies
to the subordinate cities. His first public oration was addressed
to the Goths and Romans, in the name of the emperor, who had
suspended for a while the conquest of Persia, and listened to the
prayers of his Italian subjects. He gently touched on the causes
and the authors of the recent disasters; striving to remove the
fear of punishment for the past, and the hope of impunity for the
future, and laboring, with more zeal than success, to unite all
the members of his government in a firm league of affection and
obedience. Justinian, his gracious master, was inclined to pardon
and reward; and it was their interest, as well as duty, to
reclaim their deluded brethren, who had been seduced by the arts
of the usurper. Not a man was tempted to desert the standard of
the Gothic king. Belisarius soon discovered, that he was sent to
remain the idle and impotent spectator of the glory of a young
Barbarian; and his own epistle exhibits a genuine and lively
picture of the distress of a noble mind. "Most excellent prince,
we are arrived in Italy, destitute of all the necessary
implements of war, men, horses, arms, and money. In our late
circuit through the villages of Thrace and Illyricum, we have
collected, with extreme difficulty, about four thousand recruits,
naked, and unskilled in the use of weapons and the exercises of
the camp. The soldiers already stationed in the province are
discontented, fearful, and dismayed; at the sound of an enemy,
they dismiss their horses, and cast their arms on the ground. No
taxes can be raised, since Italy is in the hands of the
Barbarians; the failure of payment has deprived us of the right
of command, or even of admonition. Be assured, dread Sir, that
the greater part of your troops have already deserted to the
Goths. If the war could be achieved by the presence of Belisarius
alone, your wishes are satisfied; Belisarius is in the midst of
Italy. But if you desire to conquer, far other preparations are
requisite: without a military force, the title of general is an
empty name. It would be expedient to restore to my service my own
veteran and domestic guards. Before I can take the field, I must
receive an adequate supply of light and heavy armed troops; and
it is only with ready money that you can procure the
indispensable aid of a powerful body of the cavalry of the Huns."
An officer in whom Belisarius confided was sent from Ravenna to
hasten and conduct the succors; but the message was neglected,
and the messenger was detained at Constantinople by an
advantageous marriage. After his patience had been exhausted by
delay and disappointment, the Roman general repassed the
Adriatic, and expected at Dyrrachium the arrival of the troops,
which were slowly assembled among the subjects and allies of the
empire. His powers were still inadequate to the deliverance of
Rome, which was closely besieged by the Gothic king. The Appian
way, a march of forty days, was covered by the Barbarians; and as
the prudence of Belisarius declined a battle, he preferred the
safe and speedy navigation of five days from the coast of Epirus
to the mouth of the Tyber.
After reducing, by force, or treaty, the towns of inferior
note in the midland provinces of Italy, Totila proceeded, not to
assault, but to encompass and starve, the ancient capital. Rome
was afflicted by the avarice, and guarded by the valor, of
Bessas, a veteran chief of Gothic extraction, who filled, with a
garrison of three thousand soldiers, the spacious circle of her
venerable walls. From the distress of the people he extracted a
profitable trade, and secretly rejoiced in the continuance of the
siege. It was for his use that the granaries had been
replenished: the charity of Pope Vigilius had purchased and
embarked an ample supply of Sicilian corn; but the vessels which
escaped the Barbarians were seized by a rapacious governor, who
imparted a scanty sustenance to the soldiers, and sold the
remainder to the wealthy Romans. The medimnus, or fifth part of
the quarter of wheat, was exchanged for seven pieces of gold;
fifty pieces were given for an ox, a rare and accidental prize;
the progress of famine enhanced this exorbitant value, and the
mercenaries were tempted to deprive themselves of the allowance
which was scarcely sufficient for the support of life. A
tasteless and unwholesome mixture, in which the bran thrice
exceeded the quantity of flour, appeased the hunger of the poor;
they were gradually reduced to feed on dead horses, dogs, cats,
and mice, and eagerly to snatch the grass, and even the nettles,
which grew among the ruins of the city. A crowd of spectres, pale
and emaciated, their bodies oppressed with disease, and their
minds with despair, surrounded the palace of the governor, urged,
with unavailing truth, that it was the duty of a master to
maintain his slaves, and humbly requested that he would provide
for their subsistence, to permit their flight, or command their
immediate execution. Bessas replied, with unfeeling tranquillity,
that it was impossible to feed, unsafe to dismiss, and unlawful
to kill, the subjects of the emperor. Yet the example of a
private citizen might have shown his countrymen that a tyrant
cannot withhold the privilege of death. Pierced by the cries of
five children, who vainly called on their father for bread, he
ordered them to follow his steps, advanced with calm and silent
despair to one of the bridges of the Tyber, and, covering his
face, threw himself headlong into the stream, in the presence of
his family and the Roman people. To the rich and pusillanimous,
Bessas sold the permission of departure; but the greatest part of
the fugitives expired on the public highways, or were intercepted
by the flying parties of Barbarians. In the mean while, the
artful governor soothed the discontent, and revived the hopes of
the Romans, by the vague reports of the fleets and armies which
were hastening to their relief from the extremities of the East.
They derived more rational comfort from the assurance that
Belisarius had landed at the port; and,
without numbering his forces, they firmly relied on the humanity,
the courage, and the skill of their great deliverer.
Chapter XLIII: Last Victory And Death Of
Belisarius, Death Of Justinian. -- Part II.
The foresight of Totila had raised obstacles worthy of such an
antagonist. Ninety furlongs below the city, in the narrowest part
of the river, he joined the two banks by strong and solid timbers
in the form of a bridge, on which he erected two lofty towers,
manned by the bravest of his Goths, and profusely stored with
missile weapons and engines of offence. The approach of the
bridge and towers was covered by a strong and massy chain of
iron; and the chain, at either end, on the opposite sides of the
Tyber, was defended by a numerous and chosen detachment of
archers. But the enterprise of forcing these barriers, and
relieving the capital, displays a shining example of the boldness
and conduct of Belisarius. His cavalry advanced from the port
along the public road, to awe the motions, and distract the
attention of the enemy. His infantry and provisions were
distributed in two hundred large boats; and each boat was
shielded by a high rampart of thick planks, pierced with many
small holes for the discharge of missile weapons. In the front,
two large vessels were linked together to sustain a floating
castle, which commanded the towers of the bridge, and contained a
magazine of fire, sulphur, and bitumen. The whole fleet, which
the general led in person, was laboriously moved against the
current of the river. The chain yielded to their weight, and the
enemies who guarded the banks were either slain or scattered. As
soon as they touched the principal barrier, the fire-ship was
instantly grappled to the bridge; one of the towers, with two
hundred Goths, was consumed by the flames; the assailants shouted
victory; and Rome was saved, if the wisdom of Belisarius had not
been defeated by the misconduct of his officers. He had
previously sent orders to Bessas to second his operations by a
timely sally from the town; and he had fixed his lieutenant,
Isaac, by a peremptory command, to the station of the port. But
avarice rendered Bessas immovable; while the youthful ardor of
Isaac delivered him into the hands of a superior enemy. The
exaggerated rumor of his defeat was hastily carried to the ears
of Belisarius: he paused; betrayed in that single moment of his
life some emotions of surprise and perplexity; and reluctantly
sounded a retreat to save his wife Antonina, his treasures, and
the only harbor which he possessed on the Tuscan coast. The
vexation of his mind produced an ardent and almost mortal fever;
and Rome was left without protection to the mercy or indignation
of Totila. The continuance of hostilities had imbittered the
national hatred: the Arian clergy was ignominiously driven from
Rome; Pelagius, the archdeacon, returned without success from an
embassy to the Gothic camp; and a Sicilian bishop, the envoy or
nuncio of the pope, was deprived of both his hands, for daring to
utter falsehoods in the service of the church and state.
Famine had relaxed the strength and discipline of the garrison
of Rome. They could derive no effectual service from a dying
people; and the inhuman avarice of the merchant at length
absorbed the vigilance of the governor. Four Isaurian sentinels,
while their companions slept, and their officers were absent,
descended by a rope from the wall, and secretly proposed to the
Gothic king to introduce his troops into the city. The offer was
entertained with coldness and suspicion; they returned in safety;
they twice repeated their visit; the place was twice examined;
the conspiracy was known and disregarded; and no sooner had
Totila consented to the attempt, than they unbarred the Asinarian
gate, and gave admittance to the Goths. Till the dawn of day,
they halted in order of battle, apprehensive of treachery or
ambush; but the troops of Bessas, with their leader, had already
escaped; and when the king was pressed to disturb their retreat,
he prudently replied, that no sight could be more grateful than
that of a flying enemy. The patricians, who were still possessed
of horses, Decius, Basilius, &c. accompanied the governor;
their brethren, among whom Olybrius, Orestes, and Maximus, are
named by the historian, took refuge in the church of St. Peter:
but the assertion, that only five hundred persons remained in the
capital, inspires some doubt of the fidelity either of his
narrative or of his text. As soon as daylight had displayed the
entire victory of the Goths, their monarch devoutly visited the
tomb of the prince of the apostles; but while he prayed at the
altar, twenty-five soldiers, and sixty citizens, were put to the
sword in the vestibule of the temple. The archdeacon Pelagius
stood before him, with the Gospels in his hand. "O Lord, be
merciful to your servant." "Pelagius," said Totila, with an
insulting smile, "your pride now condescends to become a
suppliant." "I am a suppliant," replied
the prudent archdeacon; "God has now made us your subjects, and
as your subjects, we are entitled to your clemency." At his
humble prayer, the lives of the Romans were spared; and the
chastity of the maids and matrons was preserved inviolate from
the passions of the hungry soldiers. But they were rewarded by
the freedom of pillage, after the most precious spoils had been
reserved for the royal treasury. The houses of the senators were
plentifully stored with gold and silver; and the avarice of
Bessas had labored with so much guilt and shame for the benefit
of the conqueror. In this revolution, the sons and daughters of
Roman consuls lasted the misery which they had spurned or
relieved, wandered in tattered garments through the streets of
the city and begged their bread, perhaps without success, before
the gates of their hereditary mansions. The riches of Rusticiana,
the daughter of Symmachus and widow of Boethius, had been
generously devoted to alleviate the calamities of famine. But the
Barbarians were exasperated by the report, that she had prompted
the people to overthrow the statues of the great Theodoric; and
the life of that venerable matron would have been sacrificed to
his memory, if Totila had not respected her birth, her virtues,
and even the pious motive of her revenge. The next day he
pronounced two orations, to congratulate and admonish his
victorious Goths, and to reproach the senate, as the vilest of
slaves, with their perjury, folly, and ingratitude; sternly
declaring, that their estates and honors were justly forfeited to
the companions of his arms. Yet he consented to forgive their
revolt; and the senators repaid his clemency by despatching
circular letters to their tenants and vassals in the provinces of
Italy, strictly to enjoin them to desert the standard of the
Greeks, to cultivate their lands in peace, and to learn from
their masters the duty of obedience to a Gothic sovereign.
Against the city which had so long delayed the course of his
victories, he appeared inexorable: one third of the walls, in
different parts, were demolished by his command; fire and engines
prepared to consume or subvert the most stately works of
antiquity; and the world was astonished by the fatal decree, that
Rome should be changed into a pasture for cattle. The firm and
temperate remonstrance of Belisarius suspended the execution; he
warned the Barbarian not to sully his fame by the destruction of
those monuments which were the glory of the dead, and the delight
of the living; and Totila was persuaded, by the advice of an
enemy, to preserve Rome as the ornament of his kingdom, or the
fairest pledge of peace and reconciliation. When he had signified
to the ambassadors of Belisarius his intention of sparing the
city, he stationed an army at the distance of one hundred and
twenty furlongs, to observe the motions of the Roman general.
With the remainder of his forces he marched into Lucania and
Apulia, and occupied on the summit of Mount Garganus one of the
camps of Hannibal. The senators were dragged in his train, and
afterwards confined in the fortresses of Campania: the citizens,
with their wives and children, were dispersed in exile; and
during forty days Rome was abandoned to desolate and dreary
solitude.
The loss of Rome was speedily retrieved by an action, to
which, according to the event, the public opinion would apply the
names of rashness or heroism. After the departure of Totila, the
Roman general sallied from the port at the head of a thousand
horse, cut in pieces the enemy who opposed his progress, and
visited with pity and reverence the vacant space of the
eternal city. Resolved to maintain a
station so conspicuous in the eyes of mankind, he summoned the
greatest part of his troops to the standard which he erected on
the Capitol: the old inhabitants were recalled by the love of
their country and the hopes of food; and the keys of Rome were
sent a second time to the emperor Justinian. The walls, as far as
they had been demolished by the Goths, were repaired with rude
and dissimilar materials; the ditch was restored; iron spikes
were profusely scattered in the highways to annoy the feet of the
horses; and as new gates could not suddenly be procured, the
entrance was guarded by a Spartan rampart of his bravest
soldiers. At the expiration of twenty-five days, Totila returned
by hasty marches from Apulia to avenge the injury and disgrace.
Belisarius expected his approach. The Goths were thrice repulsed
in three general assaults; they lost the flower of their troops;
the royal standard had almost fallen into the hands of the enemy,
and the fame of Totila sunk, as it had risen, with the fortune of
his arms. Whatever skill and courage could achieve, had been
performed by the Roman general: it remained only that Justinian
should terminate, by a strong and seasonable effort, the war
which he had ambitiously undertaken. The indolence, perhaps the
impotence, of a prince who despised his enemies, and envied his
servants, protracted the calamities of Italy. After a long
silence, Belisarius was commanded to leave a sufficient garrison
at Rome, and to transport himself into the province of Lucania,
whose inhabitants, inflamed by Catholic zeal, had cast away the
yoke of their Arian conquerors. In this ignoble warfare, the
hero, invincible against the power of the Barbarians, was basely
vanquished by the delay, the disobedience, and the cowardice of
his own officers. He reposed in his winter quarters of Crotona,
in the full assurance, that the two passes of the Lucanian hills
were guarded by his cavalry. They were betrayed by treachery or
weakness; and the rapid march of the Goths scarcely allowed time
for the escape of Belisarius to the coast of Sicily. At length a
fleet and army were assembled for the relief of Ruscianum, or
Rossano, a fortress sixty furlongs from the ruins of Sybaris,
where the nobles of Lucania had taken refuge. In the first
attempt, the Roman forces were dissipated by a storm. In the
second, they approached the shore; but they saw the hills covered
with archers, the landing-place defended by a line of spears, and
the king of the Goths impatient for battle. The conqueror of
Italy retired with a sigh, and continued to languish, inglorious
and inactive, till Antonina, who had been sent to Constantinople
to solicit succors, obtained, after the death of the empress, the
permission of his return.
The five last campaigns of Belisarius might abate the envy of
his competitors, whose eyes had been dazzled and wounded by the
blaze of his former glory. Instead of delivering Italy from the
Goths, he had wandered like a fugitive along the coast, without
daring to march into the country, or to accept the bold and
repeated challenge of Totila. Yet, in the judgment of the few who
could discriminate counsels from events, and compare the
instruments with the execution, he appeared a more consummate
master of the art of war, than in the season of his prosperity,
when he presented two captive kings before the throne of
Justinian. The valor of Belisarius was not chilled by age: his
prudence was matured by experience; but the moral virtues of
humanity and justice seem to have yielded to the hard necessity
of the times. The parsimony or poverty of the emperor compelled
him to deviate from the rule of conduct which had deserved the
love and confidence of the Italians. The war was maintained by
the oppression of Ravenna, Sicily, and all the faithful subjects
of the empire; and the rigorous prosecution of Herodian provoked
that injured or guilty officer to deliver Spoleto into the hands
of the enemy. The avarice of Antonina, which had been some times
diverted by love, now reigned without a rival in her breast.
Belisarius himself had always understood, that riches, in a
corrupt age, are the support and ornament of personal merit. And
it cannot be presumed that he should stain his honor for the
public service, without applying a part of the spoil to his
private emolument. The hero had escaped the sword of the
Barbarians. But the dagger of conspiracy awaited his return. In
the midst of wealth and honors, Artaban, who had chastised the
African tyrant, complained of the ingratitude of courts. He
aspired to Præjecta, the emperor's niece, who wished to
reward her deliverer; but the impediment of his previous marriage
was asserted by the piety of Theodora. The pride of royal descent
was irritated by flattery; and the service in which he gloried
had proved him capable of bold and sanguinary deeds. The death of
Justinian was resolved, but the conspirators delayed the
execution till they could surprise Belisarius disarmed, and
naked, in the palace of Constantinople. Not a hope could be
entertained of shaking his long-tried fidelity; and they justly
dreaded the revenge, or rather the justice, of the veteran
general, who might speedily assemble an army in Thrace to punish
the assassins, and perhaps to enjoy the fruits of their crime.
Delay afforded time for rash communications and honest
confessions: Artaban and his accomplices were condemned by the
senate, but the extreme clemency of Justinian detained them in
the gentle confinement of the palace, till he pardoned their
flagitious attempt against his throne and life. If the emperor
forgave his enemies, he must cordially embrace a friend whose
victories were alone remembered, and who was endeared to his
prince by the recent circumstances of their common danger.
Belisarius reposed from his toils, in the high station of general
of the East and count of the domestics; and the older consuls and
patricians respectfully yielded the precedency of rank to the
peerless merit of the first of the Romans. The first of the
Romans still submitted to be the slave of his wife; but the
servitude of habit and affection became less disgraceful when the
death of Theodora had removed the baser influence of fear.
Joannina, their daughter, and the sole heiress of their fortunes,
was betrothed to Anastasius, the grandson, or rather the nephew,
of the empress, whose kind interposition forwarded the
consummation of their youthful loves. But the power of Theodora
expired, the parents of Joannina returned, and her honor, perhaps
her happiness, were sacrificed to the revenge of an unfeeling
mother, who dissolved the imperfect nuptials before they had been
ratified by the ceremonies of the church.
Before the departure of Belisarius, Perusia was besieged, and
few cities were impregnable to the Gothic arms. Ravenna, Ancona,
and Crotona, still resisted the Barbarians; and when Totila asked
in marriage one of the daughters of France, he was stung by the
just reproach that the king of Italy was unworthy of his title
till it was acknowledged by the Roman people. Three thousand of
the bravest soldiers had been left to defend the capital. On the
suspicion of a monopoly, they massacred the governor, and
announced to Justinian, by a deputation of the clergy, that
unless their offence was pardoned, and their arrears were
satisfied, they should instantly accept the tempting offers of
Totila. But the officer who succeeded to the command (his name
was Diogenes) deserved their esteem and confidence; and the
Goths, instead of finding an easy conquest, encountered a
vigorous resistance from the soldiers and people, who patiently
endured the loss of the port and of all maritime supplies. The
siege of Rome would perhaps have been raised, if the liberality
of Totila to the Isaurians had not encouraged some of their venal
countrymen to copy the example of treason. In a dark night, while
the Gothic trumpets sounded on another side, they silently opened
the gate of St. Paul: the Barbarians rushed into the city; and
the flying garrison was intercepted before they could reach the
harbor of Centumcellæ. A soldier trained in the school of
Belisarius, Paul of Cilicia, retired with four hundred men to the
mole of Hadrian. They repelled the Goths; but they felt the
approach of famine; and their aversion to the taste of
horse-flesh confirmed their resolution to risk the event of a
desperate and decisive sally. But their spirit insensibly stooped
to the offers of capitulation; they retrieved their arrears of
pay, and preserved their arms and horses, by enlisting in the
service of Totila; their chiefs, who pleaded a laudable
attachment to their wives and children in the East, were
dismissed with honor; and above four hundred enemies, who had
taken refuge in the sanctuaries, were saved by the clemency of
the victor. He no longer entertained a wish of destroying the
edifices of Rome, which he now respected as the seat of the
Gothic kingdom: the senate and people were restored to their
country; the means of subsistence were liberally provided; and
Totila, in the robe of peace, exhibited the equestrian games of
the circus. Whilst he amused the eyes of the multitude, four
hundred vessels were prepared for the embarkation of his troops.
The cities of Rhegium and Tarentum were reduced: he passed into
Sicily, the object of his implacable resentment; and the island
was stripped of its gold and silver, of the fruits of the earth,
and of an infinite number of horses, sheep, and oxen. Sardinia
and Corsica obeyed the fortune of Italy; and the sea-coast of
Greece was visited by a fleet of three hundred galleys. The Goths
were landed in Corcyra and the ancient continent of Epirus; they
advanced as far as Nicopolis, the trophy of Augustus, and Dodona,
once famous by the oracle of Jove. In every step of his
victories, the wise Barbarian repeated to Justinian the desire of
peace, applauded the concord of their predecessors, and offered
to employ the Gothic arms in the service of the empire.
Justinian was deaf to the voice of peace: but he neglected the
prosecution of war; and the indolence of his temper disappointed,
in some degree, the obstinacy of his passions. From this salutary
slumber the emperor was awakened by the pope Vigilius and the
patrician Cethegus, who appeared before his throne, and adjured
him, in the name of God and the people, to resume the conquest
and deliverance of Italy. In the choice of the generals, caprice,
as well as judgment, was shown. A fleet and army sailed for the
relief of Sicily, under the conduct of Liberius; but his youth
and want of experience were afterwards discovered, and before he
touched the shores of the island he was overtaken by his
successor. In the place of Liberius, the conspirator Artaban was
raised from a prison to military honors; in the pious
presumption, that gratitude would animate his valor and fortify
his allegiance. Belisarius reposed in the shade of his laurels,
but the command of the principal army was reserved for Germanus,
the emperor's nephew, whose rank and merit had been long
depressed by the jealousy of the court. Theodora had injured him
in the rights of a private citizen, the marriage of his children,
and the testament of his brother; and although his conduct was
pure and blameless, Justinian was displeased that he should be
thought worthy of the confidence of the malecontents. The life of
Germanus was a lesson of implicit obedience: he nobly refused to
prostitute his name and character in the factions of the circus:
the gravity of his manners was tempered by innocent cheerfulness;
and his riches were lent without interest to indigent or
deserving friends. His valor had formerly triumphed over the
Sclavonians of the Danube and the rebels of Africa: the first
report of his promotion revived the hopes of the Italians; and he
was privately assured, that a crowd of Roman deserters would
abandon, on his approach, the standard of Totila. His second
marriage with Malasontha, the granddaughter of Theodoric endeared
Germanus to the Goths themselves; and they marched with
reluctance against the father of a royal infant the last
offspring of the line of Amali. A splendid allowance was assigned
by the emperor: the general contribute his private fortune: his
two sons were popular and active and he surpassed, in the
promptitude and success of his levies the expectation of mankind.
He was permitted to select some squadrons of Thracian cavalry:
the veterans, as well as the youth of Constantinople and Europe,
engaged their voluntary service; and as far as the heart of
Germany, his fame and liberality attracted the aid of the
Barbarians. * The Romans advanced to Sardica; an army of
Sclavonians fled before their march; but within two days of their
final departure, the designs of Germanus were terminated by his
malady and death. Yet the impulse which he had given to the
Italian war still continued to act with energy and effect. The
maritime towns Ancona, Crotona, Centumcellæ, resisted the
assaults of Totila Sicily was reduced by the zeal of Artaban, and
the Gothic navy was defeated near the coast of the Adriatic. The
two fleets were almost equal, forty-seven to fifty galleys: the
victory was decided by the knowledge and dexterity of the Greeks;
but the ships were so closely grappled, that only twelve of the
Goths escaped from this unfortunate conflict. They affected to
depreciate an element in which they were unskilled; but their own
experience confirmed the truth of a maxim, that the master of the
sea will always acquire the dominion of the land.
After the loss of Germanus, the nations were provoked to
smile, by the strange intelligence, that the command of the Roman
armies was given to a eunuch. But the eunuch Narses is ranked
among the few who have rescued that unhappy name from the
contempt and hatred of mankind. A feeble, diminutive body
concealed the soul of a statesman and a warrior. His youth had
been employed in the management of the loom and distaff, in the
cares of the household, and the service of female luxury; but
while his hands were busy, he secretly exercised the faculties of
a vigorous and discerning mind. A stranger to the schools and the
camp, he studied in the palace to dissemble, to flatter, and to
persuade; and as soon as he approached the person of the emperor,
Justinian listened with surprise and pleasure to the manly
counsels of his chamberlain and private treasurer. The talents of
Narses were tried and improved in frequent embassies: he led an
army into Italy acquired a practical knowledge of the war and the
country, and presumed to strive with the genius of Belisarius.
Twelve years after his return, the eunuch was chosen to achieve
the conquest which had been left imperfect by the first of the
Roman generals. Instead of being dazzled by vanity or emulation,
he seriously declared that, unless he were armed with an adequate
force, he would never consent to risk his own glory and that of
his sovereign. Justinian granted to the favorite what he might
have denied to the hero: the Gothic war was rekindled from its
ashes, and the preparations were not unworthy of the ancient
majesty of the empire. The key of the public treasure was put
into his hand, to collect magazines, to levy soldiers, to
purchase arms and horses, to discharge the arrears of pay, and to
tempt the fidelity of the fugitives and deserters. The troops of
Germanus were still in arms; they halted at Salona in the
expectation of a new leader; and legions of subjects and allies
were created by the well-known liberality of the eunuch Narses.
The king of the Lombards satisfied or surpassed the obligations
of a treaty, by lending two thousand two hundred of his bravest
warriors, who were followed by three thousand of their martial
attendants. Three thousand Heruli fought on horseback under
Philemuth, their native chief; and the noble Aratus, who adopted
the manners and discipline of Rome, conducted a band of veterans
of the same nation. Dagistheus was released from prison to
command the Huns; and Kobad, the grandson and nephew of the great
king, was conspicuous by the regal tiara at the head of his
faithful Persians, who had devoted themselves to the fortunes of
their prince. Absolute in the exercise of his authority, more
absolute in the affection of his troops, Narses led a numerous
and gallant army from Philippopolis to Salona, from whence he
coasted the eastern side of the Adriatic as far as the confines
of Italy. His progress was checked. The East could not supply
vessels capable of transporting such multitudes of men and
horses. The Franks, who, in the general confusion, had usurped
the greater part of the Venetian province, refused a free passage
to the friends of the Lombards. The station of Verona was
occupied by Teias, with the flower of the Gothic forces; and that
skilful commander had overspread the adjacent country with the
fall of woods and the inundation of waters. In this perplexity,
an officer of experience proposed a measure, secure by the
appearance of rashness; that the Roman army should cautiously
advance along the seashore, while the fleet preceded their march,
and successively cast a bridge of boats over the mouths of the
rivers, the Timavus, the Brenta, the Adige, and the Po, that fall
into the Adriatic to the north of Ravenna. Nine days he reposed
in the city, collected the fragments of the Italian army, and
marching towards Rimini to meet the defiance of an insulting
enemy.
Chapter XLIII: Last Victory And Death Of
Belisarius, Death Of Justinian. -- Part III.
The prudence of Narses impelled him to speedy and decisive
action. His powers were the last effort of the state; the cost of
each day accumulated the enormous account; and the nations,
untrained to discipline or fatigue, might be rashly provoked to
turn their arms against each other, or against their benefactor.
The same considerations might have tempered the ardor of Totila.
But he was conscious that the clergy and people of Italy aspired
to a second revolution: he felt or suspected the rapid progress
of treason; and he resolved to risk the Gothic kingdom on the
chance of a day, in which the valiant would be animated by
instant danger and the disaffected might be awed by mutual
ignorance. In his march from Ravenna, the Roman general chastised
the garrison of Rimini, traversed in a direct line the hills of
Urbino, and reentered the Flaminian way, nine miles beyond the
perforated rock, an obstacle of art and nature which might have
stopped or retarded his progress. The Goths were assembled in the
neighborhood of Rome, they advanced without delay to seek a
superior enemy, and the two armies approached each other at the
distance of one hundred furlongs, between Tagina and the
sepulchres of the Gauls. The haughty message of Narses was an
offer, not of peace, but of pardon. The answer of the Gothic king
declared his resolution to die or conquer. "What day," said the
messenger, "will you fix for the combat?" "The eighth day,"
replied Totila; but early the next morning he attempted to
surprise a foe, suspicious of deceit, and prepared for battle.
Ten thousand Heruli and Lombards, of approved valor and doubtful
faith, were placed in the centre. Each of the wings was composed
of eight thousand Romans; the right was guarded by the cavalry of
the Huns, the left was covered by fifteen hundred chosen horse,
destined, according to the emergencies of action, to sustain the
retreat of their friends, or to encompass the flank of the enemy.
From his proper station at the head of the right wing, the eunuch
rode along the line, expressing by his voice and countenance the
assurance of victory; exciting the soldiers of the emperor to
punish the guilt and madness of a band of robbers; and exposing
to their view gold chains, collars, and bracelets, the rewards of
military virtue. From the event of a single combat they drew an
omen of success; and they beheld with pleasure the courage of
fifty archers, who maintained a small eminence against three
successive attacks of the Gothic cavalry. At the distance only of
two bow-shots, the armies spent the morning in dreadful suspense,
and the Romans tasted some necessary food, without unloosing the
cuirass from their breast, or the bridle from their horses.
Narses awaited the charge; and it was delayed by Totila till he
had received his last succors of two thousand Goths. While he
consumed the hours in fruitless treaty, the king exhibited in a
narrow space the strength and agility of a warrior. His armor was
enchased with gold; his purple banner floated with the wind: he
cast his lance into the air; caught it with the right hand;
shifted it to the left; threw himself backwards; recovered his
seat; and managed a fiery steed in all the paces and evolutions
of the equestrian school. As soon as the succors had arrived, he
retired to his tent, assumed the dress and arms of a private
soldier, and gave the signal of a battle. The first line of
cavalry advanced with more courage than discretion, and left
behind them the infantry of the second line. They were soon
engaged between the horns of a crescent, into which the adverse
wings had been insensibly curved, and were saluted from either
side by the volleys of four thousand archers. Their ardor, and
even their distress, drove them forwards to a close and unequal
conflict, in which they could only use their lances against an
enemy equally skilled in all the instruments of war. A generous
emulation inspired the Romans and their Barbarian allies; and
Narses, who calmly viewed and directed their efforts, doubted to
whom he should adjudge the prize of superior bravery. The Gothic
cavalry was astonished and disordered, pressed and broken; and
the line of infantry, instead of presenting their spears, or
opening their intervals, were trampled under the feet of the
flying horse. Six thousand of the Goths were slaughtered without
mercy in the field of Tagina. Their prince, with five attendants,
was overtaken by Asbad, of the race of the Gepidæ. "Spare
the king of Italy," * cried a loyal voice, and Asbad struck his
lance through the body of Totila. The blow was instantly revenged
by the faithful Goths: they transported their dying monarch seven
miles beyond the scene of his disgrace; and his last moments were
not imbittered by the presence of an enemy. Compassion afforded
him the shelter of an obscure tomb; but the Romans were not
satisfied of their victory, till they beheld the corpse of the
Gothic king. His hat, enriched with gems, and his bloody robe,
were presented to Justinian by the messengers of triumph.
As soon as Narses had paid his devotions to the Author of
victory, and the blessed Virgin, his peculiar patroness, he
praised, rewarded, and dismissed the Lombards. The villages had
been reduced to ashes by these valiant savages; they ravished
matrons and virgins on the altar; their retreat was diligently
watched by a strong detachment of regular forces, who prevented a
repetition of the like disorders. The victorious eunuch pursued
his march through Tuscany, accepted the submission of the Goths,
heard the acclamations, and often the complaints, of the
Italians, and encompassed the walls of Rome with the remainder of
his formidable host. Round the wide circumference, Narses
assigned to himself, and to each of his lieutenants, a real or a
feigned attack, while he silently marked the place of easy and
unguarded entrance. Neither the fortifications of Hadrian's mole,
nor of the port, could long delay the progress of the conqueror;
and Justinian once more received the keys of Rome, which, under
his reign, had been five times taken and recovered. But the
deliverance of Rome was the last calamity of the Roman people.
The Barbarian allies of Narses too frequently confounded the
privileges of peace and war. The despair of the flying Goths
found some consolation in sanguinary revenge; and three hundred
youths of the noblest families, who had been sent as hostages
beyond the Po, were inhumanly slain by the successor of Totila.
The fate of the senate suggests an awful lesson of the
vicissitude of human affairs. Of the senators whom Totila had
banished from their country, some were rescued by an officer of
Belisarius, and transported from Campania to Sicily; while others
were too guilty to confide in the clemency of Justinian, or too
poor to provide horses for their escape to the sea-shore. Their
brethren languished five years in a state of indigence and exile:
the victory of Narses revived their hopes; but their premature
return to the metropolis was prevented by the furious Goths; and
all the fortresses of Campania were stained with patrician blood.
After a period of thirteen centuries, the institution of Romulus
expired; and if the nobles of Rome still assumed the title of
senators, few subsequent traces can be discovered of a public
council, or constitutional order. Ascend six hundred years, and
contemplate the kings of the earth soliciting an audience, as the
slaves or freedmen of the Roman senate!
The Gothic war was yet alive. The bravest of the nation
retired beyond the Po; and Teias was unanimously chosen to
succeed and revenge their departed hero. The new king immediately
sent ambassadors to implore, or rather to purchase, the aid of
the Franks, and nobly lavished, for the public safety, the riches
which had been deposited in the palace of Pavia. The residue of
the royal treasure was guarded by his brother Aligern, at
Cumæa, in Campania; but the strong castle which Totila had
fortified was closely besieged by the arms of Narses. From the
Alps to the foot of Mount Vesuvius, the Gothic king, by rapid and
secret marches, advanced to the relief of his brother, eluded the
vigilance of the Roman chiefs, and pitched his camp on the banks
of the Sarnus or Draco, which flows
from Nuceria into the Bay of Naples. The river separated the two
armies: sixty days were consumed in distant and fruitless
combats, and Teias maintained this important post till he was
deserted by his fleet and the hope of subsistence. With reluctant
steps he ascended the Lactarian mount,
where the physicians of Rome, since the time of Galen, had sent
their patients for the benefit of the air and the milk. But the
Goths soon embraced a more generous resolution: to descend the
hill, to dismiss their horses, and to die in arms, and in the
possession of freedom. The king marched at their head, bearing in
his right hand a lance, and an ample buckler in his left: with
the one he struck dead the foremost of the assailants; with the
other he received the weapons which every hand was ambitious to
aim against his life. After a combat of many hours, his left arm
was fatigued by the weight of twelve javelins which hung from his
shield. Without moving from his ground, or suspending his blows,
the hero called aloud on his attendants for a fresh buckler; but
in the moment while his side was uncovered, it was pierced by a
mortal dart. He fell; and his head, exalted on a spear,
proclaimed to the nations that the Gothic kingdom was no more.
But the example of his death served only to animate the
companions who had sworn to perish with their leader. They fought
till darkness descended on the earth. They reposed on their arms.
The combat was renewed with the return of light, and maintained
with unabated vigor till the evening of the second day. The
repose of a second night, the want of water, and the loss of
their bravest champions, determined the surviving Goths to accept
the fair capitulation which the prudence of Narses was inclined
to propose. They embraced the alternative of residing in Italy,
as the subjects and soldiers of Justinian, or departing with a
portion of their private wealth, in search of some independent
country. Yet the oath of fidelity or exile was alike rejected by
one thousand Goths, who broke away before the treaty was signed,
and boldly effected their retreat to the walls of Pavia. The
spirit, as well as the situation, of Aligern prompted him to
imitate rather than to bewail his brother: a strong and dexterous
archer, he transpierced with a single arrow the armor and breast
of his antagonist; and his military conduct defended Cumæ
above a year against the forces of the Romans. Their industry had
scooped the Sibyl's cave into a prodigious mine; combustible
materials were introduced to consume the temporary props: the
wall and the gate of Cumæ sunk into the cavern, but the
ruins formed a deep and inaccessible precipice. On the fragment
of a rock Aligern stood alone and unshaken, till he calmly
surveyed the hopeless condition of his country, and judged it
more honorable to be the friend of Narses, than the slave of the
Franks. After the death of Teias, the Roman general separated his
troops to reduce the cities of Italy; Lucca sustained a long and
vigorous siege: and such was the humanity or the prudence of
Narses, that the repeated perfidy of the inhabitants could not
provoke him to exact the forfeit lives of their hostages. These
hostages were dismissed in safety; and their grateful zeal at
length subdued the obstinacy of their countrymen.
Before Lucca had surrendered, Italy was overwhelmed by a new
deluge of Barbarians. A feeble youth, the grandson of Clovis,
reigned over the Austrasians or oriental Franks. The guardians of
Theodebald entertained with coldness and reluctance the
magnificent promises of the Gothic ambassadors. But the spirit of
a martial people outstripped the timid counsels of the court: two
brothers, Lothaire and Buccelin, the dukes of the Alemanni, stood
forth as the leaders of the Italian war; and seventy-five
thousand Germans descended in the autumn from the Rhætian
Alps into the plain of Milan. The vanguard of the Roman army was
stationed near the Po, under the conduct of Fulcaris, a bold
Herulian, who rashly conceived that personal bravery was the sole
duty and merit of a commander. As he marched without order or
precaution along the Æmilian way, an ambuscade of Franks
suddenly rose from the amphitheatre of Parma; his troops were
surprised and routed; but their leader refused to fly; declaring
to the last moment, that death was less terrible than the angry
countenance of Narses. * The death of Fulcaris, and the retreat
of the surviving chiefs, decided the fluctuating and rebellious
temper of the Goths; they flew to the standard of their
deliverers, and admitted them into the cities which still
resisted the arms of the Roman general. The conqueror of Italy
opened a free passage to the irresistible torrent of Barbarians.
They passed under the walls of Cesena, and answered by threats
and reproaches the advice of Aligern, that the Gothic treasures
could no longer repay the labor of an invasion. Two thousand
Franks were destroyed by the skill and valor of Narses himself,
who sailed from Rimini at the head of three hundred horse, to
chastise the licentious rapine of their march. On the confines of
Samnium the two brothers divided their forces. With the right
wing, Buccelin assumed the spoil of Campania, Lucania, and
Bruttium; with the left, Lothaire accepted the plunder of Apulia
and Calabria. They followed the coast of the Mediterranean and
the Adriatic, as far as Rhegium and Otranto, and the extreme
lands of Italy were the term of their destructive progress. The
Franks, who were Christians and Catholics, contented themselves
with simple pillage and occasional murder. But the churches which
their piety had spared, were stripped by the sacrilegious hands
of the Alamanni, who sacrificed horses' heads to their native
deities of the woods and rivers; they melted or profaned the
consecrated vessels, and the ruins of shrines and altars were
stained with the blood of the faithful. Buccelin was actuated by
ambition, and Lothaire by avarice. The former aspired to restore
the Gothic kingdom; the latter, after a promise to his brother of
speedy succors, returned by the same road to deposit his treasure
beyond the Alps. The strength of their armies was already wasted
by the change of climate and contagion of disease: the Germans
revelled in the vintage of Italy; and their own intemperance
avenged, in some degree, the miseries of a defenceless people.
*
At the entrance of the spring, the Imperial troops, who had
guarded the cities, assembled, to the number of eighteen thousand
men, in the neighborhood of Rome. Their winter hours had not been
consumed in idleness. By the command, and after the example, of
Narses, they repeated each day their military exercise on foot
and on horseback, accustomed their ear to obey the sound of the
trumpet, and practised the steps and evolutions of the Pyrrhic
dance. From the Straits of Sicily, Buccelin, with thirty thousand
Franks and Alamanni, slowly moved towards Capua, occupied with a
wooden tower the bridge of Casilinum, covered his right by the
stream of the Vulturnus, and secured the rest of his encampment
by a rampart of sharp stakes, and a circle of wagons, whose
wheels were buried in the earth. He impatiently expected the
return of Lothaire; ignorant, alas! that his brother could never
return, and that the chief and his army had been swept away by a
strange disease on the banks of the Lake Benacus, between Trent
and Verona. The banners of Narses soon approached the Vulturnus,
and the eyes of Italy were anxiously fixed on the event of this
final contest. Perhaps the talents of the Roman general were most
conspicuous in the calm operations which precede the tumult of a
battle. His skilful movements intercepted the subsistence of the
Barbarian deprived him of the advantage of the bridge and river,
and in the choice of the ground and moment of action reduced him
to comply with the inclination of his enemy. On the morning of
the important day, when the ranks were already formed, a servant,
for some trivial fault, was killed by his master, one of the
leaders of the Heruli. The justice or passion of Narses was
awakened: he summoned the offender to his presence, and without
listening to his excuses, gave the signal to the minister of
death. If the cruel master had not infringed the laws of his
nation, this arbitrary execution was not less unjust than it
appears to have been imprudent. The Heruli felt the indignity;
they halted: but the Roman general, without soothing their rage,
or expecting their resolution, called aloud, as the trumpets
sounded, that unless they hastened to occupy their place, they
would lose the honor of the victory. His troops were disposed in
a long front, the cavalry on the wings; in the centre, the
heavy-armed foot; the archers and slingers in the rear. The
Germans advanced in a sharp-pointed column, of the form of a
triangle or solid wedge. They pierced the feeble centre of
Narses, who received them with a smile into the fatal snare, and
directed his wings of cavalry insensibly to wheel on their flanks
and encompass their rear. The host of the Franks and Alamanni
consisted of infantry: a sword and buckler hung by their side;
and they used, as their weapons of offence, a weighty hatchet and
a hooked javelin, which were only formidable in close combat, or
at a short distance. The flower of the Roman archers, on
horseback, and in complete armor, skirmished without peril round
this immovable phalanx; supplied by active speed the deficiency
of number; and aimed their arrows against a crowd of Barbarians,
who, instead of a cuirass and helmet, were covered by a loose
garment of fur or linen. They paused, they trembled, their ranks
were confounded, and in the decisive moment the Heruli,
preferring glory to revenge, charged with rapid violence the head
of the column. Their leader, Sinbal, and Aligern, the Gothic
prince, deserved the prize of superior valor; and their example
excited the victorious troops to achieve with swords and spears
the destruction of the enemy. Buccelin, and the greatest part of
his army, perished on the field of battle, in the waters of the
Vulturnus, or by the hands of the enraged peasants: but it may
seem incredible, that a victory, which no more than five of the
Alamanni survived, could be purchased with the loss of fourscore
Romans. Seven thousand Goths, the relics of the war, defended the
fortress of Campsa till the ensuing spring; and every messenger
of Narses announced the reduction of the Italian cities, whose
names were corrupted by the ignorance or vanity of the Greeks.
After the battle of Casilinum, Narses entered the capital; the
arms and treasures of the Goths, the Franks, and the Alamanni,
were displayed; his soldiers, with garlands in their hands,
chanted the praises of the conqueror; and Rome, for the last
time, beheld the semblance of a triumph.
After a reign of sixty years, the throne of the Gothic kings
was filled by the exarchs of Ravenna, the representatives in
peace and war of the emperor of the Romans. Their jurisdiction
was soon reduced to the limits of a narrow province: but Narses
himself, the first and most powerful of the exarchs, administered
above fifteen years the entire kingdom of Italy. Like Belisarius,
he had deserved the honors of envy, calumny, and disgrace: but
the favorite eunuch still enjoyed the confidence of Justinian; or
the leader of a victorious army awed and repressed the
ingratitude of a timid court. Yet it was not by weak and
mischievous indulgence that Narses secured the attachment of his
troops. Forgetful of the past, and regardless of the future, they
abused the present hour of prosperity and peace. The cities of
Italy resounded with the noise of drinking and dancing; the
spoils of victory were wasted in sensual pleasures; and nothing
(says Agathias) remained unless to exchange their shields and
helmets for the soft lute and the capacious hogshead. In a manly
oration, not unworthy of a Roman censor, the eunuch reproved
these disorderly vices, which sullied their fame, and endangered
their safety. The soldiers blushed and obeyed; discipline was
confirmed; the fortifications were restored; a
duke was stationed for the defence and
military command of each of the principal cities; and the eye of
Narses pervaded the ample prospect from Calabria to the Alps. The
remains of the Gothic nation evacuated the country, or mingled
with the people; the Franks, instead of revenging the death of
Buccelin, abandoned, without a struggle, their Italian conquests;
and the rebellious Sinbal, chief of the Heruli, was subdued,
taken and hung on a lofty gallows by the inflexible justice of
the exarch. The civil state of Italy, after the agitation of a
long tempest, was fixed by a pragmatic sanction, which the
emperor promulgated at the request of the pope. Justinian
introduced his own jurisprudence into the schools and tribunals
of the West; he ratified the acts of Theodoric and his immediate
successors, but every deed was rescinded and abolished which
force had extorted, or fear had subscribed, under the usurpation
of Totila. A moderate theory was framed to reconcile the rights
of property with the safety of prescription, the claims of the
state with the poverty of the people, and the pardon of offences
with the interest of virtue and order of society. Under the
exarchs of Ravenna, Rome was degraded to the second rank. Yet the
senators were gratified by the permission of visiting their
estates in Italy, and of approaching, without obstacle, the
throne of Constantinople: the regulation of weights and measures
was delegated to the pope and senate; and the salaries of lawyers
and physicians, of orators and grammarians, were destined to
preserve, or rekindle, the light of science in the ancient
capital. Justinian might dictate benevolent edicts, and Narses
might second his wishes by the restoration of cities, and more
especially of churches. But the power of kings is most effectual
to destroy; and the twenty years of the Gothic war had
consummated the distress and depopulation of Italy. As early as
the fourth campaign, under the discipline of Belisarius himself,
fifty thousand laborers died of hunger in the narrow region of
Picenum; and a strict interpretation of the evidence of Procopius
would swell the loss of Italy above the total sum of her present
inhabitants.
I desire to believe, but I dare not affirm, that Belisarius
sincerely rejoiced in the triumph of Narses. Yet the
consciousness of his own exploits might teach him to esteem
without jealousy the merit of a rival; and the repose of the aged
warrior was crowned by a last victory, which saved the emperor
and the capital. The Barbarians, who annually visited the
provinces of Europe, were less discouraged by some accidental
defeats, than they were excited by the double hope of spoil and
of subsidy. In the thirty-second winter of Justinian's reign, the
Danube was deeply frozen: Zabergan led the cavalry of the
Bulgarians, and his standard was followed by a promiscuous
multitude of Sclavonians. * The savage chief passed, without
opposition, the river and the mountains, spread his troops over
Macedonia and Thrace, and advanced with no more than seven
thousand horse to the long wall, which should have defended the
territory of Constantinople. But the works of man are impotent
against the assaults of nature: a recent earthquake had shaken
the foundations of the wall; and the forces of the empire were
employed on the distant frontiers of Italy, Africa, and Persia.
The seven schools, or companies of the
guards or domestic troops, had been augmented to the number of
five thousand five hundred men, whose ordinary station was in the
peaceful cities of Asia. But the places of the brave Armenians
were insensibly supplied by lazy citizens, who purchased an
exemption from the duties of civil life, without being exposed to
the dangers of military service. Of such soldiers, few could be
tempted to sally from the gates; and none could be persuaded to
remain in the field, unless they wanted strength and speed to
escape from the Bulgarians. The report of the fugitives
exaggerated the numbers and fierceness of an enemy, who had
polluted holy virgins, and abandoned new-born infants to the dogs
and vultures; a crowd of rustics, imploring food and protection,
increased the consternation of the city, and the tents of
Zabergan were pitched at the distance of twenty miles, on the
banks of a small river, which encircles Melanthias, and
afterwards falls into the Propontis. Justinian trembled: and
those who had only seen the emperor in his old age, were pleased
to suppose, that he had lost the
alacrity and vigor of his youth. By his command the vessels of
gold and silver were removed from the churches in the
neighborhood, and even the suburbs, of Constantinople; the
ramparts were lined with trembling spectators; the golden gate
was crowded with useless generals and tribunes, and the senate
shared the fatigues and the apprehensions of the populace.
But the eyes of the prince and people were directed to a
feeble veteran, who was compelled by the public danger to resume
the armor in which he had entered Carthage and defended Rome. The
horses of the royal stables, of private citizens, and even of the
circus, were hastily collected; the emulation of the old and
young was roused by the name of Belisarius, and his first
encampment was in the presence of a victorious enemy. His
prudence, and the labor of the friendly peasants, secured, with a
ditch and rampart, the repose of the night; innumerable fires,
and clouds of dust, were artfully contrived to magnify the
opinion of his strength; his soldiers suddenly passed from
despondency to presumption; and, while ten thousand voices
demanded the battle, Belisarius dissembled his knowledge, that in
the hour of trial he must depend on the firmness of three hundred
veterans. The next morning the Bulgarian cavalry advanced to the
charge. But they heard the shouts of multitudes, they beheld the
arms and discipline of the front; they were assaulted on the
flanks by two ambuscades which rose from the woods; their
foremost warriors fell by the hand of the aged hero and his
guards; and the swiftness of their evolutions was rendered
useless by the close attack and rapid pursuit of the Romans. In
this action (so speedy was their flight) the Bulgarians lost only
four hundred horse; but Constantinople was saved; and Zabergan,
who felt the hand of a master, withdrew to a respectful distance.
But his friends were numerous in the councils of the emperor, and
Belisarius obeyed with reluctance the commands of envy and
Justinian, which forbade him to achieve the deliverance of his
country. On his return to the city, the people, still conscious
of their danger, accompanied his triumph with acclamations of joy
and gratitude, which were imputed as a crime to the victorious
general. But when he entered the palace, the courtiers were
silent, and the emperor, after a cold and thankless embrace,
dismissed him to mingle with the train of slaves. Yet so deep was
the impression of his glory on the minds of men, that Justinian,
in the seventy-seventh year of his age, was encouraged to advance
near forty miles from the capital, and to inspect in person the
restoration of the long wall. The Bulgarians wasted the summer in
the plains of Thrace; but they were inclined to peace by the
failure of their rash attempts on Greece and the Chersonesus. A
menace of killing their prisoners quickened the payment of heavy
ransoms; and the departure of Zabergan was hastened by the
report, that double-prowed vessels were built on the Danube to
intercept his passage. The danger was soon forgotten; and a vain
question, whether their sovereign had shown more wisdom or
weakness, amused the idleness of the city.
Chapter XLIII: Last Victory And Death Of
Belisarius, Death Of Justinian. -- Part IV.
About two years after the last victory of Belisarius, the
emperor returned from a Thracian journey of health, or business,
or devotion. Justinian was afflicted by a pain in his head; and
his private entry countenanced the rumor of his death. Before the
third hour of the day, the bakers' shops were plundered of their
bread, the houses were shut, and every citizen, with hope or
terror, prepared for the impending tumult. The senators
themselves, fearful and suspicious, were convened at the ninth
hour; and the præfect received their commands to visit
every quarter of the city, and proclaim a general illumination
for the recovery of the emperor's health. The ferment subsided;
but every accident betrayed the impotence of the government, and
the factious temper of the people: the guards were disposed to
mutiny as often as their quarters were changed, or their pay was
withheld: the frequent calamities of fires and earthquakes
afforded the opportunities of disorder; the disputes of the blues
and greens, of the orthodox and heretics, degenerated into bloody
battles; and, in the presence of the Persian ambassador,
Justinian blushed for himself and for his subjects. Capricious
pardon and arbitrary punishment imbittered the irksomeness and
discontent of a long reign: a conspiracy was formed in the
palace; and, unless we are deceived by the names of Marcellus and
Sergius, the most virtuous and the most profligate of the
courtiers were associated in the same designs. They had fixed the
time of the execution; their rank gave them access to the royal
banquet; and their black slaves were stationed in the vestibule
and porticos, to announce the death of the tyrant, and to excite
a sedition in the capital. But the indiscretion of an accomplice
saved the poor remnant of the days of Justinian. The conspirators
were detected and seized, with daggers hidden under their
garments: Marcellus died by his own hand, and Sergius was dragged
from the sanctuary. Pressed by remorse, or tempted by the hopes
of safety, he accused two officers of the household of
Belisarius; and torture forced them to declare that they had
acted according to the secret instructions of their patron.
Posterity will not hastily believe that a hero who, in the vigor
of life, had disdained the fairest offers of ambition and
revenge, should stoop to the murder of his prince, whom he could
not long expect to survive. His followers were impatient to fly;
but flight must have been supported by rebellion, and he had
lived enough for nature and for glory. Belisarius appeared before
the council with less fear than indignation: after forty years'
service, the emperor had prejudged his guilt; and injustice was
sanctified by the presence and authority of the patriarch. The
life of Belisarius was graciously spared; but his fortunes were
sequestered, and, from December to July, he was guarded as a
prisoner in his own palace. At length his innocence was
acknowledged; his freedom and honor were restored; and death,
which might be hastened by resentment and grief, removed him from
the world in about eight months after his deliverance. The name
of Belisarius can never die but instead of the funeral, the
monuments, the statues, so justly due to his memory, I only read,
that his treasures, the spoil of the Goths and Vandals, were
immediately confiscated by the emperor. Some decent portion was
reserved, however for the use of his widow: and as Antonina had
much to repent, she devoted the last remains of her life and
fortune to the foundation of a convent. Such is the simple and
genuine narrative of the fall of Belisarius and the ingratitude
of Justinian. That he was deprived of his eyes, and reduced by
envy to beg his bread, * "Give a penny to Belisarius the
general!" is a fiction of later times, which has obtained credit,
or rather favor, as a strange example of the vicissitudes of
fortune.
If the emperor could rejoice in the death of Belisarius, he
enjoyed the base satisfaction only eight months, the last period
of a reign of thirty-eight years, and a life of eighty-three
years. It would be difficult to trace the character of a prince
who is not the most conspicuous object of his own times: but the
confessions of an enemy may be received as the safest evidence of
his virtues. The resemblance of Justinian to the bust of
Domitian, is maliciously urged; with the acknowledgment, however,
of a well-proportioned figure, a ruddy complexion, and a pleasing
countenance. The emperor was easy of access, patient of hearing,
courteous and affable in discourse, and a master of the angry
passions which rage with such destructive violence in the breast
of a despot. Procopius praises his temper, to reproach him with
calm and deliberate cruelty: but in the conspiracies which
attacked his authority and person, a more candid judge will
approve the justice, or admire the clemency, of Justinian. He
excelled in the private virtues of chastity and temperance: but
the impartial love of beauty would have been less mischievous
than his conjugal tenderness for Theodora; and his abstemious
diet was regulated, not by the prudence of a philosopher, but the
superstition of a monk. His repasts were short and frugal: on
solemn fasts, he contented himself with water and vegetables; and
such was his strength, as well as fervor, that he frequently
passed two days, and as many nights, without tasting any food.
The measure of his sleep was not less rigorous: after the repose
of a single hour, the body was awakened by the soul, and, to the
astonishment of his chamberlain, Justinian walked or studied till
the morning light. Such restless application prolonged his time
for the acquisition of knowledge and the despatch of business;
and he might seriously deserve the reproach of confounding, by
minute and preposterous diligence, the general order of his
administration. The emperor professed himself a musician and
architect, a poet and philosopher, a lawyer and theologian; and
if he failed in the enterprise of reconciling the Christian
sects, the review of the Roman jurisprudence is a noble monument
of his spirit and industry. In the government of the empire, he
was less wise, or less successful: the age was unfortunate; the
people was oppressed and discontented; Theodora abused her power;
a succession of bad ministers disgraced his judgment; and
Justinian was neither beloved in his life, nor regretted at his
death. The love of fame was deeply implanted in his breast, but
he condescended to the poor ambition of titles, honors, and
contemporary praise; and while he labored to fix the admiration,
he forfeited the esteem and affection, of the Romans. The design
of the African and Italian wars was boldly conceived and
executed; and his penetration discovered the talents of
Belisarius in the camp, of Narses in the palace. But the name of
the emperor is eclipsed by the names of his victorious generals;
and Belisarius still lives, to upbraid the envy and ingratitude
of his sovereign. The partial favor of mankind applauds the
genius of a conqueror, who leads and directs his subjects in the
exercise of arms. The characters of Philip the Second and of
Justinian are distinguished by the cold ambition which delights
in war, and declines the dangers of the field. Yet a colossal
statue of bronze represented the emperor on horseback, preparing
to march against the Persians in the habit and armor of Achilles.
In the great square before the church of St. Sophia, this
monument was raised on a brass column and a stone pedestal of
seven steps; and the pillar of Theodosius, which weighed seven
thousand four hundred pounds of silver, was removed from the same
place by the avarice and vanity of Justinian. Future princes were
more just or indulgent to his memory;
the elder Andronicus, in the beginning of the fourteenth century,
repaired and beautified his equestrian statue: since the fall of
the empire it has been melted into cannon by the victorious
Turks.
I shall conclude this chapter with the comets, the
earthquakes, and the plague, which astonished or afflicted the
age of Justinian.
I. In the fifth year of his reign, and in the month of
September, a comet was seen during twenty days in the western
quarter of the heavens, and which shot its rays into the north.
Eight years afterwards, while the sun was in Capricorn, another
comet appeared to follow in the Sagittary; the size was gradually
increasing; the head was in the east, the tail in the west, and
it remained visible above forty days. The nations, who gazed with
astonishment, expected wars and calamities from their baleful
influence; and these expectations were abundantly fulfilled. The
astronomers dissembled their ignorance of the nature of these
blazing stars, which they affected to represent as the floating
meteors of the air; and few among them embraced the simple notion
of Seneca and the Chaldeans, that they are only planets of a
longer period and more eccentric motion. Time and science have
justified the conjectures and predictions of the Roman sage: the
telescope has opened new worlds to the eyes of astronomers; and,
in the narrow space of history and fable, one and the same comet
is already found to have revisited the earth in
seven equal revolutions of five hundred
and seventy-five years. The first,
which ascends beyond the Christian æra one thousand seven
hundred and sixty-seven years, is coeval with Ogyges, the father
of Grecian antiquity. And this appearance explains the tradition
which Varro has preserved, that under his reign the planet Venus
changed her color, size, figure, and course; a prodigy without
example either in past or succeeding ages. The
second visit, in the year eleven
hundred and ninety-three, is darkly implied in the fable of
Electra, the seventh of the Pleiads, who have been reduced to six
since the time of the Trojan war. That nymph, the wife of
Dardanus, was unable to support the ruin of her country: she
abandoned the dances of her sister orbs, fled from the zodiac to
the north pole, and obtained, from her dishevelled locks, the
name of the comet. The
third period expires in the year six
hundred and eighteen, a date that exactly agrees with the
tremendous comet of the Sibyl, and perhaps of Pliny, which arose
in the West two generations before the reign of Cyrus. The
fourth apparition, forty-four years
before the birth of Christ, is of all others the most splendid
and important. After the death of Cæsar, a long-haired star
was conspicuous to Rome and to the nations, during the games
which were exhibited by young Octavian in honor of Venus and his
uncle. The vulgar opinion, that it conveyed to heaven the divine
soul of the dictator, was cherished and consecrated by the piety
of a statesman; while his secret superstition referred the comet
to the glory of his own times. The
fifth visit has been already ascribed
to the fifth year of Justinian, which coincides with the five
hundred and thirty-first of the Christian æra. And it may
deserve notice, that in this, as in the preceding instance, the
comet was followed, though at a longer interval, by a remarkable
paleness of the sun. The sixth return,
in the year eleven hundred and six, is recorded by the chronicles
of Europe and China: and in the first fervor of the crusades, the
Christians and the Mahometans might surmise, with equal reason,
that it portended the destruction of the Infidels. The
seventh phenomenon, of one thousand six
hundred and eighty, was presented to the eyes of an enlightened
age. The philosophy of Bayle dispelled a prejudice which Milton's
muse had so recently adorned, that the comet, "from its horrid
hair shakes pestilence and war." Its road in the heavens was
observed with exquisite skill by Flamstead and Cassini: and the
mathematical science of Bernoulli, Newton *, and Halley,
investigated the laws of its revolutions. At the
eighth period, in the year two thousand
three hundred and fifty-five, their calculations may perhaps be
verified by the astronomers of some future capital in the
Siberian or American wilderness.
II. The near approach of a comet may injure or destroy the
globe which we inhabit; but the changes on its surface have been
hitherto produced by the action of volcanoes and earthquakes. The
nature of the soil may indicate the countries most exposed to
these formidable concussions, since they are caused by
subterraneous fires, and such fires are kindled by the union and
fermentation of iron and sulphur. But their times and effects
appear to lie beyond the reach of human curiosity; and the
philosopher will discreetly abstain from the prediction of
earthquakes, till he has counted the drops of water that silently
filtrate on the inflammable mineral, and measured the caverns
which increase by resistance the explosion of the imprisoned air.
Without assigning the cause, history will distinguish the periods
in which these calamitous events have been rare or frequent, and
will observe, that this fever of the earth raged with uncommon
violence during the reign of Justinian. Each year is marked by
the repetition of earthquakes, of such duration, that
Constantinople has been shaken above forty days; of such extent,
that the shock has been communicated to the whole surface of the
globe, or at least of the Roman empire. An impulsive or vibratory
motion was felt: enormous chasms were opened, huge and heavy
bodies were discharged into the air, the sea alternately advanced
and retreated beyond its ordinary bounds, and a mountain was torn
from Libanus, and cast into the waves, where it protected, as a
mole, the new harbor of Botrys in Phnicia. The stroke that
agitates an ant-hill may crush the insect-myriads in the dust;
yet truth must extort confession that man has industriously
labored for his own destruction. The institution of great cities,
which include a nation within the limits of a wall, almost
realizes the wish of Caligula, that the Roman people had but one
neck. Two hundred and fifty thousand persons are said to have
perished in the earthquake of Antioch, whose domestic multitudes
were swelled by the conflux of strangers to the festival of the
Ascension. The loss of Berytus was of smaller account, but of
much greater value. That city, on the coast of Phnicia, was
illustrated by the study of the civil law, which opened the
surest road to wealth and dignity: the schools of Berytus were
filled with the rising spirits of the age, and many a youth was
lost in the earthquake, who might have lived to be the scourge or
the guardian of his country. In these disasters, the architect
becomes the enemy of mankind. The hut of a savage, or the tent of
an Arab, may be thrown down without injury to the inhabitant; and
the Peruvians had reason to deride the folly of their Spanish
conquerors, who with so much cost and labor erected their own
sepulchres. The rich marbles of a patrician are dashed on his own
head: a whole people is buried under the ruins of public and
private edifices, and the conflagration is kindled and propagated
by the innumerable fires which are necessary for the subsistence
and manufactures of a great city. Instead of the mutual sympathy
which might comfort and assist the distressed, they dreadfully
experience the vices and passions which are released from the
fear of punishment: the tottering houses are pillaged by intrepid
avarice; revenge embraces the moment, and selects the victim; and
the earth often swallows the assassin, or the ravisher, in the
consummation of their crimes. Superstition involves the present
danger with invisible terrors; and if the image of death may
sometimes be subservient to the virtue or repentance of
individuals, an affrighted people is more forcibly moved to
expect the end of the world, or to deprecate with servile homage
the wrath of an avenging Deity.
III. Æthiopia and Egypt have been stigmatized, in every
age, as the original source and seminary of the plague. In a
damp, hot, stagnating air, this African fever is generated from
the putrefaction of animal substances, and especially from the
swarms of locusts, not less destructive to mankind in their death
than in their lives. The fatal disease which depopulated the
earth in the time of Justinian and his successors, first appeared
in the neighborhood of Pelusium, between the Serbonian bog and
the eastern channel of the Nile. From thence, tracing as it were
a double path, it spread to the East, over Syria, Persia, and the
Indies, and penetrated to the West, along the coast of Africa,
and over the continent of Europe. In the spring of the second
year, Constantinople, during three or four months, was visited by
the pestilence; and Procopius, who observed its progress and
symptoms with the eyes of a physician, has emulated the skill and
diligence of Thucydides in the description of the plague of
Athens. The infection was sometimes announced by the visions of a
distempered fancy, and the victim despaired as soon as he had
heard the menace and felt the stroke of an invisible spectre. But
the greater number, in their beds, in the streets, in their usual
occupation, were surprised by a slight fever; so slight, indeed,
that neither the pulse nor the color of the patient gave any
signs of the approaching danger. The same, the next, or the
succeeding day, it was declared by the swelling of the glands,
particularly those of the groin, of the armpits, and under the
ear; and when these buboes or tumors were opened, they were found
to contain a coal, or black substance,
of the size of a lentil. If they came to a just swelling and
suppuration, the patient was saved by this kind and natural
discharge of the morbid humor. But if they continued hard and
dry, a mortification quickly ensued, and the fifth day was
commonly the term of his life. The fever was often accompanied
with lethargy or delirium; the bodies of the sick were covered
with black pustules or carbuncles, the symptoms of immediate
death; and in the constitutions too feeble to produce an
irruption, the vomiting of blood was followed by a mortification
of the bowels. To pregnant women the plague was generally mortal:
yet one infant was drawn alive from his dead mother, and three
mothers survived the loss of their infected ftus. Youth was the
most perilous season; and the female sex was less susceptible
than the male: but every rank and profession was attacked with
indiscriminate rage, and many of those who escaped were deprived
of the use of their speech, without being secure from a return of
the disorder. The physicians of Constantinople were zealous and
skilful; but their art was baffled by the various symptoms and
pertinacious vehemence of the disease: the same remedies were
productive of contrary effects, and the event capriciously
disappointed their prognostics of death or recovery. The order of
funerals, and the right of sepulchres, were confounded: those who
were left without friends or servants, lay unburied in the
streets, or in their desolate houses; and a magistrate was
authorized to collect the promiscuous heaps of dead bodies, to
transport them by land or water, and to inter them in deep pits
beyond the precincts of the city. Their own danger, and the
prospect of public distress, awakened some remorse in the minds
of the most vicious of mankind: the confidence of health again
revived their passions and habits; but philosophy must disdain
the observation of Procopius, that the lives of such men were
guarded by the peculiar favor of fortune or Providence. He
forgot, or perhaps he secretly recollected, that the plague had
touched the person of Justinian himself; but the abstemious diet
of the emperor may suggest, as in the case of Socrates, a more
rational and honorable cause for his recovery. During his
sickness, the public consternation was expressed in the habits of
the citizens; and their idleness and despondence occasioned a
general scarcity in the capital of the East.
Contagion is the inseparable symptom of the plague; which, by
mutual respiration, is transfused from the infected persons to
the lungs and stomach of those who approach them. While
philosophers believe and tremble, it is singular, that the
existence of a real danger should have been denied by a people
most prone to vain and imaginary terrors. Yet the fellow-citizens
of Procopius were satisfied, by some short and partial
experience, that the infection could not be gained by the closest
conversation: and this persuasion might support the assiduity of
friends or physicians in the care of the sick, whom inhuman
prudence would have condemned to solitude and despair. But the
fatal security, like the predestination of the Turks, must have
aided the progress of the contagion; and those salutary
precautions to which Europe is indebted for her safety, were
unknown to the government of Justinian. No restraints were
imposed on the free and frequent intercourse of the Roman
provinces: from Persia to France, the nations were mingled and
infected by wars and emigrations; and the pestilential odor which
lurks for years in a bale of cotton was imported, by the abuse of
trade, into the most distant regions. The mode of its propagation
is explained by the remark of Procopius himself, that it always
spread from the sea-coast to the inland country: the most
sequestered islands and mountains were successively visited; the
places which had escaped the fury of its first passage were alone
exposed to the contagion of the ensuing year. The winds might
diffuse that subtile venom; but unless the atmosphere be
previously disposed for its reception, the plague would soon
expire in the cold or temperate climates of the earth. Such was
the universal corruption of the air, that the pestilence which
burst forth in the fifteenth year of Justinian was not checked or
alleviated by any difference of the seasons. In time, its first
malignity was abated and dispersed; the disease alternately
languished and revived; but it was not till the end of a
calamitous period of fifty-two years, that mankind recovered
their health, or the air resumed its pure and salubrious quality.
No facts have been preserved to sustain an account, or even a
conjecture, of the numbers that perished in this extraordinary
mortality. I only find, that during three months, five, and at
length ten, thousand persons died each day at Constantinople;
that many cities of the East were left vacant, and that in
several districts of Italy the harvest and the vintage withered
on the ground. The triple scourge of war, pestilence, and famine,
afflicted the subjects of Justinian; and his reign is disgraced
by the visible decrease of the human species, which has never
been repaired in some of the fairest countries of the globe.
Chapter XLIV * : Idea Of The Roman
Jurisprudence.
Part I.
Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. -- The Laws Of The Kings --
The Twelve Of The Decemvirs. -- The Laws Of The People. -- The
Decrees Of The Senate. -- The Edicts Of The Magistrates And
Emperors -- Authority Of The Civilians. -- Code, Pandects,
Novels, And Institutes Of Justinian: -- I. Rights Of Persons. --
II. Rights Of Things. -- III. Private Injuries And Actions. --
IV. Crimes And Punishments.
The vain titles of the victories of Justinian are crumbled
into dust; but the name of the legislator is inscribed on a fair
and everlasting monument. Under his reign, and by his care, the
civil jurisprudence was digested in the immortal works of the
Code, the Pandects, and the Institutes: the public reason of the
Romans has been silently or studiously transfused into the
domestic institutions of Europe, , and the laws of Justinian
still command the respect or obedience of independent nations.
Wise or fortunate is the prince who connects his own reputation
with the honor or interest of a perpetual order of men. The
defence of their founder is the first cause, which in every age
has exercised the zeal and industry of the civilians. They
piously commemorate his virtues; dissemble or deny his failings;
and fiercely chastise the guilt or folly of the rebels, who
presume to sully the majesty of the purple. The idolatry of love
has provoked, as it usually happens, the rancor of opposition;
the character of Justinian has been exposed to the blind
vehemence of flattery and invective; and the injustice of a sect
(the Anti-Tribonians,) has refused all
praise and merit to the prince, his ministers, and his laws.
Attached to no party, interested only for the truth and candor of
history, and directed by the most temperate and skilful guides, I
enter with just diffidence on the subject of civil law, which has
exhausted so many learned lives, and clothed the walls of such
spacious libraries. In a single, if possible in a short, chapter,
I shall trace the Roman jurisprudence from Romulus to Justinian,
appreciate the labors of that emperor, and pause to contemplate
the principles of a science so important to the peace and
happiness of society. The laws of a nation form the most
instructive portion of its history; and although I have devoted
myself to write the annals of a declining monarchy, I shall
embrace the occasion to breathe the pure and invigorating air of
the republic.
The primitive government of Rome was composed, with some
political skill, of an elective king, a council of nobles, and a
general assembly of the people. War and religion were
administered by the supreme magistrate; and he alone proposed the
laws, which were debated in the senate, and finally ratified or
rejected by a majority of votes in the thirty
curi or parishes of the city. Romulus,
Numa, and Servius Tullius, are celebrated as the most ancient
legislators; and each of them claims his peculiar part in the
threefold division of jurisprudence. The laws of marriage, the
education of children, and the authority of parents, which may
seem to draw their origin from nature
itself, are ascribed to the untutored wisdom of Romulus. The law
of nations and of religious worship,
which Numa introduced, was derived from his nocturnal converse
with the nymph Egeria. The civil law is
attributed to the experience of Servius: he balanced the rights
and fortunes of the seven classes of citizens; and guarded, by
fifty new regulations, the observance of contracts and the
punishment of crimes. The state, which he had inclined towards a
democracy, was changed by the last Tarquin into a lawless
despotism; and when the kingly office was abolished, the
patricians engrossed the benefits of freedom. The royal laws
became odious or obsolete; the mysterious deposit was silently
preserved by the priests and nobles; and at the end of sixty
years, the citizens of Rome still complained that they were ruled
by the arbitrary sentence of the magistrates. Yet the positive
institutions of the kings had blended themselves with the public
and private manners of the city, some fragments of that venerable
jurisprudence were compiled by the diligence of antiquarians, and
above twenty texts still speak the rudeness of the Pelasgic idiom
of the Latins.
I shall not repeat the well-known story of the Decemvirs, who
sullied by their actions the honor of inscribing on brass, or
wood, or ivory, the Twelve Tables of the Roman laws. They were
dictated by the rigid and jealous spirit of an aristocracy, which
had yielded with reluctance to the just demands of the people.
But the substance of the Twelve Tables was adapted to the state
of the city; and the Romans had emerged from Barbarism, since
they were capable of studying and embracing the institutions of
their more enlightened neighbors. A wise Ephesian was driven by
envy from his native country: before he could reach the shores of
Latium, he had observed the various forms of human nature and
civil society: he imparted his knowledge to the legislators of
Rome, and a statue was erected in the forum to the perpetual
memory of Hermodorus. The names and divisions of the copper
money, the sole coin of the infant state, were of Dorian origin:
the harvests of Campania and Sicily relieved the wants of a
people whose agriculture was often interrupted by war and
faction; and since the trade was established, the deputies who
sailed from the Tyber might return from the same harbors with a
more precious cargo of political wisdom. The colonies of Great
Greece had transported and improved the arts of their mother
country. Cumæ and Rhegium, Crotona and Tarentum, Agrigentum
and Syracuse, were in the rank of the most flourishing cities.
The disciples of Pythagoras applied philosophy to the use of
government; the unwritten laws of Charondas accepted the aid of
poetry and music, and Zaleucus framed the republic of the
Locrians, which stood without alteration above two hundred years.
From a similar motive of national pride, both Livy and Dionysius
are willing to believe, that the deputies of Rome visited Athens
under the wise and splendid administration of Pericles; and the
laws of Solon were transfused into the twelve tables. If such an
embassy had indeed been received from the Barbarians of Hesperia,
the Roman name would have been familiar to the Greeks before the
reign of Alexander; and the faintest evidence would have been
explored and celebrated by the curiosity of succeeding times. But
the Athenian monuments are silent; nor will it seem credible that
the patricians should undertake a long and perilous navigation to
copy the purest model of democracy. In the comparison of the
tables of Solon with those of the Decemvirs, some casual
resemblance may be found; some rules which nature and reason have
revealed to every society; some proofs of a common descent from
Egypt or Phnicia. But in all the great lines of public and
private jurisprudence, the legislators of Rome and Athens appear
to be strangers or adverse at each other.
Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. --
Part II.
Whatever might be the origin or the merit of the twelve
tables, they obtained among the Romans that blind and partial
reverence which the lawyers of every country delight to bestow on
their municipal institutions. The study is recommended by Cicero
as equally pleasant and instructive. "They amuse the mind by the
remembrance of old words and the portrait of ancient manners;
they inculcate the soundest principles of government and morals;
and I am not afraid to affirm, that the brief composition of the
Decemvirs surpasses in genuine value the libraries of Grecian
philosophy. How admirable," says Tully, with honest or affected
prejudice, "is the wisdom of our ancestors! We alone are the
masters of civil prudence, and our superiority is the more
conspicuous, if we deign to cast our eyes on the rude and almost
ridiculous jurisprudence of Draco, of Solon, and of Lycurgus."
The twelve tables were committed to the memory of the young and
the meditation of the old; they were transcribed and illustrated
with learned diligence; they had escaped the flames of the Gauls,
they subsisted in the age of Justinian, and their subsequent loss
has been imperfectly restored by the labors of modern critics.
But although these venerable monuments were considered as the
rule of right and the fountain of justice, they were overwhelmed
by the weight and variety of new laws, which, at the end of five
centuries, became a grievance more intolerable than the vices of
the city. Three thousand brass plates, the acts of the senate of
the people, were deposited in the Capitol: and some of the acts,
as the Julian law against extortion, surpassed the number of a
hundred chapters. The Decemvirs had neglected to import the
sanction of Zaleucus, which so long maintained the integrity of
his republic. A Locrian, who proposed any new law, stood forth in
the assembly of the people with a cord round his neck, and if the
law was rejected, the innovator was instantly strangled.
The Decemvirs had been named, and their tables were approved,
by an assembly of the centuries, in
which riches preponderated against numbers. To the first class of
Romans, the proprietors of one hundred thousand pounds of copper,
ninety-eight votes were assigned, and only ninety-five were left
for the six inferior classes, distributed according to their
substance by the artful policy of Servius. But the tribunes soon
established a more specious and popular maxim, that every citizen
has an equal right to enact the laws which he is bound to obey.
Instead of the centuries, they convened
the tribes; and the patricians, after
an impotent struggle, submitted to the decrees of an assembly, in
which their votes were confounded with those of the meanest
plebeians. Yet as long as the tribes successively passed over
narrow bridges and gave their voices
aloud, the conduct of each citizen was exposed to the eyes and
ears of his friends and countrymen. The insolvent debtor
consulted the wishes of his creditor; the client would have
blushed to oppose the views of his patron; the general was
followed by his veterans, and the aspect of a grave magistrate
was a living lesson to the multitude. A new method of secret
ballot abolished the influence of fear and shame, of honor and
interest, and the abuse of freedom accelerated the progress of
anarchy and despotism. The Romans had aspired to be equal; they
were levelled by the equality of servitude; and the dictates of
Augustus were patiently ratified by the formal consent of the
tribes or centuries. Once, and once only, he experienced a
sincere and strenuous opposition. His subjects had resigned all
political liberty; they defended the freedom of domestic life. A
law which enforced the obligation, and strengthened the bonds of
marriage, was clamorously rejected; Propertius, in the arms of
Delia, applauded the victory of licentious love; and the project
of reform was suspended till a new and more tractable generation
had arisen in the world. Such an example was not necessary to
instruct a prudent usurper of the mischief of popular assemblies;
and their abolition, which Augustus had silently prepared, was
accomplished without resistance, and almost without notice, on
the accession of his successor. Sixty thousand plebeian
legislators, whom numbers made formidable, and poverty secure,
were supplanted by six hundred senators, who held their honors,
their fortunes, and their lives, by the clemency of the emperor.
The loss of executive power was alleviated by the gift of
legislative authority; and Ulpian might assert, after the
practice of two hundred years, that the decrees of the senate
obtained the force and validity of laws. In the times of freedom,
the resolves of the people had often been dictated by the passion
or error of the moment: the Cornelian, Pompeian, and Julian laws
were adapted by a single hand to the prevailing disorders; but
the senate, under the reign of the Cæsars, was composed of
magistrates and lawyers, and in questions of private
jurisprudence, the integrity of their judgment was seldom
perverted by fear or interest.
The silence or ambiguity of the laws was supplied by the
occasional edicts of those magistrates who were invested with the
honors of the state. This ancient
prerogative of the Roman kings was transferred, in their
respective offices, to the consuls and dictators, the censors and
prætors; and a similar right was assumed by the tribunes of
the people, the ediles, and the proconsuls. At Rome, and in the
provinces, the duties of the subject, and the intentions of the
governor, were proclaimed; and the civil jurisprudence was
reformed by the annual edicts of the supreme judge, the
prætor of the city. * As soon as he ascended his tribunal,
he announced by the voice of the crier, and afterwards inscribed
on a white wall, the rules which he proposed to follow in the
decision of doubtful cases, and the relief which his equity would
afford from the precise rigor of ancient statutes. A principle of
discretion more congenial to monarchy was introduced into the
republic: the art of respecting the name, and eluding the
efficacy, of the laws, was improved by successive prætors;
subtleties and fictions were invented to defeat the plainest
meaning of the Decemvirs, and where the end was salutary, the
means were frequently absurd. The secret or probable wish of the
dead was suffered to prevail over the order of succession and the
forms of testaments; and the claimant, who was excluded from the
character of heir, accepted with equal pleasure from an indulgent
prætor the possession of the goods of his late kinsman or
benefactor. In the redress of private wrongs, compensations and
fines were substituted to the obsolete rigor of the Twelve
Tables; time and space were annihilated by fanciful suppositions;
and the plea of youth, or fraud, or violence, annulled the
obligation, or excused the performance, of an inconvenient
contract. A jurisdiction thus vague and arbitrary was exposed to
the most dangerous abuse: the substance, as well as the form, of
justice were often sacrificed to the prejudices of virtue, the
bias of laudable affection, and the grosser seductions of
interest or resentment. But the errors or vices of each
prætor expired with his annual office; such maxims alone as
had been approved by reason and practice were copied by
succeeding judges; the rule of proceeding was defined by the
solution of new cases; and the temptations of injustice were
removed by the Cornelian law, which compelled the prætor of
the year to adhere to the spirit and letter of his first
proclamation. It was reserved for the curiosity and learning of
Adrian, to accomplish the design which had been conceived by the
genius of Cæsar; and the prætorship of Salvius
Julian, an eminent lawyer, was immortalized by the composition of
the Perpetual Edict. This well-digested code was ratified by the
emperor and the senate; the long divorce of law and equity was at
length reconciled; and, instead of the Twelve Tables, the
perpetual edict was fixed as the invariable standard of civil
jurisprudence.
From Augustus to Trajan, the modest Cæsars were content
to promulgate their edicts in the various characters of a Roman
magistrate; * and, in the decrees of the senate, the
epistles and
orations of the prince were
respectfully inserted. Adrian appears to have been the first who
assumed, without disguise, the plenitude of legislative power.
And this innovation, so agreeable to his active mind, was
countenanced by the patience of the times, and his long absence
from the seat of government. The same policy was embraced by
succeeding monarchs, and, according to the harsh metaphor of
Tertullian, "the gloomy and intricate forest of ancient laws was
cleared away by the axe of royal mandates and
constitutions." During four centuries,
from Adrian to Justinian the public and private jurisprudence was
moulded by the will of the sovereign; and few institutions,
either human or divine, were permitted to stand on their former
basis. The origin of Imperial legislation was concealed by the
darkness of ages and the terrors of armed despotism; and a double
fiction was propagated by the servility, or perhaps the
ignorance, of the civilians, who basked in the sunshine of the
Roman and Byzantine courts. 1. To the prayer of the ancient
Cæsars, the people or the senate had sometimes granted a
personal exemption from the obligation and penalty of particular
statutes; and each indulgence was an act of jurisdiction
exercised by the republic over the first of her citizens. His
humble privilege was at length transformed into the prerogative
of a tyrant; and the Latin expression of "released from the laws"
was supposed to exalt the emperor above
all human restraints, and to leave his
conscience and reason as the sacred measure of his conduct. 2. A
similar dependence was implied in the decrees of the senate,
which, in every reign, defined the titles and powers of an
elective magistrate. But it was not before the ideas, and even
the language, of the Romans had been corrupted, that a
royal law, and an irrevocable gift of
the people, were created by the fancy of Ulpian, or more probably
of Tribonian himself; and the origin of Imperial power, though
false in fact, and slavish in its consequence, was supported on a
principle of freedom and justice. "The pleasure of the emperor
has the vigor and effect of law, since the Roman people, by the
royal law, have transferred to their prince the full extent of
their own power and sovereignty." The will of a single man, of a
child perhaps, was allowed to prevail over the wisdom of ages and
the inclinations of millions; and the degenerate Greeks were
proud to declare, that in his hands alone the arbitrary exercise
of legislation could be safely deposited. "What interest or
passion," exclaims Theophilus in the court of Justinian, "can
reach the calm and sublime elevation of the monarch? He is
already master of the lives and fortunes of his subjects; and
those who have incurred his displeasure are already numbered with
the dead." Disdaining the language of flattery, the historian may
confess, that in questions of private jurisprudence, the absolute
sovereign of a great empire can seldom be influenced by any
personal considerations. Virtue, or even reason, will suggest to
his impartial mind, that he is the guardian of peace and equity,
and that the interest of society is inseparably connected with
his own. Under the weakest and most vicious reign, the seat of
justice was filled by the wisdom and integrity of Papinian and
Ulpian; and the purest materials of the Code and Pandects are
inscribed with the names of Caracalla and his ministers. The
tyrant of Rome was sometimes the benefactor of the provinces. A
dagger terminated the crimes of Domitian; but the prudence of
Nerva confirmed his acts, which, in the joy of their deliverance,
had been rescinded by an indignant senate. Yet in the
rescripts, replies to the consultations
of the magistrates, the wisest of princes might be deceived by a
partial exposition of the case. And this abuse, which placed
their hasty decisions on the same level with mature and
deliberate acts of legislation, was ineffectually condemned by
the sense and example of Trajan. The
rescripts of the emperor, his
grants and
decrees, his
edicts and pragmatic
sanctions, were subscribed in purple ink, and
transmitted to the provinces as general or special laws, which
the magistrates were bound to execute, and the people to obey.
But as their number continually multiplied, the rule of obedience
became each day more doubtful and obscure, till the will of the
sovereign was fixed and ascertained in the Gregorian, the
Hermogenian, and the Theodosian codes. * The two first, of which
some fragments have escaped, were framed by two private lawyers,
to preserve the constitutions of the Pagan emperors from Adrian
to Constantine. The third, which is still extant, was digested in
sixteen books by the order of the younger Theodosius to
consecrate the laws of the Christian princes from Constantine to
his own reign. But the three codes obtained an equal authority in
the tribunals; and any act which was not included in the sacred
deposit might be disregarded by the judge as spurious or
obsolete.
Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. --
Part III.
Among savage nations, the want of letters is imperfectly
supplied by the use of visible signs, which awaken attention, and
perpetuate the remembrance of any public or private transaction.
The jurisprudence of the first Romans exhibited the scenes of a
pantomime; the words were adapted to the gestures, and the
slightest error or neglect in the forms
of proceeding was sufficient to annul the
substance of the fairest claim. The
communion of the marriage-life was denoted by the necessary
elements of fire and water; and the divorced wife resigned the
bunch of keys, by the delivery of which she had been invested
with the government of the family. The manumission of a son, or a
slave, was performed by turning him round with a gentle blow on
the cheek; a work was prohibited by the casting of a stone;
prescription was interrupted by the breaking of a branch; the
clinched fist was the symbol of a pledge or deposit; the right
hand was the gift of faith and confidence. The indenture of
covenants was a broken straw; weights and scales were introduced
into every payment, and the heir who accepted a testament was
sometimes obliged to snap his fingers, to cast away his garments,
and to leap or dance with real or affected transport. If a
citizen pursued any stolen goods into a neighbor's house, he
concealed his nakedness with a linen towel, and hid his face with
a mask or basin, lest he should encounter the eyes of a virgin or
a matron. In a civil action the plaintiff touched the ear of his
witness, seized his reluctant adversary by the neck, and
implored, in solemn lamentation, the aid of his fellow-citizens.
The two competitors grasped each other's hand as if they stood
prepared for combat before the tribunal of the prætor; he
commanded them to produce the object of the dispute; they went,
they returned with measured steps, and a clod of earth was cast
at his feet to represent the field for which they contended. This
occult science of the words and actions of law was the
inheritance of the pontiffs and patricians. Like the Chaldean
astrologers, they announced to their clients the days of business
and repose; these important trifles were interwoven with the
religion of Numa; and after the publication of the Twelve Tables,
the Roman people was still enslaved by the ignorance of judicial
proceedings. The treachery of some plebeian officers at length
revealed the profitable mystery: in a more enlightened age, the
legal actions were derided and observed; and the same antiquity
which sanctified the practice, obliterated the use and meaning of
this primitive language.
A more liberal art was cultivated, however, by the sage of
Rome, who, in a stricter sense, may be considered as the authors
of the civil law. The alteration of the idiom and manners of the
Romans rendered the style of the Twelve Tables less familiar to
each rising generation, and the doubtful passages were
imperfectly explained by the study of legal antiquarians. To
define the ambiguities, to circumscribe the latitude, to apply
the principles, to extend the consequences, to reconcile the real
or apparent contradictions, was a much nobler and more important
task; and the province of legislation was silently invaded by the
expounders of ancient statutes. Their subtle interpretations
concurred with the equity of the prætor, to reform the
tyranny of the darker ages: however strange or intricate the
means, it was the aim of artificial jurisprudence to restore the
simple dictates of nature and reason, and the skill of private
citizens was usefully employed to undermine the public
institutions of their country. The revolution of almost one
thousand years, from the Twelve Tables to the reign of Justinian,
may be divided into three periods, almost equal in duration, and
distinguished from each other by the mode of instruction and the
character of the civilians. Pride and ignorance contributed,
during the first period, to confine within narrow limits the
science of the Roman law. On the public days of market or
assembly, the masters of the art were seen walking in the forum
ready to impart the needful advice to the meanest of their
fellow-citizens, from whose votes, on a future occasion, they
might solicit a grateful return. As their years and honors
increased, they seated themselves at home on a chair or throne,
to expect with patient gravity the visits of their clients, who
at the dawn of day, from the town and country, began to thunder
at their door. The duties of social life, and the incidents of
judicial proceeding, were the ordinary subject of these
consultations, and the verbal or written opinion of the
juris-consults was framed according to
the rules of prudence and law. The youths of their own order and
family were permitted to listen; their children enjoyed the
benefit of more private lessons, and the Mucian race was long
renowned for the hereditary knowledge of the civil law. The
second period, the learned and splendid age of jurisprudence, may
be extended from the birth of Cicero to the reign of Severus
Alexander. A system was formed, schools were instituted, books
were composed, and both the living and the dead became
subservient to the instruction of the student. The
tripartite of Ælius Pætus,
surnamed Catus, or the Cunning, was preserved as the oldest work
of Jurisprudence. Cato the censor derived some additional fame
from his legal studies, and those of his son: the kindred
appellation of Mucius Scævola was illustrated by three
sages of the law; but the perfection of the science was ascribed
to Servius Sulpicius, their disciple, and the friend of Tully;
and the long succession, which shone with equal lustre under the
republic and under the Cæsars, is finally closed by the
respectable characters of Papinian, of Paul, and of Ulpian. Their
names, and the various titles of their productions, have been
minutely preserved, and the example of Labeo may suggest some
idea of their diligence and fecundity. That eminent lawyer of the
Augustan age divided the year between the city and country,
between business and composition; and four hundred books are
enumerated as the fruit of his retirement. Of the collection of
his rival Capito, the two hundred and fifty-ninth book is
expressly quoted; and few teachers could deliver their opinions
in less than a century of volumes. In the third period, between
the reigns of Alexander and Justinian, the oracles of
jurisprudence were almost mute. The measure of curiosity had been
filled: the throne was occupied by tyrants and Barbarians, the
active spirits were diverted by religious disputes, and the
professors of Rome, Constantinople, and Berytus, were humbly
content to repeat the lessons of their more enlightened
predecessors. From the slow advances and rapid decay of these
legal studies, it may be inferred, that they require a state of
peace and refinement. From the multitude of voluminous civilians
who fill the intermediate space, it is evident that such studies
may be pursued, and such works may be performed, with a common
share of judgment, experience, and industry. The genius of Cicero
and Virgil was more sensibly felt, as each revolving age had been
found incapable of producing a similar or a second: but the most
eminent teachers of the law were assured of leaving disciples
equal or superior to themselves in merit and reputation.
The jurisprudence which had been grossly adapted to the wants
of the first Romans, was polished and improved in the seventh
century of the city, by the alliance of Grecian philosophy. The
Scævolas had been taught by use and experience; but Servius
Sulpicius * was the first civilian who established his art on a
certain and general theory. For the discernment of truth and
falsehood he applied, as an infallible rule, the logic of
Aristotle and the stoics, reduced particular cases to general
principles, and diffused over the shapeless mass the light of
order and eloquence. Cicero, his contemporary and friend,
declined the reputation of a professed lawyer; but the
jurisprudence of his country was adorned by his incomparable
genius, which converts into gold every object that it touches.
After the example of Plato, he composed a republic; and, for the
use of his republic, a treatise of laws; in which he labors to
deduce from a celestial origin the wisdom and justice of the
Roman constitution. The whole universe, according to his sublime
hypothesis, forms one immense commonwealth: gods and men, who
participate of the same essence, are members of the same
community; reason prescribes the law of nature and nations; and
all positive institutions, however modified by accident or
custom, are drawn from the rule of right, which the Deity has
inscribed on every virtuous mind. From these philosophical
mysteries, he mildly excludes the sceptics who refuse to believe,
and the epicureans who are unwilling to act. The latter disdain
the care of the republic: he advises them to slumber in their
shady gardens. But he humbly entreats that the new academy would
be silent, since her bold objections would too soon destroy the
fair and well ordered structure of his lofty system. Plato,
Aristotle, and Zeno, he represents as the only teachers who arm
and instruct a citizen for the duties of social life. Of these,
the armor of the stoics was found to be of the firmest temper;
and it was chiefly worn, both for use and ornament, in the
schools of jurisprudence. From the portico, the Roman civilians
learned to live, to reason, and to die: but they imbibed in some
degree the prejudices of the sect; the love of paradox, the
pertinacious habits of dispute, and a minute attachment to words
and verbal distinctions. The superiority of
form to
matter was introduced to ascertain the
right of property: and the equality of crimes is countenanced by
an opinion of Trebatius, that he who touches the ear, touches the
whole body; and that he who steals from a heap of corn, or a
hogshead of wine, is guilty of the entire theft.
Arms, eloquence, and the study of the civil law, promoted a
citizen to the honors of the Roman state; and the three
professions were sometimes more conspicuous by their union in the
same character. In the composition of the edict, a learned
prætor gave a sanction and preference to his private
sentiments; the opinion of a censor, or a counsel, was
entertained with respect; and a doubtful interpretation of the
laws might be supported by the virtues or triumphs of the
civilian. The patrician arts were long protected by the veil of
mystery; and in more enlightened times, the freedom of inquiry
established the general principles of jurisprudence. Subtile and
intricate cases were elucidated by the disputes of the forum:
rules, axioms, and definitions, were admitted as the genuine
dictates of reason; and the consent of the legal professors was
interwoven into the practice of the tribunals. But these
interpreters could neither enact nor execute the laws of the
republic; and the judges might disregard the authority of the
Scævolas themselves, which was often overthrown by the
eloquence or sophistry of an ingenious pleader. Augustus and
Tiberius were the first to adopt, as a useful engine, the science
of the civilians; and their servile labors accommodated the old
system to the spirit and views of despotism. Under the fair
pretence of securing the dignity of the art, the privilege of
subscribing legal and valid opinions was confined to the sages of
senatorian or equestrian rank, who had been previously approved
by the judgment of the prince; and this monopoly prevailed, till
Adrian restored the freedom of the profession to every citizen
conscious of his abilities and knowledge. The discretion of the
prætor was now governed by the lessons of his teachers; the
judges were enjoined to obey the comment as well as the text of
the law; and the use of codicils was a memorable innovation,
which Augustus ratified by the advice of the civilians. *
The most absolute mandate could only require that the judges
should agree with the civilians, if the civilians agreed among
themselves. But positive institutions are often the result of
custom and prejudice; laws and language are ambiguous and
arbitrary; where reason is incapable of pronouncing, the love of
argument is inflamed by the envy of rivals, the vanity of
masters, the blind attachment of their disciples; and the Roman
jurisprudence was divided by the once famous sects of the
Proculians and
Sabinians. Two sages of the law, Ateius
Capito and Antistius Labeo, adorned the peace of the Augustan
age; the former distinguished by the favor of his sovereign; the
latter more illustrious by his contempt of that favor, and his
stern though harmless opposition to the tyrant of Rome. Their
legal studies were influenced by the various colors of their
temper and principles. Labeo was attached to the form of the old
republic; his rival embraced the more profitable substance of the
rising monarchy. But the disposition of a courtier is tame and
submissive; and Capito seldom presumed to deviate from the
sentiments, or at least from the words, of his predecessors;
while the bold republican pursued his independent ideas without
fear of paradox or innovations. The freedom of Labeo was
enslaved, however, by the rigor of his own conclusions, and he
decided, according to the letter of the law, the same questions
which his indulgent competitor resolved with a latitude of equity
more suitable to the common sense and feelings of mankind. If a
fair exchange had been substituted to the payment of money,
Capito still considered the transaction as a legal sale; and he
consulted nature for the age of puberty, without confining his
definition to the precise period of twelve or fourteen years.
This opposition of sentiments was propagated in the writings and
lessons of the two founders; the schools of Capito and Labeo
maintained their inveterate conflict from the age of Augustus to
that of Adrian; and the two sects derived their appellations from
Sabinus and Proculus, their most celebrated teachers. The names
of Cassians and
Pegasians were likewise applied to the
same parties; but, by a strange reverse, the popular cause was in
the hands of Pegasus, a timid slave of Domitian, while the
favorite of the Cæsars was represented by Cassius, who
gloried in his descent from the patriot assassin. By the
perpetual edict, the controversies of the sects were in a great
measure determined. For that important work, the emperor Adrian
preferred the chief of the Sabinians: the friends of monarchy
prevailed; but the moderation of Salvius Julian insensibly
reconciled the victors and the vanquished. Like the contemporary
philosophers, the lawyers of the age of the Antonines disclaimed
the authority of a master, and adopted from every system the most
probable doctrines. But their writings would have been less
voluminous, had their choice been more unanimous. The conscience
of the judge was perplexed by the number and weight of discordant
testimonies, and every sentence that his passion or interest
might pronounce was justified by the sanction of some venerable
name. An indulgent edict of the younger Theodosius excused him
from the labor of comparing and weighing their arguments. Five
civilians, Caius, Papinian, Paul, Ulpian, and Modestinus, were
established as the oracles of jurisprudence: a majority was
decisive: but if their opinions were equally divided, a casting
vote was ascribed to the superior wisdom of Papinian.
Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. --
Part IV.
When Justinian ascended the throne, the reformation of the
Roman jurisprudence was an arduous but indispensable task. In the
space of ten centuries, the infinite variety of laws and legal
opinions had filled many thousand volumes, which no fortune could
purchase and no capacity could digest. Books could not easily be
found; and the judges, poor in the midst of riches, were reduced
to the exercise of their illiterate discretion. The subjects of
the Greek provinces were ignorant of the language that disposed
of their lives and properties; and the
barbarous dialect of the Latins was
imperfectly studied in the academies of Berytus and
Constantinople. As an Illyrian soldier, that idiom was familiar
to the infancy of Justinian; his youth had been instructed by the
lessons of jurisprudence, and his Imperial choice selected the
most learned civilians of the East, to labor with their sovereign
in the work of reformation. The theory of professors was assisted
by the practice of advocates, and the experience of magistrates;
and the whole undertaking was animated by the spirit of
Tribonian. This extraordinary man, the object of so much praise
and censure, was a native of Side in Pamphylia; and his genius,
like that of Bacon, embraced, as his own, all the business and
knowledge of the age. Tribonian composed, both in prose and
verse, on a strange diversity of curious and abstruse subjects: a
double panegyric of Justinian and the life of the philosopher
Theodotus; the nature of happiness and the duties of government;
Homer's catalogue and the four-and-twenty sorts of metre; the
astronomical canon of Ptolemy; the changes of the months; the
houses of the planets; and the harmonic system of the world. To
the literature of Greece he added the use of the Latin tongue;
the Roman civilians were deposited in his library and in his
mind; and he most assiduously cultivated those arts which opened
the road of wealth and preferment. From the bar of the
Prætorian præfects, he raised himself to the honors
of quæstor, of consul, and of master of the offices: the
council of Justinian listened to his eloquence and wisdom; and
envy was mitigated by the gentleness and affability of his
manners. The reproaches of impiety and avarice have stained the
virtue or the reputation of Tribonian. In a bigoted and
persecuting court, the principal minister was accused of a secret
aversion to the Christian faith, and was supposed to entertain
the sentiments of an Atheist and a Pagan, which have been
imputed, inconsistently enough, to the last philosophers of
Greece. His avarice was more clearly proved and more sensibly
felt. If he were swayed by gifts in the administration of
justice, the example of Bacon will again occur; nor can the merit
of Tribonian atone for his baseness, if he degraded the sanctity
of his profession; and if laws were every day enacted, modified,
or repealed, for the base consideration of his private emolument.
In the sedition of Constantinople, his removal was granted to the
clamors, perhaps to the just indignation, of the people: but the
quæstor was speedily restored, and, till the hour of his
death, he possessed, above twenty years, the favor and confidence
of the emperor. His passive and dutiful submission had been
honored with the praise of Justinian himself, whose vanity was
incapable of discerning how often that submission degenerated
into the grossest adulation. Tribonian adored the virtues of his
gracious of his gracious master; the earth was unworthy of such a
prince; and he affected a pious fear, that Justinian, like Elijah
or Romulus, would be snatched into the air, and translated alive
to the mansions of celestial glory.
If Cæsar had achieved the reformation of the Roman law,
his creative genius, enlightened by reflection and study, would
have given to the world a pure and original system of
jurisprudence. Whatever flattery might suggest, the emperor of
the East was afraid to establish his private judgment as the
standard of equity: in the possession of legislative power, he
borrowed the aid of time and opinion; and his laborious
compilations are guarded by the sages and legislature of past
times. Instead of a statue cast in a simple mould by the hand of
an artist, the works of Justinian represent a tessellated
pavement of antique and costly, but too often of incoherent,
fragments. In the first year of his reign, he directed the
faithful Tribonian, and nine learned associates, to revise the
ordinances of his predecessors, as they were contained, since the
time of Adrian, in the Gregorian Hermogenian, and Theodosian
codes; to purge the errors and contradictions, to retrench
whatever was obsolete or superfluous, and to select the wise and
salutary laws best adapted to the practice of the tribunals and
the use of his subjects. The work was accomplished in fourteen
months; and the twelve books or tables,
which the new decemvirs produced, might be designed to imitate
the labors of their Roman predecessors. The new Code of Justinian
was honored with his name, and confirmed by his royal signature:
authentic transcripts were multiplied by the pens of notaries and
scribes; they were transmitted to the magistrates of the
European, the Asiatic, and afterwards the African provinces; and
the law of the empire was proclaimed on solemn festivals at the
doors of churches. A more arduous operation was still behind --
to extract the spirit of jurisprudence from the decisions and
conjectures, the questions and disputes, of the Roman civilians.
Seventeen lawyers, with Tribonian at their head, were appointed
by the emperor to exercise an absolute jurisdiction over the
works of their predecessors. If they had obeyed his commands in
ten years, Justinian would have been satisfied with their
diligence; and the rapid composition of the Digest or Pandects,
in three years, will deserve praise or censure, according to the
merit of the execution. From the library of Tribonian, they chose
forty, the most eminent civilians of former times: two thousand
treatises were comprised in an abridgment of fifty books; and it
has been carefully recorded, that three millions of lines or
sentences, were reduced, in this abstract, to the moderate number
of one hundred and fifty thousand. The edition of this great work
was delayed a month after that of the Institutes; and it seemed
reasonable that the elements should precede the digest of the
Roman law. As soon as the emperor had approved their labors, he
ratified, by his legislative power, the speculations of these
private citizens: their commentaries, on the twelve tables, the
perpetual edict, the laws of the people, and the decrees of the
senate, succeeded to the authority of the text; and the text was
abandoned, as a useless, though venerable, relic of antiquity.
The Code, the
Pandects, and the
Institutes, were declared to be the
legitimate system of civil jurisprudence; they alone were
admitted into the tribunals, and they alone were taught in the
academies of Rome, Constantinople, and Berytus. Justinian
addressed to the senate and provinces his eternal
oracles; and his pride, under the mask of piety,
ascribed the consummation of this great design to the support and
inspiration of the Deity.
Since the emperor declined the fame and envy of original
composition, we can only require, at his hands, method choice,
and fidelity, the humble, though indispensable, virtues of a
compiler. Among the various combinations of ideas, it is
difficult to assign any reasonable preference; but as the order
of Justinian is different in his three works, it is possible that
all may be wrong; and it is certain that two cannot be right. In
the selection of ancient laws, he seems to have viewed his
predecessors without jealousy, and with equal regard: the series
could not ascend above the reign of Adrian, and the narrow
distinction of Paganism and Christianity, introduced by the
superstition of Theodosius, had been abolished by the consent of
mankind. But the jurisprudence of the Pandects is circumscribed
within a period of a hundred years, from the perpetual edict to
the death of Severus Alexander: the civilians who lived under the
first Cæsars are seldom permitted to speak, and only three
names can be attributed to the age of the republic. The favorite
of Justinian (it has been fiercely urged) was fearful of
encountering the light of freedom and the gravity of Roman sages.
Tribonian condemned to oblivion the genuine and native wisdom of
Cato, the Scævolas, and Sulpicius; while he invoked spirits
more congenial to his own, the Syrians, Greeks, and Africans, who
flocked to the Imperial court to study Latin as a foreign tongue,
and jurisprudence as a lucrative profession. But the ministers of
Justinian, were instructed to labor, not for the curiosity of
antiquarians, but for the immediate benefit of his subjects. It
was their duty to select the useful and practical parts of the
Roman law; and the writings of the old republicans, however
curious on excellent, were no longer suited to the new system of
manners, religion, and government. Perhaps, if the preceptors and
friends of Cicero were still alive, our candor would acknowledge,
that, except in purity of language, their intrinsic merit was
excelled by the school of Papinian and Ulpian. The science of the
laws is the slow growth of time and experience, and the advantage
both of method and materials, is naturally assumed by the most
recent authors. The civilians of the reign of the Antonines had
studied the works of their predecessors: their philosophic spirit
had mitigated the rigor of antiquity, simplified the forms of
proceeding, and emerged from the jealousy and prejudice of the
rival sects. The choice of the authorities that compose the
Pandects depended on the judgment of Tribonian: but the power of
his sovereign could not absolve him from the sacred obligations
of truth and fidelity. As the legislator of the empire, Justinian
might repeal the acts of the Antonines, or condemn, as seditious,
the free principles, which were maintained by the last of the
Roman lawyers. But the existence of
past facts is placed beyond the reach of despotism; and the
emperor was guilty of fraud and forgery, when he corrupted the
integrity of their text, inscribed with their venerable names the
words and ideas of his servile reign, and suppressed, by the hand
of power, the pure and authentic copies of their sentiments. The
changes and interpolations of Tribonian and his colleagues are
excused by the pretence of uniformity: but their cares have been
insufficient, and the antinomies, or
contradictions of the Code and Pandects, still exercise the
patience and subtilty of modern civilians.
A rumor devoid of evidence has been propagated by the enemies
of Justinian; that the jurisprudence of ancient Rome was reduced
to ashes by the author of the Pandects, from the vain persuasion,
that it was now either false or superfluous. Without usurping an
office so invidious, the emperor might safely commit to ignorance
and time the accomplishments of this destructive wish. Before the
invention of printing and paper, the labor and the materials of
writing could be purchased only by the rich; and it may
reasonably be computed, that the price of books was a hundred
fold their present value. Copies were slowly multiplied and
cautiously renewed: the hopes of profit tempted the sacrilegious
scribes to erase the characters of antiquity, * and Sophocles or
Tacitus were obliged to resign the parchment to missals,
homilies, and the golden legend. If such was the fate of the most
beautiful compositions of genius, what stability could be
expected for the dull and barren works of an obsolete science?
The books of jurisprudence were interesting to few, and
entertaining to none: their value was connected with present use,
and they sunk forever as soon as that use was superseded by the
innovations of fashion, superior merit, or public authority. In
the age of peace and learning, between Cicero and the last of the
Antonines, many losses had been already sustained, and some
luminaries of the school, or forum, were known only to the
curious by tradition and report. Three hundred and sixty years of
disorder and decay accelerated the progress of oblivion; and it
may fairly be presumed, that of the writings, which Justinian is
accused of neglecting, many were no longer to be found in the
libraries of the East. The copies of Papinian, or Ulpian, which
the reformer had proscribed, were deemed unworthy of future
notice: the Twelve Tables and prætorian edicts insensibly
vanished, and the monuments of ancient Rome were neglected or
destroyed by the envy and ignorance of the Greeks. Even the
Pandects themselves have escaped with difficulty and danger from
the common shipwreck, and criticism has pronounced that
all the editions and manuscripts of the
West are derived from one original. It
was transcribed at Constantinople in the beginning of the seventh
century, was successively transported by the accidents of war and
commerce to Amalphi, Pisa, and Florence, and is now deposited as
a sacred relic in the ancient palace of the republic.
It is the first care of a reformer to prevent any future
reformation. To maintain the text of the Pandects, the
Institutes, and the Code, the use of ciphers and abbreviations
was rigorously proscribed; and as Justinian recollected, that the
perpetual edict had been buried under the weight of commentators,
he denounced the punishment of forgery against the rash civilians
who should presume to interpret or pervert the will of their
sovereign. The scholars of Accursius, of Bartolus, of Cujacius,
should blush for their accumulated guilt, unless they dare to
dispute his right of binding the authority of his successors, and
the native freedom of the mind. But the emperor was unable to fix
his own inconstancy; and, while he boasted of renewing the
exchange of Diomede, of transmuting brass into gold, discovered
the necessity of purifying his gold from the mixture of baser
alloy. Six years had not elapsed from the publication of the
Code, before he condemned the imperfect attempt, by a new and
more accurate edition of the same work; which he enriched with
two hundred of his own laws, and fifty decisions of the darkest
and most intricate points of jurisprudence. Every year, or,
according to Procopius, each day, of his long reign, was marked
by some legal innovation. Many of his acts were rescinded by
himself; many were rejected by his successors; many have been
obliterated by time; but the number of sixteen Edicts, and one
hundred and sixty-eight Novels, has been admitted into the
authentic body of the civil jurisprudence. In the opinion of a
philosopher superior to the prejudices of his profession, these
incessant, and, for the most part, trifling alterations, can be
only explained by the venal spirit of a prince, who sold without
shame his judgments and his laws. The charge of the secret
historian is indeed explicit and vehement; but the sole instance,
which he produces, may be ascribed to the devotion as well as to
the avarice of Justinian. A wealthy bigot had bequeathed his
inheritance to the church of Emesa; and its value was enhanced by
the dexterity of an artist, who subscribed confessions of debt
and promises of payment with the names of the richest Syrians.
They pleaded the established prescription of thirty or forty
years; but their defence was overruled by a retrospective edict,
which extended the claims of the church to the term of a century;
an edict so pregnant with injustice and disorder, that, after
serving this occasional purpose, it was prudently abolished in
the same reign. If candor will acquit the emperor himself, and
transfer the corruption to his wife and favorites, the suspicion
of so foul a vice must still degrade the majesty of his laws; and
the advocates of Justinian may acknowledge, that such levity,
whatsoever be the motive, is unworthy of a legislator and a
man.
Monarchs seldom condescend to become the preceptors of their
subjects; and some praise is due to Justinian, by whose command
an ample system was reduced to a short and elementary treatise.
Among the various institutes of the Roman law, those of Caius
were the most popular in the East and West; and their use may be
considered as an evidence of their merit. They were selected by
the Imperial delegates, Tribonian, Theophilus, and Dorotheus; and
the freedom and purity of the Antonines was incrusted with the
coarser materials of a degenerate age. The same volume which
introduced the youth of Rome, Constantinople, and Berytus, to the
gradual study of the Code and Pandects, is still precious to the
historian, the philosopher, and the magistrate. The Institutes of
Justinian are divided into four books: they proceed, with no
contemptible method, from, I. Persons,
to, II. Things, and from things, to,
III. Actions; and the article IV., of
Private Wrongs, is terminated by the
principles of Criminal Law. *
Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. --
Part IV.
The distinction of ranks and persons
is the firmest basis of a mixed and limited government. In
France, the remains of liberty are kept alive by the spirit, the
honors, and even the prejudices, of fifty thousand nobles. Two
hundred families supply, in lineal descent, the second branch of
English legislature, which maintains, between the king and
commons, the balance of the constitution. A gradation of
patricians and plebeians, of strangers and subjects, has
supported the aristocracy of Genoa, Venice, and ancient Rome. The
perfect equality of men is the point in which the extremes of
democracy and despotism are confounded; since the majesty of the
prince or people would be offended, if any heads were exalted
above the level of their fellow-slaves or fellow-citizens. In the
decline of the Roman empire, the proud distinctions of the
republic were gradually abolished, and the reason or instinct of
Justinian completed the simple form of an absolute monarchy. The
emperor could not eradicate the popular reverence which always
waits on the possession of hereditary wealth, or the memory of
famous ancestors. He delighted to honor, with titles and
emoluments, his generals, magistrates, and senators; and his
precarious indulgence communicated some rays of their glory to
the persons of their wives and children. But in the eye of the
law, all Roman citizens were equal, and all subjects of the
empire were citizens of Rome. That inestimable character was
degraded to an obsolete and empty name. The voice of a Roman
could no longer enact his laws, or create the annual ministers of
his power: his constitutional rights might have checked the
arbitrary will of a master: and the bold adventurer from Germany
or Arabia was admitted, with equal favor, to the civil and
military command, which the citizen alone had been once entitled
to assume over the conquests of his fathers. The first
Cæsars had scrupulously guarded the distinction of
ingenuous and
servile birth, which was decided by the
condition of the mother; and the candor of the laws was
satisfied, if her freedom could be ascertained, during a single
moment, between the conception and the delivery. The slaves, who
were liberated by a generous master, immediately entered into the
middle class of libertines or freedmen;
but they could never be enfranchised from the duties of obedience
and gratitude; whatever were the fruits of their industry, their
patron and his family inherited the third part; or even the whole
of their fortune, if they died without children and without a
testament. Justinian respected the rights of patrons; but his
indulgence removed the badge of disgrace from the two inferior
orders of freedmen; whoever ceased to be a slave, obtained,
without reserve or delay, the station of a citizen; and at length
the dignity of an ingenuous birth, which nature had refused, was
created, or supposed, by the omnipotence of the emperor. Whatever
restraints of age, or forms, or numbers, had been formerly
introduced to check the abuse of manumissions, and the too rapid
increase of vile and indigent Romans, he finally abolished; and
the spirit of his laws promoted the extinction of domestic
servitude. Yet the eastern provinces were filled, in the time of
Justinian, with multitudes of slaves, either born or purchased
for the use of their masters; and the price, from ten to seventy
pieces of gold, was determined by their age, their strength, and
their education. But the hardships of this dependent state were
continually diminished by the influence of government and
religion: and the pride of a subject was no longer elated by his
absolute dominion over the life and happiness of his
bondsman.
The law of nature instructs most animals to cherish and
educate their infant progeny. The law of reason inculcates to the
human species the returns of filial piety. But the exclusive,
absolute, and perpetual dominion of the father over his children,
is peculiar to the Roman jurisprudence, and seems to be coeval
with the foundation of the city. The paternal power was
instituted or confirmed by Romulus himself; and, after the
practice of three centuries, it was inscribed on the fourth table
of the Decemvirs. In the forum, the senate, or the camp, the
adult son of a Roman citizen enjoyed the public and private
rights of a person: in his father's
house he was a mere thing; confounded
by the laws with the movables, the cattle, and the slaves, whom
the capricious master might alienate or destroy, without being
responsible to any earthly tribunal. The hand which bestowed the
daily sustenance might resume the voluntary gift, and whatever
was acquired by the labor or fortune of the son was immediately
lost in the property of the father. His stolen goods (his oxen or
his children) might be recovered by the same action of theft; and
if either had been guilty of a trespass, it was in his own option
to compensate the damage, or resign to the injured party the
obnoxious animal. At the call of indigence or avarice, the master
of a family could dispose of his children or his slaves. But the
condition of the slave was far more advantageous, since he
regained, by the first manumission, his alienated freedom: the
son was again restored to his unnatural father; he might be
condemned to servitude a second and a third time, and it was not
till after the third sale and deliverance, that he was
enfranchised from the domestic power which had been so repeatedly
abused. According to his discretion, a father might chastise the
real or imaginary faults of his children, by stripes, by
imprisonment, by exile, by sending them to the country to work in
chains among the meanest of his servants. The majesty of a parent
was armed with the power of life and death; and the examples of
such bloody executions, which were sometimes praised and never
punished, may be traced in the annals of Rome beyond the times of
Pompey and Augustus. Neither age, nor rank, nor the consular
office, nor the honors of a triumph, could exempt the most
illustrious citizen from the bonds of filial subjection: his own
descendants were included in the family of their common ancestor;
and the claims of adoption were not less sacred or less rigorous
than those of nature. Without fear, though not without danger of
abuse, the Roman legislators had reposed an unbounded confidence
in the sentiments of paternal love; and the oppression was
tempered by the assurance that each generation must succeed in
its turn to the awful dignity of parent and master.
The first limitation of paternal power is ascribed to the
justice and humanity of Numa; and the maid who, with
his father's consent, had espoused a
freeman, was protected from the disgrace of becoming the wife of
a slave. In the first ages, when the city was pressed, and often
famished, by her Latin and Tuscan neighbors, the sale of children
might be a frequent practice; but as a Roman could not legally
purchase the liberty of his fellow-citizen, the market must
gradually fail, and the trade would be destroyed by the conquests
of the republic. An imperfect right of property was at length
communicated to sons; and the threefold distinction of
profectitious,
adventitious, and
professional was ascertained by the
jurisprudence of the Code and Pandects. Of all that proceeded
from the father, he imparted only the use, and reserved the
absolute dominion; yet if his goods were sold, the filial portion
was excepted, by a favorable interpretation, from the demands of
the creditors. In whatever accrued by marriage, gift, or
collateral succession, the property was secured to the son; but
the father, unless he had been specially excluded, enjoyed the
usufruct during his life. As a just and prudent reward of
military virtue, the spoils of the enemy were acquired,
possessed, and bequeathed by the soldier alone; and the fair
analogy was extended to the emoluments of any liberal profession,
the salary of public service, and the sacred liberality of the
emperor or empress. The life of a citizen was less exposed than
his fortune to the abuse of paternal power. Yet his life might be
adverse to the interest or passions of an unworthy father: the
same crimes that flowed from the corruption, were more sensibly
felt by the humanity, of the Augustan age; and the cruel Erixo,
who whipped his son till he expired, was saved by the emperor
from the just fury of the multitude. The Roman father, from the
license of servile dominion, was reduced to the gravity and
moderation of a judge. The presence and opinion of Augustus
confirmed the sentence of exile pronounced against an intentional
parricide by the domestic tribunal of Arius. Adrian transported
to an island the jealous parent, who, like a robber, had seized
the opportunity of hunting, to assassinate a youth, the
incestuous lover of his step-mother. A private jurisdiction is
repugnant to the spirit of monarchy; the parent was again reduced
from a judge to an accuser; and the magistrates were enjoined by
Severus Alexander to hear his complaints and execute his
sentence. He could no longer take the life of a son without
incurring the guilt and punishment of murder; and the pains of
parricide, from which he had been excepted by the Pompeian law,
were finally inflicted by the justice of Constantine. The same
protection was due to every period of existence; and reason must
applaud the humanity of Paulus, for imputing the crime of murder
to the father who strangles, or starves, or abandons his new-born
infant; or exposes him in a public place to find the mercy which
he himself had denied. But the exposition of children was the
prevailing and stubborn vice of antiquity: it was sometimes
prescribed, often permitted, almost always practised with
impunity, by the nations who never entertained the Roman ideas of
paternal power; and the dramatic poets, who appeal to the human
heart, represent with indifference a popular custom which was
palliated by the motives of economy and compassion. If the father
could subdue his own feelings, he might escape, though not the
censure, at least the chastisement, of the laws; and the Roman
empire was stained with the blood of infants, till such murders
were included, by Valentinian and his colleagues, in the letter
and spirit of the Cornelian law. The lessons of jurisprudence and
Christianity had been insufficient to eradicate this inhuman
practice, till their gentle influence was fortified by the
terrors of capital punishment.
Experience has proved, that savages are the tyrants of the
female sex, and that the condition of women is usually softened
by the refinements of social life. In the hope of a robust
progeny, Lycurgus had delayed the season of marriage: it was
fixed by Numa at the tender age of twelve years, that the Roman
husband might educate to his will a pure and obedient virgin.
According to the custom of antiquity, he bought his bride of her
parents, and she fulfilled the
coemption by purchasing, with three
pieces of copper, a just introduction to his house and household
deities. A sacrifice of fruits was offered by the pontiffs in the
presence of ten witnesses; the contracting parties were seated on
the same sheep-skin; they tasted a salt cake of
far or rice; and this
confarreation, which denoted the
ancient food of Italy, served as an emblem of their mystic union
of mind and body. But this union on the side of the woman was
rigorous and unequal; and she renounced the name and worship of
her father's house, to embrace a new servitude, decorated only by
the title of adoption, a fiction of the law, neither rational nor
elegant, bestowed on the mother of a family (her proper
appellation) the strange characters of sister to her own
children, and of daughter to her husband or master, who was
invested with the plenitude of paternal power. By his judgment or
caprice her behavior was approved, or censured, or chastised; he
exercised the jurisdiction of life and death; and it was allowed,
that in the cases of adultery or drunkenness, the sentence might
be properly inflicted. She acquired and inherited for the sole
profit of her lord; and so clearly was woman defined, not as a
person, but as a
thing, that, if the original title were
deficient, she might be claimed, like other movables, by the use
and possession of an entire year. The inclination of the Roman
husband discharged or withheld the conjugal debt, so scrupulously
exacted by the Athenian and Jewish laws: but as polygamy was
unknown, he could never admit to his bed a fairer or a more
favored partner.
After the Punic triumphs, the matrons of Rome aspired to the
common benefits of a free and opulent republic: their wishes were
gratified by the indulgence of fathers and lovers, and their
ambition was unsuccessfully resisted by the gravity of Cato the
Censor. They declined the solemnities of the old nuptials;
defeated the annual prescription by an absence of three days;
and, without losing their name or independence, subscribed the
liberal and definite terms of a marriage contract. Of their
private fortunes, they communicated the use, and secured the
property: the estates of a wife could neither be alienated nor
mortgaged by a prodigal husband; their mutual gifts were
prohibited by the jealousy of the laws; and the misconduct of
either party might afford, under another name, a future subject
for an action of theft. To this loose and voluntary compact,
religious and civil rights were no longer essential; and, between
persons of a similar rank, the apparent community of life was
allowed as sufficient evidence of their nuptials. The dignity of
marriage was restored by the Christians, who derived all
spiritual grace from the prayers of the faithful and the
benediction of the priest or bishop. The origin, validity, and
duties of the holy institution were regulated by the tradition of
the synagogue, the precepts of the gospel, and the canons of
general or provincial synods; and the conscience of the
Christians was awed by the decrees and censures of their
ecclesiastical rulers. Yet the magistrates of Justinian were not
subject to the authority of the church: the emperor consulted the
unbelieving civilians of antiquity, and the choice of matrimonial
laws in the Code and Pandects, is directed by the earthly motives
of justice, policy, and the natural freedom of both sexes.
Besides the agreement of the parties, the essence of every
rational contract, the Roman marriage required the previous
approbation of the parents. A father might be forced by some
recent laws to supply the wants of a mature daughter; but even
his insanity was not gradually allowed to supersede the necessity
of his consent. The causes of the dissolution of matrimony have
varied among the Romans; but the most solemn sacrament, the
confarreation itself, might always be done away by rites of a
contrary tendency. In the first ages, the father of a family
might sell his children, and his wife was reckoned in the number
of his children: the domestic judge might pronounce the death of
the offender, or his mercy might expel her from his bed and
house; but the slavery of the wretched female was hopeless and
perpetual, unless he asserted for his own convenience the manly
prerogative of divorce. * The warmest applause has been lavished
on the virtue of the Romans, who abstained from the exercise of
this tempting privilege above five hundred years: but the same
fact evinces the unequal terms of a connection in which the slave
was unable to renounce her tyrant, and the tyrant was unwilling
to relinquish his slave. When the Roman matrons became the equal
and voluntary companions of their lords, a new jurisprudence was
introduced, that marriage, like other partnerships, might be
dissolved by the abdication of one of the associates. In three
centuries of prosperity and corruption, this principle was
enlarged to frequent practice and pernicious abuse. Passion,
interest, or caprice, suggested daily motives for the dissolution
of marriage; a word, a sign, a message, a letter, the mandate of
a freedman, declared the separation; the most tender of human
connections was degraded to a transient society of profit or
pleasure. According to the various conditions of life, both sexes
alternately felt the disgrace and injury: an inconstant spouse
transferred her wealth to a new family, abandoning a numerous,
perhaps a spurious, progeny to the paternal authority and care of
her late husband; a beautiful virgin might be dismissed to the
world, old, indigent, and friendless; but the reluctance of the
Romans, when they were pressed to marriage by Augustus,
sufficiently marks, that the prevailing institutions were least
favorable to the males. A specious theory is confuted by this
free and perfect experiment, which demonstrates, that the liberty
of divorce does not contribute to happiness and virtue. The
facility of separation would destroy all mutual confidence, and
inflame every trifling dispute: the minute difference between a
husband and a stranger, which might so easily be removed, might
still more easily be forgotten; and the matron, who in five years
can submit to the embraces of eight husbands, must cease to
reverence the chastity of her own person.
Insufficient remedies followed with distant and tardy steps
the rapid progress of the evil. The ancient worship of the Romans
afforded a peculiar goddess to hear and reconcile the complaints
of a married life; but her epithet of
Viriplaca, the appeaser of husbands,
too clearly indicates on which side submission and repentance
were always expected. Every act of a citizen was subject to the
judgment of the censors; the first who
used the privilege of divorce assigned, at their command, the
motives of his conduct; and a senator was expelled for dismissing
his virgin spouse without the knowledge or advice of his friends.
Whenever an action was instituted for the recovery of a marriage
portion, the prtor, as the guardian of
equity, examined the cause and the characters, and gently
inclined the scale in favor of the guiltless and injured party.
Augustus, who united the powers of both magistrates, adopted
their different modes of repressing or chastising the license of
divorce. The presence of seven Roman witnesses was required for
the validity of this solemn and deliberate act: if any adequate
provocation had been given by the husband, instead of the delay
of two years, he was compelled to refund immediately, or in the
space of six months; but if he could arraign the manners of his
wife, her guilt or levity was expiated by the loss of the sixth
or eighth part of her marriage portion. The Christian princes
were the first who specified the just causes of a private
divorce; their institutions, from Constantine to Justinian,
appear to fluctuate between the custom of the empire and the
wishes of the church, and the author of the Novels too frequently
reforms the jurisprudence of the Code and Pandects. In the most
rigorous laws, a wife was condemned to support a gamester, a
drunkard, or a libertine, unless he were guilty of homicide,
poison, or sacrilege, in which cases the marriage, as it should
seem, might have been dissolved by the hand of the executioner.
But the sacred right of the husband was invariably maintained, to
deliver his name and family from the disgrace of adultery: the
list of mortal sins, either male or
female, was curtailed and enlarged by successive regulations, and
the obstacles of incurable impotence, long absence, and monastic
profession, were allowed to rescind the matrimonial obligation.
Whoever transgressed the permission of the law, was subject to
various and heavy penalties. The woman was stripped of her wealth
and ornaments, without excepting the bodkin of her hair: if the
man introduced a new bride into his bed,
her fortune might be lawfully seized by
the vengeance of his exiled wife. Forfeiture was sometimes
commuted to a fine; the fine was sometimes aggravated by
transportation to an island, or imprisonment in a monastery; the
injured party was released from the bonds of marriage; but the
offender, during life, or a term of years, was disabled from the
repetition of nuptials. The successor of Justinian yielded to the
prayers of his unhappy subjects, and restored the liberty of
divorce by mutual consent: the civilians were unanimous, the
theologians were divided, and the ambiguous word, which contains
the precept of Christ, is flexible to any interpretation that the
wisdom of a legislator can demand.
The freedom of love and marriage was restrained among the
Romans by natural and civil impediments. An instinct, almost
innate and universal, appears to prohibit the incestuous commerce
of parents and children in the infinite series of ascending and
descending generations. Concerning the oblique and collateral
branches, nature is indifferent, reason mute, and custom various
and arbitrary. In Egypt, the marriage of brothers and sisters was
admitted without scruple or exception: a Spartan might espouse
the daughter of his father, an Athenian, that of his mother; and
the nuptials of an uncle with his niece were applauded at Athens
as a happy union of the dearest relations. The profane lawgivers
of Rome were never tempted by interest or superstition to
multiply the forbidden degrees: but they inflexibly condemned the
marriage of sisters and brothers, hesitated whether first cousins
should be touched by the same interdict; revered the parental
character of aunts and uncles, * and treated affinity and
adoption as a just imitation of the ties of blood. According to
the proud maxims of the republic, a legal marriage could only be
contracted by free citizens; an honorable, at least an ingenuous
birth, was required for the spouse of a senator: but the blood of
kings could never mingle in legitimate nuptials with the blood of
a Roman; and the name of Stranger degraded Cleopatra and
Berenice, to live the concubines of
Mark Antony and Titus. This appellation, indeed, so injurious to
the majesty, cannot without indulgence be applied to the manners,
of these Oriental queens. A concubine, in the strict sense of the
civilians, was a woman of servile or plebeian extraction, the
sole and faithful companion of a Roman citizen, who continued in
a state of celibacy. Her modest station, below the honors of a
wife, above the infamy of a prostitute, was acknowledged and
approved by the laws: from the age of Augustus to the tenth
century, the use of this secondary marriage prevailed both in the
West and East; and the humble virtues of a concubine were often
preferred to the pomp and insolence of a noble matron. In this
connection, the two Antonines, the best of princes and of men,
enjoyed the comforts of domestic love: the example was imitated
by many citizens impatient of celibacy, but regardful of their
families. If at any time they desired to legitimate their natural
children, the conversion was instantly performed by the
celebration of their nuptials with a partner whose faithfulness
and fidelity they had already tried. * By this epithet of
natural, the offspring of the concubine
were distinguished from the spurious brood of adultery,
prostitution, and incest, to whom Justinian reluctantly grants
the necessary aliments of life; and these natural children alone
were capable of succeeding to a sixth part of the inheritance of
their reputed father. According to the rigor of law, bastards
were entitled only to the name and condition of their mother,
from whom they might derive the character of a slave, a stranger,
or a citizen. The outcasts of every family were adopted without
reproach as the children of the state.
Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. --
Part V.
The relation of guardian and ward, or in Roman words of
tutor and
pupil, which covers so many titles of
the Institutes and Pandects, is of a very simple and uniform
nature. The person and property of an orphan must always be
trusted to the custody of some discreet friend. If the deceased
father had not signified his choice, the
agnats, or paternal kindred of the
nearest degree, were compelled to act as the natural guardians:
the Athenians were apprehensive of exposing the infant to the
power of those most interested in his death; but an axiom of
Roman jurisprudence has pronounced, that the charge of tutelage
should constantly attend the emolument of succession. If the
choice of the father, and the line of consanguinity, afforded no
efficient guardian, the failure was supplied by the nomination of
the prætor of the city, or the president of the province.
But the person whom they named to this
public office might be legally excused
by insanity or blindness, by ignorance or inability, by previous
enmity or adverse interest, by the number of children or
guardianships with which he was already burdened, and by the
immunities which were granted to the useful labors of
magistrates, lawyers, physicians, and professors. Till the infant
could speak, and think, he was represented by the tutor, whose
authority was finally determined by the age of puberty. Without
his consent, no act of the pupil could bind himself to his own
prejudice, though it might oblige others for his personal
benefit. It is needless to observe, that the tutor often gave
security, and always rendered an account, and that the want of
diligence or integrity exposed him to a civil and almost criminal
action for the violation of his sacred trust. The age of puberty
had been rashly fixed by the civilians at fourteen; * but as the
faculties of the mind ripen more slowly than those of the body, a
curator was interposed to guard the
fortunes of a Roman youth from his own inexperience and
headstrong passions. Such a trustee had been first instituted by
the prætor, to save a family from the blind havoc of a
prodigal or madman; and the minor was compelled, by the laws, to
solicit the same protection, to give validity to his acts till he
accomplished the full period of twenty-five years. Women were
condemned to the perpetual tutelage of parents, husbands, or
guardians; a sex created to please and obey was never supposed to
have attained the age of reason and experience. Such, at least,
was the stern and haughty spirit of the ancient law, which had
been insensibly mollified before the time of Justinian.
II. The original right of property can only be justified by
the accident or merit of prior occupancy; and on this foundation
it is wisely established by the philosophy of the civilians. The
savage who hollows a tree, inserts a sharp stone into a wooden
handle, or applies a string to an elastic branch, becomes in a
state of nature the just proprietor of the canoe, the bow, or the
hatchet. The materials were common to all, the new form, the
produce of his time and simple industry, belongs solely to
himself. His hungry brethren cannot, without a sense of their own
injustice, extort from the hunter the game of the forest
overtaken or slain by his personal strength and dexterity. If his
provident care preserves and multiplies the tame animals, whose
nature is tractable to the arts of education, he acquires a
perpetual title to the use and service of their numerous progeny,
which derives its existence from him alone. If he encloses and
cultivates a field for their sustenance and his own, a barren
waste is converted into a fertile soil; the seed, the manure, the
labor, create a new value, and the rewards of harvest are
painfully earned by the fatigues of the revolving year. In the
successive states of society, the hunter, the shepherd, the
husbandman, may defend their possessions by two reasons which
forcibly appeal to the feelings of the human mind: that whatever
they enjoy is the fruit of their own industry; and that every man
who envies their felicity, may purchase similar acquisitions by
the exercise of similar diligence. Such, in truth, may be the
freedom and plenty of a small colony cast on a fruitful island.
But the colony multiplies, while the space still continues the
same; the common rights, the equal inheritance of mankind. are
engrossed by the bold and crafty; each field and forest is
circumscribed by the landmarks of a jealous master; and it is the
peculiar praise of the Roman jurisprudence, that i asserts the
claim of the first occupant to the wild animals of the earth, the
air, and the waters. In the progress from primitive equity to
final injustice, the steps are silent, the shades are almost
imperceptible, and the absolute monopoly is guarded by positive
laws and artificial reason. The active, insatiate principle of
self-love can alone supply the arts of life and the wages of
industry; and as soon as civil government and exclusive property
have been introduced, they become necessary to the existence of
the human race. Except in the singular institutions of Sparta,
the wisest legislators have disapproved an agrarian law as a
false and dangerous innovation. Among the Romans, the enormous
disproportion of wealth surmounted the ideal restraints of a
doubtful tradition, and an obsolete statute; a tradition that the
poorest follower of Romulus had been endowed with the perpetual
inheritance of two jugera; a statute
which confined the richest citizen to the measure of five hundred
jugera, or three hundred and twelve acres of land. The original
territory of Rome consisted only of some miles of wood and meadow
along the banks of the Tyber; and domestic exchange could add
nothing to the national stock. But the goods of an alien or enemy
were lawfully exposed to the first hostile occupier; the city was
enriched by the profitable trade of war; and the blood of her
sons was the only price that was paid for the Volscian sheep, the
slaves of Briton, or the gems and gold of Asiatic kingdoms. In
the language of ancient jurisprudence, which was corrupted and
forgotten before the age of Justinian, these spoils were
distinguished by the name of manceps or
mancipium, taken with the hand; and
whenever they were sold or emancipated,
the purchaser required some assurance that they had been the
property of an enemy, and not of a fellow-citizen. A citizen
could only forfeit his rights by apparent dereliction, and such
dereliction of a valuable interest could not easily be presumed.
Yet, according to the Twelve Tables, a prescription of one year
for movables, and of two years for immovables, abolished the
claim of the ancient master, if the actual possessor had acquired
them by a fair transaction from the person whom he believed to be
the lawful proprietor. Such conscientious injustice, without any
mixture of fraud or force could seldom injure the members of a
small republic; but the various periods of three, of ten, or of
twenty years, determined by Justinian, are more suitable to the
latitude of a great empire. It is only in the term of
prescription that the distinction of real and personal fortune
has been remarked by the civilians; and their general idea of
property is that of simple, uniform, and absolute dominion. The
subordinate exceptions of use, of
usufruct, of
servitude, imposed for the benefit of a
neighbor on lands and houses, are abundantly explained by the
professors of jurisprudence. The claims of property, as far as
they are altered by the mixture, the division, or the
transformation of substances, are investigated with metaphysical
subtilty by the same civilians.
The personal title of the first proprietor must be determined
by his death: but the possession, without any appearance of
change, is peaceably continued in his children, the associates of
his toil, and the partners of his wealth. This natural
inheritance has been protected by the legislators of every
climate and age, and the father is encouraged to persevere in
slow and distant improvements, by the tender hope, that a long
posterity will enjoy the fruits of his labor. The
principle of hereditary succession is
universal; but the order has been
variously established by convenience or caprice, by the spirit of
national institutions, or by some partial example which was
originally decided by fraud or violence. The jurisprudence of the
Romans appear to have deviated from the inequality of nature much
less than the Jewish, the Athenian, or the English institutions.
On the death of a citizen, all his descendants, unless they were
already freed from his paternal power, were called to the
inheritance of his possessions. The insolent prerogative of
primogeniture was unknown; the two sexes were placed on a just
level; all the sons and daughters were entitled to an equal
portion of the patrimonial estate; and if any of the sons had
been intercepted by a premature death, his person was
represented, and his share was divided, by his surviving
children. On the failure of the direct line, the right of
succession must diverge to the collateral branches. The degrees
of kindred are numbered by the civilians, ascending from the last
possessor to a common parent, and descending from the common
parent to the next heir: my father stands in the first degree, my
brother in the second, his children in the third, and the
remainder of the series may be conceived by a fancy, or pictured
in a genealogical table. In this computation, a distinction was
made, essential to the laws and even the constitution of Rome;
the agnats, or persons connected by a
line of males, were called, as they stood in the nearest degree,
to an equal partition; but a female was incapable of transmitting
any legal claims; and the cognats of
every rank, without excepting the dear relation of a mother and a
son, were disinherited by the Twelve Tables, as strangers and
aliens. Among the Romans agens or
lineage was united by a common name and
domestic rites; the various cognomens
or surnames of Scipio, or Marcellus,
distinguished from each other the subordinate branches or
families of the Cornelian or Claudian race: the default of the
agnats, of the same surname, was
supplied by the larger denomination of
gentiles; and the vigilance of the laws
maintained, in the same name, the perpetual descent of religion
and property. A similar principle dictated the Voconian law,
which abolished the right of female inheritance. As long as
virgins were given or sold in marriage, the adoption of the wife
extinguished the hopes of the daughter. But the equal succession
of independent matrons supported their pride and luxury, and
might transport into a foreign house the riches of their fathers.
While the maxims of Cato were revered, they tended to perpetuate
in each family a just and virtuous mediocrity: till female
blandishments insensibly triumphed; and every salutary restraint
was lost in the dissolute greatness of the republic. The rigor of
the decemvirs was tempered by the equity of the prætors.
Their edicts restored and emancipated posthumous children to the
rights of nature; and upon the failure of the
agnats, they preferred the blood of the
cognats to the name of the gentiles
whose title and character were insensibly covered with oblivion.
The reciprocal inheritance of mothers and sons was established in
the Tertullian and Orphitian decrees by the humanity of the
senate. A new and more impartial order was introduced by the
Novels of Justinian, who affected to revive the jurisprudence of
the Twelve Tables. The lines of masculine and female kindred were
confounded: the descending, ascending, and collateral series was
accurately defined; and each degree, according tot he proximity
of blood and affection, succeeded to the vacant possessions of a
Roman citizen.
The order of succession is regulated by nature, or at least by
the general and permanent reason of the lawgiver: but this order
is frequently violated by the arbitrary and partial
wills, which prolong the dominion of
the testator beyond the grave. In the simple state of society,
this last use or abuse of the right of property is seldom
indulged: it was introduced at Athens by the laws of Solon; and
the private testaments of the father of a family are authorized
by the Twelve Tables. Before the time of the decemvirs, a Roman
citizen exposed his wishes and motives to the assembly of the
thirty curiæ or parishes, and the general law of
inheritance was suspended by an occasional act of the
legislature. After the permission of the decemvirs, each private
lawgiver promulgated his verbal or written testament in the
presence of five citizens, who represented the five classes of
the Roman people; a sixth witness attested their concurrence; a
seventh weighed the copper money, which was paid by an imaginary
purchaser; and the estate was emancipated by a fictitious sale
and immediate release. This singular ceremony, which excited the
wonder of the Greeks, was still practised in the age of Severus;
but the prætors had already approved a more simple
testament, for which they required the seals and signatures of
seven witnesses, free from all legal exception, and purposely
summoned for the execution of that important act. A domestic
monarch, who reigned over the lives and fortunes of his children,
might distribute their respective shares according to the degrees
of their merit or his affection; his arbitrary displeasure
chastised an unworthy son by the loss of his inheritance, and the
mortifying preference of a stranger. But the experience of
unnatural parents recommended some limitations of their
testamentary powers. A son, or, by the laws of Justinian, even a
daughter, could no longer be disinherited by their silence: they
were compelled to name the criminal, and to specify the offence;
and the justice of the emperor enumerated the sole causes that
could justify such a violation of the first principles of nature
and society. Unless a legitimate portion, a fourth part, had been
reserved for the children, they were entitled to institute an
action or complaint of inofficious
testament; to suppose that their father's understanding was
impaired by sickness or age; and respectfully to appeal from his
rigorous sentence to the deliberate wisdom of the magistrate. In
the Roman jurisprudence, an essential distinction was admitted
between the inheritance and the legacies. The heirs who succeeded
to the entire unity, or to any of the twelve fractions of the
substance of the testator, represented his civil and religious
character, asserted his rights, fulfilled his obligations, and
discharged the gifts of friendship or liberality, which his last
will had bequeathed under the name of legacies. But as the
imprudence or prodigality of a dying man might exhaust the
inheritance, and leave only risk and labor to his successor, he
was empowered to retain the Falcidian
portion; to deduct, before the payment of the legacies, a clear
fourth for his own emolument. A reasonable time was allowed to
examine the proportion between the debts and the estate, to
decide whether he should accept or refuse the testament; and if
he used the benefit of an inventory, the demands of the creditors
could not exceed the valuation of the effects. The last will of a
citizen might be altered during his life, or rescinded after his
death: the persons whom he named might die before him, or reject
the inheritance, or be exposed to some legal disqualification. In
the contemplation of these events, he was permitted to substitute
second and third heirs, to replace each other according to the
order of the testament; and the incapacity of a madman or an
infant to bequeath his property might be supplied by a similar
substitution. But the power of the testator expired with the
acceptance of the testament: each Roman of mature age and
discretion acquired the absolute dominion of his inheritance, and
the simplicity of the civil law was never clouded by the long and
intricate entails which confine the happiness and freedom of
unborn generations.
Conquest and the formalities of law established the use of
codicils. If a Roman was surprised by
death in a remote province of the empire, he addressed a short
epistle to his legitimate or testamentary heir; who fulfilled
with honor, or neglected with impunity, this last request, which
the judges before the age of Augustus were not authorized to
enforce. A codicil might be expressed in any mode, or in any
language; but the subscription of five witnesses must declare
that it was the genuine composition of the author. His intention,
however laudable, was sometimes illegal; and the invention of
fidei-commissa, or trusts, arose form
the struggle between natural justice and positive jurisprudence.
A stranger of Greece or Africa might be the friend or benefactor
of a childless Roman, but none, except a fellow-citizen, could
act as his heir. The Voconian law, which abolished female
succession, restrained the legacy or inheritance of a woman to
the sum of one hundred thousand sesterces; and an only daughter
was condemned almost as an alien in her father's house. The zeal
of friendship, and parental affection, suggested a liberal
artifice: a qualified citizen was named in the testament, with a
prayer or injunction that he would restore the inheritance to the
person for whom it was truly intended. Various was the conduct of
the trustees in this painful situation: they had sworn to observe
the laws of their country, but honor prompted them to violate
their oath; and if they preferred their interest under the mask
of patriotism, they forfeited the esteem of every virtuous mind.
The declaration of Augustus relieved their doubts, gave a legal
sanction to confidential testaments and codicils, and gently
unravelled the forms and restraints of the republican
jurisprudence. But as the new practice of trusts degenerated into
some abuse, the trustee was enabled, by the Trebellian and
Pegasian decrees, to reserve one fourth of the estate, or to
transfer on the head of the real heir all the debts and actions
of the succession. The interpretation of testaments was strict
and literal; but the language of trusts
and codicils was delivered from the minute and technical accuracy
of the civilians.
III. The general duties of mankind are imposed by their public
and private relations: but their specific
obligations to each other can only be
the effect of, 1. a promise, 2. a benefit, or 3. an injury: and
when these obligations are ratified by law, the interested party
may compel the performance by a judicial action. On this
principle, the civilians of every country have erected a similar
jurisprudence, the fair conclusion of universal reason and
justice.
Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. --
Part VI.
1. The goddess of faith (of human
and social faith) was worshipped, not only in her temples, but in
the lives of the Romans; and if that nation was deficient in the
more amiable qualities of benevolence and generosity, they
astonished the Greeks by their sincere and simple performance of
the most burdensome engagements. Yet among the same people,
according to the rigid maxims of the patricians and decemvirs, a
naked pact, a promise, or even an oath,
did not create any civil obligation, unless it was confirmed by
the legal form of a stipulation.
Whatever might be the etymology of the Latin word, it conveyed
the idea of a firm and irrevocable contract, which was always
expressed in the mode of a question and answer. Do you promise to
pay me one hundred pieces of gold? was the solemn interrogation
of Seius. I do promise, was the reply of Sempronius. The friends
of Sempronius, who answered for his ability and inclination,
might be separately sued at the option of Seius; and the benefit
of partition, or order of reciprocal actions, insensibly deviated
from the strict theory of stipulation. The most cautious and
deliberate consent was justly required to sustain the validity of
a gratuitous promise; and the citizen who might have obtained a
legal security, incurred the suspicion of fraud, and paid the
forfeit of his neglect. But the ingenuity of the civilians
successfully labored to convert simple engagements into the form
of solemn stipulations. The prætors, as the guardians of
social faith, admitted every rational evidence of a voluntary and
deliberate act, which in their tribunal produced an equitable
obligation, and for which they gave an action and a remedy.
2. The obligations of the second class, as they were
contracted by the delivery of a thing, are marked by the
civilians with the epithet of real. A grateful return is due to
the author of a benefit; and whoever is intrusted with the
property of another, has bound himself to the sacred duty of
restitution. In the case of a friendly loan, the merit of
generosity is on the side of the lender only; in a deposit, on
the side of the receiver; but in a
pledge, and the rest of the selfish
commerce of ordinary life, the benefit is compensated by an
equivalent, and the obligation to restore is variously modified
by the nature of the transaction. The Latin language very happily
expresses the fundamental difference between the
commodatum and the
mutuum, which our poverty is reduced to
confound under the vague and common appellation of a loan. In the
former, the borrower was obliged to restore the same individual
thing with which he had been
accommodated for the temporary supply
of his wants; in the latter, it was destined for his use and
consumption, and he discharged this
mutual engagement, by substituting the
same specific value according to a just estimation of number, of
weight, and of measure. In the contract of
sale, the absolute dominion is
transferred to the purchaser, and he repays the benefit with an
adequate sum of gold or silver, the price and universal standard
of all earthly possessions. The obligation of another contract,
that of location, is of a more
complicated kind. Lands or houses, labor or talents, may be hired
for a definite term; at the expiration of the time, the thing
itself must be restored to the owner, with an additional reward
for the beneficial occupation and employment. In these lucrative
contracts, to which may be added those of partnership and
commissions, the civilians sometimes imagine the delivery of the
object, and sometimes presume the consent of the parties. The
substantial pledge has been refined into the invisible rights of
a mortgage or hypotheca; and the
agreement of sale, for a certain price, imputes, from that
moment, the chances of gain or loss to the account of the
purchaser. It may be fairly supposed, that every man will obey
the dictates of his interest; and if he accepts the benefit, he
is obliged to sustain the expense, of the transaction. In this
boundless subject, the historian will observe the
location of land and money, the rent of
the one and the interest of the other, as they materially affect
the prosperity of agriculture and commerce. The landlord was
often obliged to advance the stock and instruments of husbandry,
and to content himself with a partition of the fruits. If the
feeble tenant was oppressed by accident, contagion, or hostile
violence, he claimed a proportionable relief from the equity of
the laws: five years were the customary term, and no solid or
costly improvements could be expected from a farmer, who, at each
moment might be ejected by the sale of the estate. Usury, the
inveterate grievance of the city, had been discouraged by the
Twelve Tables, and abolished by the clamors of the people. It was
revived by their wants and idleness, tolerated by the discretion
of the prætors, and finally determined by the Code of
Justinian. Persons of illustrious rank were confined to the
moderate profit of four per cent.; six
was pronounced to be the ordinary and legal standard of interest;
eight was allowed for the convenience of manufactures and
merchants; twelve was granted to nautical insurance, which the
wiser ancients had not attempted to define; but, except in this
perilous adventure, the practice of exorbitant usury was severely
restrained. The most simple interest was condemned by the clergy
of the East and West; but the sense of mutual benefit, which had
triumphed over the law of the republic, has resisted with equal
firmness the decrees of the church, and even the prejudices of
mankind.
3. Nature and society impose the strict obligation of
repairing an injury; and the sufferer by private injustice
acquires a personal right and a legitimate action. If the
property of another be intrusted to our care, the requisite
degree of care may rise and fall according to the benefit which
we derive from such temporary possession; we are seldom made
responsible for inevitable accident, but the consequences of a
voluntary fault must always be imputed to the author. A Roman
pursued and recovered his stolen goods by a civil action of
theft; they might pass through a succession of pure and innocent
hands, but nothing less than a prescription of thirty years could
extinguish his original claim. They were restored by the sentence
of the prætor, and the injury was compensated by double, or
threefold, or even quadruple damages, as the deed had been
perpetrated by secret fraud or open rapine, as the robber had
been surprised in the fact, or detected by a subsequent research.
The Aquilian law defended the living property of a citizen, his
slaves and cattle, from the stroke of malice or negligence: the
highest price was allowed that could be ascribed to the domestic
animal at any moment of the year preceding his death; a similar
latitude of thirty days was granted on the destruction of any
other valuable effects. A personal injury is blunted or sharpened
by the manners of the times and the sensibility of the
individual: the pain or the disgrace of a word or blow cannot
easily be appreciated by a pecuniary equivalent. The rude
jurisprudence of the decemvirs had confounded all hasty insults,
which did not amount to the fracture of a limb, by condemning the
aggressor to the common penalty of twenty-five
asses. But the same denomination of
money was reduced, in three centuries, from a pound to the weight
of half an ounce: and the insolence of a wealthy Roman indulged
himself in the cheap amusement of breaking and satisfying the law
of the twelve tables. Veratius ran through the streets striking
on the face the inoffensive passengers, and his attendant
purse-bearer immediately silenced their clamors by the legal
tender of twenty-five pieces of copper, about the value of one
shilling. The equity of the prætors examined and estimated
the distinct merits of each particular complaint. In the
adjudication of civil damages, the magistrate assumed a right to
consider the various circumstances of time and place, of age and
dignity, which may aggravate the shame and sufferings of the
injured person; but if he admitted the idea of a fine, a
punishment, an example, he invaded the province, though, perhaps,
he supplied the defects, of the criminal law.
The execution of the Alban dictator, who was dismembered by
eight horses, is represented by Livy as the first and the fast
instance of Roman cruelty in the punishment of the most atrocious
crimes. But this act of justice, or revenge, was inflicted on a
foreign enemy in the heat of victory, and at the command of a
single man. The twelve tables afford a more decisive proof of the
national spirit, since they were framed by the wisest of the
senate, and accepted by the free voices of the people; yet these
laws, like the statutes of Draco, are written in characters of
blood. They approve the inhuman and unequal principle of
retaliation; and the forfeit of an eye for an eye, a tooth for a
tooth, a limb for a limb, is rigorously exacted, unless the
offender can redeem his pardon by a fine of three hundred pounds
of copper. The decemvirs distributed with much liberality the
slighter chastisements of flagellation and servitude; and nine
crimes of a very different complexion are adjudged worthy of
death. 1. Any act of
treason against the state, or of
correspondence with the public enemy. The mode of execution was
painful and ignominious: the head of the degenerate Roman was
shrouded in a veil, his hands were tied behind his back, and
after he had been scourged by the lictor, he was suspended in the
midst of the forum on a cross, or inauspicious tree.
2. Nocturnal meetings in the city; whatever
might be the pretence, of pleasure, or religion, or the public
good. 3. The murder of a citizen; for which the
common feelings of mankind demand the blood of the murderer.
Poison is still more odious than the sword or dagger; and we are
surprised to discover, in two flagitious events, how early such
subtle wickedness had infected the simplicity of the republic,
and the chaste virtues of the Roman matrons. The parricide, who
violated the duties of nature and gratitude, was cast into the
river or the sea, enclosed in a sack; and a cock, a viper, a dog,
and a monkey, were successively added, as the most suitable
companions. Italy produces no monkeys; but the want could never
be felt, till the middle of the sixth century first revealed the
guilt of a parricide. 4.The malice of an
incendiary. After the previous ceremony
of whipping, he himself was delivered to the flames; and in this
example alone our reason is tempted to applaud the justice of
retaliation. 5. Judicial
perjury. The corrupt or malicious witness was
thrown headlong from the Tarpeian rock, to expiate his falsehood,
which was rendered still more fatal by the severity of the penal
laws, and the deficiency of written evidence. 6.
The corruption of a judge, who accepted bribes to pronounce an
iniquitous sentence. 7. Libels and satires,
whose rude strains sometimes disturbed the peace of an illiterate
city. The author was beaten with clubs, a worthy chastisement,
but it is not certain that he was left to expire under the blows
of the executioner. 8. The nocturnal mischief of
damaging or destroying a neighbor's corn. The criminal was
suspended as a grateful victim to Ceres. But the sylvan deities
were less implacable, and the extirpation of a more valuable tree
was compensated by the moderate fine of twenty-five pounds of
copper. 9. Magical incantations; which had
power, in the opinion of the Latin shepherds, to exhaust the
strength of an enemy, to extinguish his life, and to remove from
their seats his deep-rooted plantations. The cruelty of the
twelve tables against insolvent debtors still remains to be told;
and I shall dare to prefer the literal sense of antiquity to the
specious refinements of modern criticism. * After the judicial
proof or confession of the debt, thirty days of grace were
allowed before a Roman was delivered into the power of his
fellow-citizen. In this private prison, twelve ounces of rice
were his daily food; he might be bound with a chain of fifteen
pounds weight; and his misery was thrice exposed in the market
place, to solicit the compassion of his friends and countrymen.
At the expiration of sixty days, the debt was discharged by the
loss of liberty or life; the insolvent debtor was either put to
death, or sold in foreign slavery beyond the Tyber: but, if
several creditors were alike obstinate and unrelenting, they
might legally dismember his body, and satiate their revenge by
this horrid partition. The advocates for this savage law have
insisted, that it must strongly operate in deterring idleness and
fraud from contracting debts which they were unable to discharge;
but experience would dissipate this salutary terror, by proving
that no creditor could be found to exact this unprofitable
penalty of life or limb. As the manners of Rome were insensibly
polished, the criminal code of the decemvirs was abolished by the
humanity of accusers, witnesses, and judges; and impunity became
the consequence of immoderate rigor. The Porcian and Valerian
laws prohibited the magistrates from inflicting on a free citizen
any capital, or even corporal, punishment; and the obsolete
statutes of blood were artfully, and perhaps truly, ascribed to
the spirit, not of patrician, but of regal, tyranny.
In the absence of penal laws, and the insufficiency of civil
actions, the peace and justice of the city were imperfectly
maintained by the private jurisdiction of the citizens. The
malefactors who replenish our jails are the outcasts of society,
and the crimes for which they suffer may be commonly ascribed to
ignorance, poverty, and brutal appetite. For the perpetration of
similar enormities, a vile plebeian might claim and abuse the
sacred character of a member of the republic: but, on the proof
or suspicion of guilt, the slave, or the stranger, was nailed to
a cross; and this strict and summary justice might be exercised
without restraint over the greatest part of the populace of Rome.
Each family contained a domestic tribunal, which was not
confined, like that of the prætor, to the cognizance of
external actions: virtuous principles and habits were inculcated
by the discipline of education; and the Roman father was
accountable to the state for the manners of his children, since
he disposed, without appeal, of their life, their liberty, and
their inheritance. In some pressing emergencies, the citizen was
authorized to avenge his private or public wrongs. The consent of
the Jewish, the Athenian, and the Roman laws approved the
slaughter of the nocturnal thief; though in open daylight a
robber could not be slain without some previous evidence of
danger and complaint. Whoever surprised an adulterer in his
nuptial bed might freely exercise his revenge; the most bloody
and wanton outrage was excused by the provocation; nor was it
before the reign of Augustus that the husband was reduced to
weigh the rank of the offender, or that the parent was condemned
to sacrifice his daughter with her guilty seducer. After the
expulsion of the kings, the ambitious Roman, who should dare to
assume their title or imitate their tyranny, was devoted to the
infernal gods: each of his fellow-citizens was armed with the
sword of justice; and the act of Brutus, however repugnant to
gratitude or prudence, had been already sanctified by the
judgment of his country. The barbarous practice of wearing arms
in the midst of peace, and the bloody maxims of honor, were
unknown to the Romans; and, during the two purest ages, from the
establishment of equal freedom to the end of the Punic wars, the
city was never disturbed by sedition, and rarely polluted with
atrocious crimes. The failure of penal laws was more sensibly
felt, when every vice was inflamed by faction at home and
dominion abroad. In the time of Cicero, each private citizen
enjoyed the privilege of anarchy; each minister of the republic
was exalted to the temptations of regal power, and their virtues
are entitled to the warmest praise, as the spontaneous fruits of
nature or philosophy. After a triennial indulgence of lust,
rapine, and cruelty, Verres, the tyrant of Sicily, could only be
sued for the pecuniary restitution of three hundred thousand
pounds sterling; and such was the temper of the laws, the judges,
and perhaps the accuser himself, that, on refunding a thirteenth
part of his plunder, Verres could retire to an easy and luxurious
exile.
The first imperfect attempt to restore the proportion of
crimes and punishments was made by the dictator Sylla, who, in
the midst of his sanguinary triumph, aspired to restrain the
license, rather than to oppress the liberty, of the Romans. He
gloried in the arbitrary proscription of four thousand seven
hundred citizens. But, in the character of a legislator, he
respected the prejudices of the times; and, instead of
pronouncing a sentence of death against the robber or assassin,
the general who betrayed an army, or the magistrate who ruined a
province, Sylla was content to aggravate the pecuniary damages by
the penalty of exile, or, in more constitutional language, by the
interdiction of fire and water. The Cornelian, and afterwards the
Pompeian and Julian, laws introduced a new system of criminal
jurisprudence; and the emperors, from Augustus to Justinian,
disguised their increasing rigor under the names of the original
authors. But the invention and frequent use of
extraordinary pains proceeded from the
desire to extend and conceal the progress of despotism. In the
condemnation of illustrious Romans, the senate was always
prepared to confound, at the will of their masters, the judicial
and legislative powers. It was the duty of the governors to
maintain the peace of their province, by the arbitrary and rigid
administration of justice; the freedom of the city evaporated in
the extent of empire, and the Spanish malefactor, who claimed the
privilege of a Roman, was elevated by the command of Galba on a
fairer and more lofty cross. Occasional rescripts issued from the
throne to decide the questions which, by their novelty or
importance, appeared to surpass the authority and discernment of
a proconsul. Transportation and beheading were reserved for
honorable persons; meaner criminals were either hanged, or burnt,
or buried in the mines, or exposed to the wild beasts of the
amphitheatre. Armed robbers were pursued and extirpated as the
enemies of society; the driving away horses or cattle was made a
capital offence; but simple theft was uniformly considered as a
mere civil and private injury. The degrees of guilt, and the
modes of punishment, were too often determined by the discretion
of the rulers, and the subject was left in ignorance of the legal
danger which he might incur by every action of his life.
A sin, a vice, a crime, are the objects of theology, ethics,
and jurisprudence. Whenever their judgments agree, they
corroborate each other; but, as often as they differ, a prudent
legislator appreciates the guilt and punishment according to the
measure of social injury. On this principle, the most daring
attack on the life and property of a private citizen is judged
less atrocious than the crime of treason or rebellion, which
invades the majesty of the republic:
the obsequious civilians unanimously pronounced, that the
republic is contained in the person of its chief; and the edge of
the Julian law was sharpened by the incessant diligence of the
emperors. The licentious commerce of the sexes may be tolerated
as an impulse of nature, or forbidden as a source of disorder and
corruption; but the fame, the fortunes, the family of the
husband, are seriously injured by the adultery of the wife. The
wisdom of Augustus, after curbing the freedom of revenge, applied
to this domestic offence the animadversion of the laws: and the
guilty parties, after the payment of heavy forfeitures and fines,
were condemned to long or perpetual exile in two separate
islands. Religion pronounces an equal censure against the
infidelity of the husband; but, as it is not accompanied by the
same civil effects, the wife was never permitted to vindicate her
wrongs; and the distinction of simple or double adultery, so
familiar and so important in the canon law, is unknown to the
jurisprudence of the Code and the Pandects. I touch with
reluctance, and despatch with impatience, a more odious vice, of
which modesty rejects the name, and nature abominates the idea.
The primitive Romans were infected by the example of the
Etruscans and Greeks: and in the mad abuse of prosperity and
power, every pleasure that is innocent was deemed insipid; and
the Scatinian law, which had been extorted by an act of violence,
was insensibly abolished by the lapse of time and the multitude
of criminals. By this law, the rape, perhaps the seduction, of an
ingenuous youth, was compensated, as a personal injury, by the
poor damages of ten thousand sesterces, or fourscore pounds; the
ravisher might be slain by the resistance or revenge of chastity;
and I wish to believe, that at Rome, as in Athens, the voluntary
and effeminate deserter of his sex was degraded from the honors
and the rights of a citizen. But the practice of vice was not
discouraged by the severity of opinion: the indelible stain of
manhood was confounded with the more venial transgressions of
fornication and adultery, nor was the licentious lover exposed to
the same dishonor which he impressed on the male or female
partner of his guilt. From Catullus to Juvenal, the poets accuse
and celebrate the degeneracy of the times; and the reformation of
manners was feebly attempted by the reason and authority of the
civilians till the most virtuous of the Cæsars proscribed
the sin against nature as a crime against society.
Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence. --
Part VII.
A new spirit of legislation, respectable even in its error,
arose in the empire with the religion of Constantine. The laws of
Moses were received as the divine original of justice, and the
Christian princes adapted their penal statutes to the degrees of
moral and religious turpitude. Adultery was first declared to be
a capital offence: the frailty of the sexes was assimilated to
poison or assassination, to sorcery or parricide; the same
penalties were inflicted on the passive and active guilt of
pæderasty; and all criminals of free or servile condition
were either drowned or beheaded, or cast alive into the avenging
flames. The adulterers were spared by the common sympathy of
mankind; but the lovers of their own sex were pursued by general
and pious indignation: the impure manners of Greece still
prevailed in the cities of Asia, and every vice was fomented by
the celibacy of the monks and clergy. Justinian relaxed the
punishment at least of female infidelity: the guilty spouse was
only condemned to solitude and penance, and at the end of two
years she might be recalled to the arms of a forgiving husband.
But the same emperor declared himself the implacable enemy of
unmanly lust, and the cruelty of his persecution can scarcely be
excused by the purity of his motives. In defiance of every
principle of justice, he stretched to past as well as future
offences the operations of his edicts, with the previous
allowance of a short respite for confession and pardon. A painful
death was inflicted by the amputation of the sinful instrument,
or the insertion of sharp reeds into the pores and tubes of most
exquisite sensibility; and Justinian defended the propriety of
the execution, since the criminals would have lost their hands,
had they been convicted of sacrilege. In this state of disgrace
and agony, two bishops, Isaiah of Rhodes and Alexander of
Diospolis, were dragged through the streets of Constantinople,
while their brethren were admonished, by the voice of a crier, to
observe this awful lesson, and not to pollute the sanctity of
their character. Perhaps these prelates were innocent. A sentence
of death and infamy was often founded on the slight and
suspicious evidence of a child or a servant: the guilt of the
green faction, of the rich, and of the enemies of Theodora, was
presumed by the judges, and pæderasty became the crime of
those to whom no crime could be imputed. A French philosopher has
dared to remark that whatever is secret must be doubtful, and
that our natural horror of vice may be abused as an engine of
tyranny. But the favorable persuasion of the same writer, that a
legislator may confide in the taste and reason of mankind, is
impeached by the unwelcome discovery of the antiquity and extent
of the disease.
The free citizens of Athens and Rome enjoyed, in all criminal
cases, the invaluable privilege of being tried by their country.
1. The administration of justice is the most ancient office of a
prince: it was exercised by the Roman kings, and abused by
Tarquin; who alone, without law or council, pronounced his
arbitrary judgments. The first consuls succeeded to this regal
prerogative; but the sacred right of appeal soon abolished the
jurisdiction of the magistrates, and all public causes were
decided by the supreme tribunal of the people. But a wild
democracy, superior to the forms, too often disdains the
essential principles, of justice: the pride of despotism was
envenomed by plebeian envy, and the heroes of Athens might
sometimes applaud the happiness of the Persian, whose fate
depended on the caprice of a single
tyrant. Some salutary restraints, imposed by the people or their
own passions, were at once the cause and effect of the gravity
and temperance of the Romans. The right of accusation was
confined to the magistrates. A vote of the thirty five tribes
could inflict a fine; but the cognizance of all capital crimes
was reserved by a fundamental law to the assembly of the
centuries, in which the weight of influence and property was sure
to preponderate. Repeated proclamations and adjournments were
interposed, to allow time for prejudice and resentment to
subside: the whole proceeding might be annulled by a seasonable
omen, or the opposition of a tribune; and such popular trials
were commonly less formidable to innocence than they were
favorable to guilt. But this union of the judicial and
legislative powers left it doubtful whether the accused party was
pardoned or acquitted; and, in the defence of an illustrious
client, the orators of Rome and Athens address their arguments to
the policy and benevolence, as well as to the justice, of their
sovereign. 2. The task of convening the citizens for the trial of
each offender became more difficult, as the citizens and the
offenders continually multiplied; and the ready expedient was
adopted of delegating the jurisdiction of the people to the
ordinary magistrates, or to extraordinary
inquisitors. In the first ages these
questions were rare and occasional. In the beginning of the
seventh century of Rome they were made perpetual: four
prætors were annually empowered to sit in judgment on the
state offences of treason, extortion, peculation, and bribery;
and Sylla added new prætors and new questions for those
crimes which more directly injure the safety of individuals. By
these inquisitors the trial was
prepared and directed; but they could only pronounce the sentence
of the majority of judges, who with
some truth, and more prejudice, have been compared to the English
juries. To discharge this important, though burdensome office, an
annual list of ancient and respectable citizens was formed by the
prætor. After many constitutional struggles, they were
chosen in equal numbers from the senate, the equestrian order,
and the people; four hundred and fifty were appointed for single
questions; and the various rolls or
decuries of judges must have contained
the names of some thousand Romans, who represented the judicial
authority of the state. In each particular cause, a sufficient
number was drawn from the urn; their integrity was guarded by an
oath; the mode of ballot secured their independence; the
suspicion of partiality was removed by the mutual challenges of
the accuser and defendant; and the judges of Milo, by the
retrenchment of fifteen on each side, were reduced to fifty-one
voices or tablets, of acquittal, of condemnation, or of favorable
doubt. 3. In his civil jurisdiction, the prætor of the city
was truly a judge, and almost a legislator; but, as soon as he
had prescribed the action of law, he often referred to a delegate
the determination of the fact. With the increase of legal
proceedings, the tribunal of the centumvirs, in which he
presided, acquired more weight and reputation. But whether he
acted alone, or with the advice of his council, the most absolute
powers might be trusted to a magistrate who was annually chosen
by the votes of the people. The rules and precautions of freedom
have required some explanation; the order of despotism is simple
and inanimate. Before the age of Justinian, or perhaps of
Diocletian, the decuries of Roman judges had sunk to an empty
title: the humble advice of the assessors might be accepted or
despised; and in each tribunal the civil and criminal
jurisdiction was administered by a single magistrate, who was
raised and disgraced by the will of the emperor.
A Roman accused of any capital crime might prevent the
sentence of the law by voluntary exile, or death. Till his guilt
had been legally proved, his innocence was presumed, and his
person was free: till the votes of the last
century had been counted and declared,
he might peaceably secede to any of the allied cities of Italy,
or Greece, or Asia. His fame and fortunes were preserved, at
least to his children, by this civil death; and he might still be
happy in every rational and sensual enjoyment, if a mind
accustomed to the ambitious tumult of Rome could support the
uniformity and silence of Rhodes or Athens. A bolder effort was
required to escape from the tyranny of the Cæsars; but this
effort was rendered familiar by the maxims of the stoics, the
example of the bravest Romans, and the legal encouragements of
suicide. The bodies of condemned criminals were exposed to public
ignominy, and their children, a more serious evil, were reduced
to poverty by the confiscation of their fortunes. But, if the
victims of Tiberius and Nero anticipated the decree of the prince
or senate, their courage and despatch were recompensed by the
applause of the public, the decent honors of burial, and the
validity of their testaments. The exquisite avarice and cruelty
of Domitian appear to have deprived the unfortunate of this last
consolation, and it was still denied even by the clemency of the
Antonines. A voluntary death, which, in the case of a capital
offence, intervened between the accusation and the sentence, was
admitted as a confession of guilt, and the spoils of the deceased
were seized by the inhuman claims of the treasury. Yet the
civilians have always respected the natural right of a citizen to
dispose of his life; and the posthumous disgrace invented by
Tarquin, to check the despair of his subjects, was never revived
or imitated by succeeding tyrants. The powers of this world have
indeed lost their dominion over him who is resolved on death; and
his arm can only be restrained by the religious apprehension of a
future state. Suicides are enumerated by Virgil among the
unfortunate, rather than the guilty; and the poetical fables of
the infernal shades could not seriously influence the faith or
practice of mankind. But the precepts of the gospel, or the
church, have at length imposed a pious servitude on the minds of
Christians, and condemn them to expect, without a murmur, the
last stroke of disease or the executioner.
The penal statutes form a very small proportion of the
sixty-two books of the Code and Pandects; and in all judicial
proceedings, the life or death of a citizen is determined with
less caution or delay than the most ordinary question of covenant
or inheritance. This singular distinction, though something may
be allowed for the urgent necessity of defending the peace of
society, is derived from the nature of criminal and civil
jurisprudence. Our duties to the state are simple and uniform:
the law by which he is condemned is inscribed not only on brass
or marble, but on the conscience of the offender, and his guilt
is commonly proved by the testimony of a single fact. But our
relations to each other are various and infinite; our obligations
are created, annulled, and modified, by injuries, benefits, and
promises; and the interpretation of voluntary contracts and
testaments, which are often dictated by fraud or ignorance,
affords a long and laborious exercise to the sagacity of the
judge. The business of life is multiplied by the extent of
commerce and dominion, and the residence of the parties in the
distant provinces of an empire is productive of doubt, delay, and
inevitable appeals from the local to the supreme magistrate.
Justinian, the Greek emperor of Constantinople and the East, was
the legal successor of the Latin shepherd who had planted a
colony on the banks of the Tyber. In a period of thirteen hundred
years, the laws had reluctantly followed the changes of
government and manners; and the laudable desire of conciliating
ancient names with recent institutions destroyed the harmony, and
swelled the magnitude, of the obscure and irregular system. The
laws which excuse, on any occasions, the ignorance of their
subjects, confess their own imperfections: the civil
jurisprudence, as it was abridged by Justinian, still continued a
mysterious science, and a profitable trade, and the innate
perplexity of the study was involved in tenfold darkness by the
private industry of the practitioners. The expense of the pursuit
sometimes exceeded the value of the prize, and the fairest rights
were abandoned by the poverty or prudence of the claimants. Such
costly justice might tend to abate the spirit of litigation, but
the unequal pressure serves only to increase the influence of the
rich, and to aggravate the misery of the poor. By these dilatory
and expensive proceedings, the wealthy pleader obtains a more
certain advantage than he could hope from the accidental
corruption of his judge. The experience of an abuse, from which
our own age and country are not perfectly exempt, may sometimes
provoke a generous indignation, and extort the hasty wish of
exchanging our elaborate jurisprudence for the simple and summary
decrees of a Turkish cadhi. Our calmer reflection will suggest,
that such forms and delays are necessary to guard the person and
property of the citizen; that the discretion of the judge is the
first engine of tyranny; and that the laws of a free people
should foresee and determine every question that may probably
arise in the exercise of power and the transactions of industry.
But the government of Justinian united the evils of liberty and
servitude; and the Romans were oppressed at the same time by the
multiplicity of their laws and the arbitrary will of their
master.
Chapter XLV: State Of Italy Under The
Lombards.
Part I.
Reign Of The Younger Justin. -- Embassy Of The Avars. -- Their
Settlement On The Danube. -- Conquest Of Italy By The Lombards.
-- Adoption And Reign Of Tiberius. -- Of Maurice. -- State Of
Italy Under The Lombards And The Exarchs. -- Of Ravenna. --
Distress Of Rome. -- Character And Pontificate Of Gregory The
First.
During the last years of Justinian, his infirm mind was
devoted to heavenly contemplation, and he neglected the business
of the lower world. His subjects were impatient of the long
continuance of his life and reign: yet all who were capable of
reflection apprehended the moment of his death, which might
involve the capital in tumult, and the empire in civil war. Seven
nephews of the childless monarch, the sons or grandsons of his
brother and sister, had been educated in the splendor of a
princely fortune; they had been shown in high commands to the
provinces and armies; their characters were known, their
followers were zealous, and, as the jealousy of age postponed the
declaration of a successor, they might expect with equal hopes
the inheritance of their uncle. He expired in his palace, after a
reign of thirty-eight years; and the decisive opportunity was
embraced by the friends of Justin, the son of Vigilantia. At the
hour of midnight, his domestics were awakened by an importunate
crowd, who thundered at his door, and obtained admittance by
revealing themselves to be the principal members of the senate.
These welcome deputies announced the recent and momentous secret
of the emperor's decease; reported, or perhaps invented, his
dying choice of the best beloved and most deserving of his
nephews, and conjured Justin to prevent the disorders of the
multitude, if they should perceive, with the return of light,
that they were left without a master. After composing his
countenance to surprise, sorrow, and decent modesty, Justin, by
the advice of his wife Sophia, submitted to the authority of the
senate. He was conducted with speed and silence to the palace;
the guards saluted their new sovereign; and the martial and
religious rites of his coronation were diligently accomplished.
By the hands of the proper officers he was invested with the
Imperial garments, the red buskins, white tunic, and purple robe.
A fortunate soldier, whom he instantly promoted to the rank of
tribune, encircled his neck with a military collar; four robust
youths exalted him on a shield; he stood firm and erect to
receive the adoration of his subjects; and their choice was
sanctified by the benediction of the patriarch, who imposed the
diadem on the head of an orthodox prince. The hippodrome was
already filled with innumerable multitudes; and no sooner did the
emperor appear on his throne, than the voices of the blue and the
green factions were confounded in the same loyal acclamations. In
the speeches which Justin addressed to the senate and people, he
promised to correct the abuses which had disgraced the age of his
predecessor, displayed the maxims of a just and beneficent
government, and declared that, on the approaching calends of
January, he would revive in his own person the name and liberty
of a Roman consul. The immediate discharge of his uncle's debts
exhibited a solid pledge of his faith and generosity: a train of
porters, laden with bags of gold, advanced into the midst of the
hippodrome, and the hopeless creditors of Justinian accepted this
equitable payment as a voluntary gift. Before the end of three
years, his example was imitated and surpassed by the empress
Sophia, who delivered many indigent citizens from the weight of
debt and usury: an act of benevolence the best entitled to
gratitude, since it relieves the most intolerable distress; but
in which the bounty of a prince is the most liable to be abused
by the claims of prodigality and fraud.
On the seventh day of his reign, Justin gave audience to the
ambassadors of the Avars, and the scene was decorated to impress
the Barbarians with astonishment, veneration, and terror. From
the palace gate, the spacious courts and long porticos were lined
with the lofty crests and gilt bucklers of the guards, who
presented their spears and axes with more confidence than they
would have shown in a field of battle. The officers who exercised
the power, or attended the person, of the prince, were attired in
their richest habits, and arranged according to the military and
civil order of the hierarchy. When the veil of the sanctuary was
withdrawn, the ambassadors beheld the emperor of the East on his
throne, beneath a canopy, or dome, which was supported by four
columns, and crowned with a winged figure of Victory. In the
first emotions of surprise, they submitted to the servile
adoration of the Byzantine court; but as soon as they rose from
the ground, Targetius, the chief of the embassy, expressed the
freedom and pride of a Barbarian. He extolled, by the tongue of
his interpreter, the greatness of the chagan, by whose clemency
the kingdoms of the South were permitted to exist, whose
victorious subjects had traversed the frozen rivers of Scythia,
and who now covered the banks of the Danube with innumerable
tents. The late emperor had cultivated, with annual and costly
gifts, the friendship of a grateful monarch, and the enemies of
Rome had respected the allies of the Avars. The same prudence
would instruct the nephew of Justinian to imitate the liberality
of his uncle, and to purchase the blessings of peace from an
invincible people, who delighted and excelled in the exercise of
war. The reply of the emperor was delivered in the same strain of
haughty defiance, and he derived his confidence from the God of
the Christians, the ancient glory of Rome, and the recent
triumphs of Justinian. "The empire," said he, "abounds with men
and horses, and arms sufficient to defend our frontiers, and to
chastise the Barbarians. You offer aid, you threaten hostilities:
we despise your enmity and your aid. The conquerors of the Avars
solicit our alliance; shall we dread their fugitives and exiles?
The bounty of our uncle was granted to your misery, to your
humble prayers. From us you shall receive a more important
obligation, the knowledge of your own weakness. Retire from our
presence; the lives of ambassadors are safe; and, if you return
to implore our pardon, perhaps you will taste of our
benevolence." On the report of his ambassadors, the chagan was
awed by the apparent firmness of a Roman emperor of whose
character and resources he was ignorant. Instead of executing his
threats against the Eastern empire, he marched into the poor and
savage countries of Germany, which were subject to the dominion
of the Franks. After two doubtful battles, he consented to
retire, and the Austrasian king relieve the distress of his camp
with an immediate supply of corn and cattle. Such repeated
disappointments had chilled the spirit of the Avars, and their
power would have dissolved away in the Sarmatian desert, if the
alliance of Alboin, king of the Lombards, had not given a new
object to their arms, and a lasting settlement to their wearied
fortunes.
While Alboin served under his father's standard, he
encountered in battle, and transpierced with his lance, the rival
prince of the Gepidæ. The Lombards, who applauded such
early prowess, requested his father, with unanimous acclamations,
that the heroic youth, who had shared the dangers of the field,
might be admitted to the feast of victory. "You are not
unmindful," replied the inflexible Audoin, "of the wise customs
of our ancestors. Whatever may be his merit, a prince is
incapable of sitting at table with his father till he has
received his arms from a foreign and royal hand." Alboin bowed
with reverence to the institutions of his country, selected forty
companions, and boldly visited the court of Turisund, king of the
Gepidæ, who embraced and entertained, according to the laws
of hospitality, the murderer of his son. At the banquet, whilst
Alboin occupied the seat of the youth whom he had slain, a tender
remembrance arose in the mind of Turisund. "How dear is that
place! how hateful is that person!" were the words that escaped,
with a sigh, from the indignant father. His grief exasperated the
national resentment of the Gepidæ; and Cunimund, his
surviving son, was provoked by wine, or fraternal affection, to
the desire of vengeance. "The Lombards," said the rude Barbarian,
"resemble, in figure and in smell, the mares of our Sarmatian
plains." And this insult was a coarse allusion to the white bands
which enveloped their legs. "Add another resemblance," replied an
audacious Lombard; "you have felt how strongly they kick. Visit
the plain of Asfield, and seek for the bones of thy brother: they
are mingled with those of the vilest animals." The Gepidæ,
a nation of warriors, started from their seats, and the fearless
Alboin, with his forty companions, laid their hands on their
swords. The tumult was appeased by the venerable interposition of
Turisund. He saved his own honor, and the life of his guest; and,
after the solemn rites of investiture, dismissed the stranger in
the bloody arms of his son; the gift of a weeping parent. Alboin
returned in triumph; and the Lombards, who celebrated his
matchless intrepidity, were compelled to praise the virtues of an
enemy. In this extraordinary visit he had probably seen the
daughter of Cunimund, who soon after ascended the throne of the
Gepidæ. Her name was Rosamond, an appellation expressive of
female beauty, and which our own history or romance has
consecrated to amorous tales. The king of the Lombards (the
father of Alboin no longer lived) was contracted to the
granddaughter of Clovis; but the restraints of faith and policy
soon yielded to the hope of possessing the fair Rosamond, and of
insulting her family and nation. The arts of persuasion were
tried without success; and the impatient lover, by force and
stratagem, obtained the object of his desires. War was the
consequence which he foresaw and solicited; but the Lombards
could not long withstand the furious assault of the Gepidæ,
who were sustained by a Roman army. And, as the offer of marriage
was rejected with contempt, Alboin was compelled to relinquish
his prey, and to partake of the disgrace which he had inflicted
on the house of Cunimund.
When a public quarrel is envenomed by private injuries, a blow
that is not mortal or decisive can be productive only of a short
truce, which allows the unsuccessful combatant to sharpen his
arms for a new encounter. The strength of Alboin had been found
unequal to the gratification of his love, ambition, and revenge:
he condescended to implore the formidable aid of the chagan; and
the arguments that he employed are expressive of the art and
policy of the Barbarians. In the attack of the Gepidæ, he
had been prompted by the just desire of extirpating a people whom
their alliance with the Roman empire had rendered the common
enemies of the nations, and the personal adversaries of the
chagan. If the forces of the Avars and the Lombards should unite
in this glorious quarrel, the victory was secure, and the reward
inestimable: the Danube, the Hebrus, Italy, and Constantinople,
would be exposed, without a barrier, to their invincible arms.
But, if they hesitated or delayed to prevent the malice of the
Romans, the same spirit which had insulted would pursue the Avars
to the extremity of the earth. These specious reasons were heard
by the chagan with coldness and disdain: he detained the Lombard
ambassadors in his camp, protracted the negotiation, and by turns
alleged his want of inclination, or his want of ability, to
undertake this important enterprise. At length he signified the
ultimate price of his alliance, that the Lombards should
immediately present him with a tithe of their cattle; that the
spoils and captives should be equally divided; but that the lands
of the Gepidæ should become the sole patrimony of the
Avars. Such hard conditions were eagerly accepted by the passions
of Alboin; and, as the Romans were dissatisfied with the
ingratitude and perfidy of the Gepidæ, Justin abandoned
that incorrigible people to their fate, and remained the tranquil
spectator of this unequal conflict. The despair of Cunimund was
active and dangerous. He was informed that the Avars had entered
his confines; but, on the strong assurance that, after the defeat
of the Lombards, these foreign invaders would easily be repelled,
he rushed forwards to encounter the implacable enemy of his name
and family. But the courage of the Gepidæ could secure them
no more than an honorable death. The bravest of the nation fell
in the field of battle; the king of the Lombards contemplated
with delight the head of Cunimund; and his skull was fashioned
into a cup to satiate the hatred of the conqueror, or, perhaps,
to comply with the savage custom of his country. After this
victory, no further obstacle could impede the progress of the
confederates, and they faithfully executed the terms of their
agreement. The fair countries of Walachia, Moldavia,
Transylvania, and the other parts of Hungary beyond the Danube,
were occupied, without resistance, by a new colony of Scythians;
and the Dacian empire of the chagans subsisted with splendor
above two hundred and thirty years. The nation of the
Gepidæ was dissolved; but, in the distribution of the
captives, the slaves of the Avars were less fortunate than the
companions of the Lombards, whose generosity adopted a valiant
foe, and whose freedom was incompatible with cool and deliberate
tyranny. One moiety of the spoil introduced into the camp of
Alboin more wealth than a Barbarian could readily compute. The
fair Rosamond was persuaded, or compelled, to acknowledge the
rights of her victorious lover; and the daughter of Cunimund
appeared to forgive those crimes which might be imputed to her
own irresistible charms.
The destruction of a mighty kingdom established the fame of
Alboin. In the days of Charlemagne, the Bavarians, the Saxons,
and the other tribes of the Teutonic language, still repeated the
songs which described the heroic virtues, the valor, liberality,
and fortune of the king of the Lombards. But his ambition was yet
unsatisfied; and the conqueror of the Gepidæ turned his
eyes from the Danube to the richer banks of the Po, and the
Tyber. Fifteen years had not elapsed, since his subjects, the
confederates of Narses, had visited the pleasant climate of
Italy: the mountains, the rivers, the highways, were familiar to
their memory: the report of their success, perhaps the view of
their spoils, had kindled in the rising generation the flame of
emulation and enterprise. Their hopes were encouraged by the
spirit and eloquence of Alboin: and it is affirmed, that he spoke
to their senses, by producing at the royal feast, the fairest and
most exquisite fruits that grew spontaneously in the garden of
the world. No sooner had he erected his standard, than the native
strength of the Lombard was multiplied by the adventurous youth
of Germany and Scythia. The robust peasantry of Noricum and
Pannonia had resumed the manners of Barbarians; and the names of
the Gepidæ, Bulgarians, Sarmatians, and Bavarians, may be
distinctly traced in the provinces of Italy. Of the Saxons, the
old allies of the Lombards, twenty thousand warriors, with their
wives and children, accepted the invitation of Alboin. Their
bravery contributed to his success; but the accession or the
absence of their numbers was not sensibly felt in the magnitude
of his host. Every mode of religion was freely practised by its
respective votaries. The king of the Lombards had been educated
in the Arian heresy; but the Catholics, in their public worship,
were allowed to pray for his conversion; while the more stubborn
Barbarians sacrificed a she-goat, or perhaps a captive, to the
gods of their fathers. The Lombards, and their confederates, were
united by their common attachment to a chief, who excelled in all
the virtues and vices of a savage hero; and the vigilance of
Alboin provided an ample magazine of offensive and defensive arms
for the use of the expedition. The portable wealth of the
Lombards attended the march: their lands they cheerfully
relinquished to the Avars, on the solemn promise, which was made
and accepted without a smile, that if they failed in the conquest
of Italy, these voluntary exiles should be reinstated in their
former possessions.
They might have failed, if Narses had been the antagonist of
the Lombards; and the veteran warriors, the associates of his
Gothic victory, would have encountered with reluctance an enemy
whom they dreaded and esteemed. But the weakness of the Byzantine
court was subservient to the Barbarian cause; and it was for the
ruin of Italy, that the emperor once listened to the complaints
of his subjects. The virtues of Narses were stained with avarice;
and, in his provincial reign of fifteen years, he accumulated a
treasure of gold and silver which surpassed the modesty of a
private fortune. His government was oppressive or unpopular, and
the general discontent was expressed with freedom by the deputies
of Rome. Before the throne of Justinian they boldly declared,
that their Gothic servitude had been more tolerable than the
despotism of a Greek eunuch; and that, unless their tyrant were
instantly removed, they would consult their own happiness in the
choice of a master. The apprehension of a revolt was urged by the
voice of envy and detraction, which had so recently triumphed
over the merit of Belisarius. A new exarch, Longinus, was
appointed to supersede the conqueror of Italy, and the base
motives of his recall were revealed in the insulting mandate of
the empress Sophia, "that he should leave to
men the exercise of arms, and return to
his proper station among the maidens of the palace, where a
distaff should be again placed in the hand of the eunuch." "I
will spin her such a thread as she shall not easily unravel!" is
said to have been the reply which indignation and conscious
virtue extorted from the hero. Instead of attending, a slave and
a victim, at the gate of the Byzantine palace, he retired to
Naples, from whence (if any credit is due to the belief of the
times) Narses invited the Lombards to chastise the ingratitude of
the prince and people. But the passions of the people are furious
and changeable, and the Romans soon recollected the merits, or
dreaded the resentment, of their victorious general. By the
mediation of the pope, who undertook a special pilgrimage to
Naples, their repentance was accepted; and Narses, assuming a
milder aspect and a more dutiful language, consented to fix his
residence in the Capitol. His death, though in the extreme period
of old age, was unseasonable and premature, since
his genius alone could have repaired
the last and fatal error of his life. The reality, or the
suspicion, of a conspiracy disarmed and disunited the Italians.
The soldiers resented the disgrace, and bewailed the loss, of
their general. They were ignorant of their new exarch; and
Longinus was himself ignorant of the state of the army and the
province. In the preceding years Italy had been desolated by
pestilence and famine, and a disaffected people ascribed the
calamities of nature to the guilt or folly of their rulers.
Whatever might be the grounds of his security, Alboin neither
expected nor encountered a Roman army in the field. He ascended
the Julian Alps, and looked down with contempt and desire on the
fruitful plains to which his victory communicated the perpetual
appellation of Lombardy. A faithful chieftain, and a select band,
were stationed at Forum Julii, the modern Friuli, to guard the
passes of the mountains. The Lombards respected the strength of
Pavia, and listened to the prayers of the Trevisans: their slow
and heavy multitudes proceeded to occupy the palace and city of
Verona; and Milan, now rising from her ashes, was invested by the
powers of Alboin five months after his departure from Pannonia.
Terror preceded his march: he found every where, or he left, a
dreary solitude; and the pusillanimous Italians presumed, without
a trial, that the stranger was invincible. Escaping to lakes, or
rocks, or morasses, the affrighted crowds concealed some
fragments of their wealth, and delayed the moment of their
servitude. Paulinus, the patriarch of Aquileia, removed his
treasures, sacred and profane, to the Isle of Grado, and his
successors were adopted by the infant republic of Venice, which
was continually enriched by the public calamities. Honoratus, who
filled the chair of St. Ambrose, had credulously accepted the
faithless offers of a capitulation; and the archbishop, with the
clergy and nobles of Milan, were driven by the perfidy of Alboin
to seek a refuge in the less accessible ramparts of Genoa. Along
the maritime coast, the courage of the inhabitants was supported
by the facility of supply, the hopes of relief, and the power of
escape; but from the Trentine hills to the gates of Ravenna and
Rome the inland regions of Italy became, without a battle or a
siege, the lasting patrimony of the Lombards. The submission of
the people invited the Barbarian to assume the character of a
lawful sovereign, and the helpless exarch was confined to the
office of announcing to the emperor Justin the rapid and
irretrievable loss of his provinces and cities. One city, which
had been diligently fortified by the Goths, resisted the arms of
a new invader; and while Italy was subdued by the flying
detachments of the Lombards, the royal camp was fixed above three
years before the western gate of Ticinum, or Pavia. The same
courage which obtains the esteem of a civilized enemy provokes
the fury of a savage, and the impatient besieger had bound
himself by a tremendous oath, that age, and sex, and dignity,
should be confounded in a general massacre. The aid of famine at
length enabled him to execute his bloody vow; but, as Alboin
entered the gate, his horse stumbled, fell, and could not be
raised from the ground. One of his attendants was prompted by
compassion, or piety, to interpret this miraculous sign of the
wrath of Heaven: the conqueror paused and relented; he sheathed
his sword, and peacefully reposing himself in the palace of
Theodoric, proclaimed to the trembling multitude that they should
live and obey. Delighted with the situation of a city which was
endeared to his pride by the difficulty of the purchase, the
prince of the Lombards disdained the ancient glories of Milan;
and Pavia, during some ages, was respected as the capital of the
kingdom of Italy.
The reign of the founder was splendid and transient; and,
before he could regulate his new conquests, Alboin fell a
sacrifice to domestic treason and female revenge. In a palace
near Verona, which had not been erected for the Barbarians, he
feasted the companions of his arms; intoxication was the reward
of valor, and the king himself was tempted by appetite, or
vanity, to exceed the ordinary measure of his intemperance. After
draining many capacious bowls of Rhætian or Falernian wine,
he called for the skull of Cunimund, the noblest and most
precious ornament of his sideboard. The cup of victory was
accepted with horrid applause by the circle of the Lombard
chiefs. "Fill it again with wine," exclaimed the inhuman
conqueror, "fill it to the brim: carry this goblet to the queen,
and request in my name that she would rejoice with her father."
In an agony of grief and rage, Rosamond had strength to utter,
"Let the will of my lord be obeyed!" and, touching it with her
lips, pronounced a silent imprecation, that the insult should be
washed away in the blood of Alboin. Some indulgence might be due
to the resentment of a daughter, if she had not already violated
the duties of a wife. Implacable in her enmity, or inconstant in
her love, the queen of Italy had stooped from the throne to the
arms of a subject, and Helmichis, the king's armor-bearer, was
the secret minister of her pleasure and revenge. Against the
proposal of the murder, he could no longer urge the scruples of
fidelity or gratitude; but Helmichis trembled when he revolved
the danger as well as the guilt, when he recollected the
matchless strength and intrepidity of a warrior whom he had so
often attended in the field of battle. He pressed and obtained,
that one of the bravest champions of the Lombards should be
associated to the enterprise; but no more than a promise of
secrecy could be drawn from the gallant Peredeus, and the mode of
seduction employed by Rosamond betrays her shameless
insensibility both to honor and love. She supplied the place of
one of her female attendants who was beloved by Peredeus, and
contrived some excuse for darkness and silence, till she could
inform her companion that he had enjoyed the queen of the
Lombards, and that his own death, or the death of Alboin, must be
the consequence of such treasonable adultery. In this alternative
he chose rather to be the accomplice than the victim of Rosamond,
whose undaunted spirit was incapable of fear or remorse. She
expected and soon found a favorable moment, when the king,
oppressed with wine, had retired from the table to his afternoon
slumbers. His faithless spouse was anxious for his health and
repose: the gates of the palace were shut, the arms removed, the
attendants dismissed, and Rosamond, after lulling him to rest by
her tender caresses, unbolted the chamber door, and urged the
reluctant conspirators to the instant execution of the deed. On
the first alarm, the warrior started from his couch: his sword,
which he attempted to draw, had been fastened to the scabbard by
the hand of Rosamond; and a small stool, his only weapon, could
not long protect him from the spears of the assassins. The
daughter of Cunimund smiled in his fall: his body was buried
under the staircase of the palace; and the grateful posterity of
the Lombards revered the tomb and the memory of their victorious
leader.
Chapter XLV: State Of Italy Under The Lombards. --
Part II.
The ambitious Rosamond aspired to reign in the name of her
lover; the city and palace of Verona were awed by her power; and
a faithful band of her native Gepidæ was prepared to
applaud the revenge, and to second the wishes, of their
sovereign. But the Lombard chiefs, who fled in the first moments
of consternation and disorder, had resumed their courage and
collected their powers; and the nation, instead of submitting to
her reign, demanded, with unanimous cries, that justice should be
executed on the guilty spouse and the murderers of their king.
She sought a refuge among the enemies of her country; and a
criminal who deserved the abhorrence of mankind was protected by
the selfish policy of the exarch. With her daughter, the heiress
of the Lombard throne, her two lovers, her trusty Gepidæ,
and the spoils of the palace of Verona, Rosamond descended the
Adige and the Po, and was transported by a Greek vessel to the
safe harbor of Ravenna. Longinus beheld with delight the charms
and the treasures of the widow of Alboin: her situation and her
past conduct might justify the most licentious proposals; and she
readily listened to the passion of a minister, who, even in the
decline of the empire, was respected as the equal of kings. The
death of a jealous lover was an easy and grateful sacrifice; and,
as Helmichis issued from the bath, he received the deadly potion
from the hand of his mistress. The taste of the liquor, its
speedy operation, and his experience of the character of
Rosamond, convinced him that he was poisoned: he pointed his
dagger to her breast, compelled her to drain the remainder of the
cup, and expired in a few minutes, with the consolation that she
could not survive to enjoy the fruits of her wickedness. The
daughter of Alboin and Rosamond, with the richest spoils of the
Lombards, was embarked for Constantinople: the surprising
strength of Peredeus amused and terrified the Imperial court: *
his blindness and revenge exhibited an imperfect copy of the
adventures of Samson. By the free suffrage of the nation, in the
assembly of Pavia, Clepho, one of their noblest chiefs, was
elected as the successor of Alboin. Before the end of eighteen
months, the throne was polluted by a second murder: Clepho was
stabbed by the hand of a domestic; the regal office was suspended
above ten years during the minority of his son Autharis; and
Italy was divided and oppressed by a ducal aristocracy of thirty
tyrants.
When the nephew of Justinian ascended the throne, he
proclaimed a new æra of happiness and glory. The annals of
the second Justin are marked with disgrace abroad and misery at
home. In the West, the Roman empire was afflicted by the loss of
Italy, the desolation of Africa, and the conquests of the
Persians. Injustice prevailed both in the capital and the
provinces: the rich trembled for their property, the poor for
their safety, the ordinary magistrates were ignorant or venal,
the occasional remedies appear to have been arbitrary and
violent, and the complaints of the people could no longer be
silenced by the splendid names of a legislator and a conqueror.
The opinion which imputes to the prince all the calamities of his
times may be countenanced by the historian as a serious truth or
a salutary prejudice. Yet a candid suspicion will arise, that the
sentiments of Justin were pure and benevolent, and that he might
have filled his station without reproach, if the faculties of his
mind had not been impaired by disease, which deprived the emperor
of the use of his feet, and confined him to the palace, a
stranger to the complaints of the people and the vices of the
government. The tardy knowledge of his own impotence determined
him to lay down the weight of the diadem; and, in the choice of a
worthy substitute, he showed some symptoms of a discerning and
even magnanimous spirit. The only son of Justin and Sophia died
in his infancy; their daughter Arabia was the wife of Baduarius,
superintendent of the palace, and afterwards commander of the
Italian armies, who vainly aspired to confirm the rights of
marriage by those of adoption. While the empire appeared an
object of desire, Justin was accustomed to behold with jealousy
and hatred his brothers and cousins, the rivals of his hopes; nor
could he depend on the gratitude of those who would accept the
purple as a restitution, rather than a gift. Of these
competitors, one had been removed by exile, and afterwards by
death; and the emperor himself had inflicted such cruel insults
on another, that he must either dread his resentment or despise
his patience. This domestic animosity was refined into a generous
resolution of seeking a successor, not in his family, but in the
republic; and the artful Sophia recommended Tiberius, his
faithful captain of the guards, whose virtues and fortune the
emperor might cherish as the fruit of his judicious choice. The
ceremony of his elevation to the rank of Cæsar, or
Augustus, was performed in the portico of the palace, in the
presence of the patriarch and the senate. Justin collected the
remaining strength of his mind and body; but the popular belief
that his speech was inspired by the Deity betrays a very humble
opinion both of the man and of the times. "You behold," said the
emperor, "the ensigns of supreme power. You are about to receive
them, not from my hand, but from the hand of God. Honor them, and
from them you will derive honor. Respect the empress your mother:
you are now her son; before, you were her servant. Delight not in
blood; abstain from revenge; avoid those actions by which I have
incurred the public hatred; and consult the experience, rather
than the example, of your predecessor. As a man, I have sinned;
as a sinner, even in this life, I have been severely punished:
but these servants, (and we pointed to his ministers,) who have
abused my confidence, and inflamed my passions, will appear with
me before the tribunal of Christ. I have been dazzled by the
splendor of the diadem: be thou wise and modest; remember what
you have been, remember what you are. You see around us your
slaves, and your children: with the authority, assume the
tenderness, of a parent. Love your people like yourself;
cultivate the affections, maintain the discipline, of the army;
protect the fortunes of the rich, relieve the necessities of the
poor." The assembly, in silence and in tears, applauded the
counsels, and sympathized with the repentance, of their prince
the patriarch rehearsed the prayers of the church; Tiberius
received the diadem on his knees; and Justin, who in his
abdication appeared most worthy to reign, addressed the new
monarch in the following words: "If you consent, I live; if you
command, I die: may the God of heaven and earth infuse into your
heart whatever I have neglected or forgotten." The four last
years of the emperor Justin were passed in tranquil obscurity:
his conscience was no longer tormented by the remembrance of
those duties which he was incapable of discharging; and his
choice was justified by the filial reverence and gratitude of
Tiberius.
Among the virtues of Tiberius, his beauty (he was one of the
tallest and most comely of the Romans) might introduce him to the
favor of Sophia; and the widow of Justin was persuaded, that she
should preserve her station and influence under the reign of a
second and more youthful husband. But, if the ambitious candidate
had been tempted to flatter and dissemble, it was no longer in
his power to fulfil her expectations, or his own promise. The
factions of the hippodrome demanded, with some impatience, the
name of their new empress: both the people and Sophia were
astonished by the proclamation of Anastasia, the secret, though
lawful, wife of the emperor Tiberius. Whatever could alleviate
the disappointment of Sophia, Imperial honors, a stately palace,
a numerous household, was liberally bestowed by the piety of her
adopted son; on solemn occasions he attended and consulted the
widow of his benefactor; but her ambition disdained the vain
semblance of royalty, and the respectful appellation of mother
served to exasperate, rather than appease, the rage of an injured
woman. While she accepted, and repaid with a courtly smile, the
fair expressions of regard and confidence, a secret alliance was
concluded between the dowager empress and her ancient enemies;
and Justinian, the son of Germanus, was employed as the
instrument of her revenge. The pride of the reigning house
supported, with reluctance, the dominion of a stranger: the youth
was deservedly popular; his name, after the death of Justin, had
been mentioned by a tumultuous faction; and his own submissive
offer of his head with a treasure of sixty thousand pounds, might
be interpreted as an evidence of guilt, or at least of fear.
Justinian received a free pardon, and the command of the eastern
army. The Persian monarch fled before his arms; and the
acclamations which accompanied his triumph declared him worthy of
the purple. His artful patroness had chosen the month of the
vintage, while the emperor, in a rural solitude, was permitted to
enjoy the pleasures of a subject. On the first intelligence of
her designs, he returned to Constantinople, and the conspiracy
was suppressed by his presence and firmness. From the pomp and
honors which she had abused, Sophia was reduced to a modest
allowance: Tiberius dismissed her train, intercepted her
correspondence, and committed to a faithful guard the custody of
her person. But the services of Justinian were not considered by
that excellent prince as an aggravation of his offences: after a
mild reproof, his treason and ingratitude were forgiven; and it
was commonly believed, that the emperor entertained some thoughts
of contracting a double alliance with the rival of his throne.
The voice of an angel (such a fable was propagated) might reveal
to the emperor, that he should always triumph over his domestic
foes; but Tiberius derived a firmer assurance from the innocence
and generosity of his own mind.
With the odious name of Tiberius, he assumed the more popular
appellation of Constantine, and imitated the purer virtues of the
Antonines. After recording the vice or folly of so many Roman
princes, it is pleasing to repose, for a moment, on a character
conspicuous by the qualities of humanity, justice, temperance,
and fortitude; to contemplate a sovereign affable in his palace,
pious in the church, impartial on the seat of judgment, and
victorious, at least by his generals, in the Persian war. The
most glorious trophy of his victory consisted in a multitude of
captives, whom Tiberius entertained, redeemed, and dismissed to
their native homes with the charitable spirit of a Christian
hero. The merit or misfortunes of his own subjects had a dearer
claim to his beneficence, and he measured his bounty not so much
by their expectations as by his own dignity. This maxim, however
dangerous in a trustee of the public wealth, was balanced by a
principle of humanity and justice, which taught him to abhor, as
of the basest alloy, the gold that was extracted from the tears
of the people. For their relief, as often as they had suffered by
natural or hostile calamities, he was impatient to remit the
arrears of the past, or the demands of future taxes: he sternly
rejected the servile offerings of his ministers, which were
compensated by tenfold oppression; and the wise and equitable
laws of Tiberius excited the praise and regret of succeeding
times. Constantinople believed that the emperor had discovered a
treasure: but his genuine treasure consisted in the practice of
liberal economy, and the contempt of all vain and superfluous
expense. The Romans of the East would have been happy, if the
best gift of Heaven, a patriot king, had been confirmed as a
proper and permanent blessing. But in less than four years after
the death of Justin, his worthy successor sunk into a mortal
disease, which left him only sufficient time to restore the
diadem, according to the tenure by which he held it, to the most
deserving of his fellow-citizens. He selected Maurice from the
crowd, a judgment more precious than the purple itself: the
patriarch and senate were summoned to the bed of the dying
prince: he bestowed his daughter and the empire; and his last
advice was solemnly delivered by the voice of the quæstor.
Tiberius expressed his hope that the virtues of his son and
successor would erect the noblest mausoleum to his memory. His
memory was embalmed by the public affliction; but the most
sincere grief evaporates in the tumult of a new reign, and the
eyes and acclamations of mankind were speedily directed to the
rising sun.
The emperor Maurice derived his origin from ancient Rome; but
his immediate parents were settled at Arabissus in Cappadocia,
and their singular felicity preserved them alive to behold and
partake the fortune of their august son. The youth of Maurice was
spent in the profession of arms: Tiberius promoted him to the
command of a new and favorite legion of twelve thousand
confederates; his valor and conduct were signalized in the
Persian war; and he returned to Constantinople to accept, as his
just reward, the inheritance of the empire. Maurice ascended the
throne at the mature age of forty-three years; and he reigned
above twenty years over the East and over himself; expelling from
his mind the wild democracy of passions, and establishing
(according to the quaint expression of Evagrius) a perfect
aristocracy of reason and virtue. Some suspicion will degrade the
testimony of a subject, though he protests that his secret praise
should never reach the ear of his sovereign, and some failings
seem to place the character of Maurice below the purer merit of
his predecessor. His cold and reserved demeanor might be imputed
to arrogance; his justice was not always exempt from cruelty, nor
his clemency from weakness; and his rigid economy too often
exposed him to the reproach of avarice. But the rational wishes
of an absolute monarch must tend to the happiness of his people.
Maurice was endowed with sense and courage to promote that
happiness, and his administration was directed by the principles
and example of Tiberius. The pusillanimity of the Greeks had
introduced so complete a separation between the offices of king
and of general, that a private soldier, who had deserved and
obtained the purple, seldom or never appeared at the head of his
armies. Yet the emperor Maurice enjoyed the glory of restoring
the Persian monarch to his throne; his lieutenants waged a
doubtful war against the Avars of the Danube; and he cast an eye
of pity, of ineffectual pity, on the abject and distressful state
of his Italian provinces.
From Italy the emperors were incessantly tormented by tales of
misery and demands of succor, which extorted the humiliating
confession of their own weakness. The expiring dignity of Rome
was only marked by the freedom and energy of her complaints: "If
you are incapable," she said, "of delivering us from the sword of
the Lombards, save us at least from the calamity of famine."
Tiberius forgave the reproach, and relieved the distress: a
supply of corn was transported from Egypt to the Tyber; and the
Roman people, invoking the name, not of Camillus, but of St.
Peter repulsed the Barbarians from their walls. But the relief
was accidental, the danger was perpetual and pressing; and the
clergy and senate, collecting the remains of their ancient
opulence, a sum of three thousand pounds of gold, despatched the
patrician Pamphronius to lay their gifts and their complaints at
the foot of the Byzantine throne. The attention of the court, and
the forces of the East, were diverted by the Persian war: but the
justice of Tiberius applied the subsidy to the defence of the
city; and he dismissed the patrician with his best advice, either
to bribe the Lombard chiefs, or to purchase the aid of the kings
of France. Notwithstanding this weak invention, Italy was still
afflicted, Rome was again besieged, and the suburb of Classe,
only three miles from Ravenna, was pillaged and occupied by the
troops of a simple duke of Spoleto. Maurice gave audience to a
second deputation of priests and senators: the duties and the
menaces of religion were forcibly urged in the letters of the
Roman pontiff; and his nuncio, the deacon Gregory, was alike
qualified to solicit the powers either of heaven or of the earth.
The emperor adopted, with stronger effect, the measures of his
predecessor: some formidable chiefs were persuaded to embrace the
friendship of the Romans; and one of them, a mild and faithful
Barbarian, lived and died in the service of the exarchs: the
passes of the Alps were delivered to the Franks; and the pope
encouraged them to violate, without scruple, their oaths and
engagements to the misbelievers. Childebert, the great-grandson
of Clovis, was persuaded to invade Italy by the payment of fifty
thousand pieces; but, as he had viewed with delight some
Byzantine coin of the weight of one pound of gold, the king of
Austrasia might stipulate, that the gift should be rendered more
worthy of his acceptance, by a proper mixture of these
respectable medals. The dukes of the Lombards had provoked by
frequent inroads their powerful neighbors of Gaul. As soon as
they were apprehensive of a just retaliation, they renounced
their feeble and disorderly independence: the advantages of real
government, union, secrecy, and vigor, were unanimously
confessed; and Autharis, the son of Clepho, had already attained
the strength and reputation of a warrior. Under the standard of
their new king, the conquerors of Italy withstood three
successive invasions, one of which was led by Childebert himself,
the last of the Merovingian race who descended from the Alps. The
first expedition was defeated by the jealous animosity of the
Franks and Alemanni. In the second they were vanquished in a
bloody battle, with more loss and dishonor than they had
sustained since the foundation of their monarchy. Impatient for
revenge, they returned a third time with accumulated force, and
Autharis yielded to the fury of the torrent. The troops and
treasures of the Lombards were distributed in the walled towns
between the Alps and the Apennine. A nation, less sensible of
danger than of fatigue and delay, soon murmured against the folly
of their twenty commanders; and the hot vapors of an Italian sun
infected with disease those tramontane bodies which had already
suffered the vicissitudes of intemperance and famine. The powers
that were inadequate to the conquest, were more than sufficient
for the desolation, of the country; nor could the trembling
natives distinguish between their enemies and their deliverers.
If the junction of the Merovingian and Imperial forces had been
effected in the neighborhood of Milan, perhaps they might have
subverted the throne of the Lombards; but the Franks expected six
days the signal of a flaming village, and the arms of the Greeks
were idly employed in the reduction of Modena and Parma, which
were torn from them after the retreat of their transalpine
allies. The victorious Autharis asserted his claim to the
dominion of Italy. At the foot of the Rhætian Alps, he
subdued the resistance, and rifled the hidden treasures, of a
sequestered island in the Lake of Comum. At the extreme point of
the Calabria, he touched with his spear a column on the sea-shore
of Rhegium, proclaiming that ancient landmark to stand the
immovable boundary of his kingdom.
During a period of two hundred years, Italy was unequally
divided between the kingdom of the Lombards and the exarchate of
Ravenna. The offices and professions, which the jealousy of
Constantine had separated, were united by the indulgence of
Justinian; and eighteen successive exarchs were invested, in the
decline of the empire, with the full remains of civil, of
military, and even of ecclesiastical, power. Their immediate
jurisdiction, which was afterwards consecrated as the patrimony
of St. Peter, extended over the modern Romagna, the marshes or
valleys of Ferrara and Commachio, five maritime cities from
Rimini to Ancona, and a second inland Pentapolis, between the
Adriatic coast and the hills of the Apennine. Three subordinate
provinces, of Rome, of Venice, and of Naples, which were divided
by hostile lands from the palace of Ravenna, acknowledged, both
in peace and war, the supremacy of the exarch. The duchy of Rome
appears to have included the Tuscan, Sabine, and Latin conquests,
of the first four hundred years of the city, and the limits may
be distinctly traced along the coast, from Civita Vecchia to
Terracina, and with the course of the Tyber from Ameria and Narni
to the port of Ostia. The numerous islands from Grado to Chiozza
composed the infant dominion of Venice: but the more accessible
towns on the Continent were overthrown by the Lombards, who
beheld with impotent fury a new capital rising from the waves.
The power of the dukes of Naples was circumscribed by the bay and
the adjacent isles, by the hostile territory of Capua, and by the
Roman colony of Amalphi, whose industrious citizens, by the
invention of the mariner's compass, have unveiled the face of the
globe. The three islands of Sardinia, Corsica, and Sicily, still
adhered to the empire; and the acquisition of the farther
Calabria removed the landmark of Autharis from the shore of
Rhegium to the Isthmus of Consentia. In Sardinia, the savage
mountaineers preserved the liberty and religion of their
ancestors; and the husbandmen of Sicily were chained to their
rich and cultivated soil. Rome was oppressed by the iron sceptre
of the exarchs, and a Greek, perhaps a eunuch, insulted with
impunity the ruins of the Capitol. But Naples soon acquired the
privilege of electing her own dukes: the independence of Amalphi
was the fruit of commerce; and the voluntary attachment of Venice
was finally ennobled by an equal alliance with the Eastern
empire. On the map of Italy, the measure of the exarchate
occupies a very inadequate space, but it included an ample
proportion of wealth, industry, and population. The most faithful
and valuable subjects escaped from the Barbarian yoke; and the
banners of Pavia and Verona, of Milan and Padua, were displayed
in their respective quarters by the new inhabitants of Ravenna.
The remainder of Italy was possessed by the Lombards; and from
Pavia, the royal seat, their kingdom was extended to the east,
the north, and the west, as far as the confines of the Avars, the
Bavarians, and the Franks of Austrasia and Burgundy. In the
language of modern geography, it is now represented by the Terra
Firma of the Venetian republic, Tyrol, the Milanese, Piedmont,
the coast of Genoa, Mantua, Parma, and Modena, the grand duchy of
Tuscany, and a large portion of the ecclesiastical state from
Perugia to the Adriatic. The dukes, and at length the princes, of
Beneventum, survived the monarchy, and propagated the name of the
Lombards. From Capua to Tarentum, they reigned near five hundred
years over the greatest part of the present kingdom of
Naples.
In comparing the proportion of the victorious and the
vanquished people, the change of language will afford the most
probably inference. According to this standard, it will appear,
that the Lombards of Italy, and the Visigoths of Spain, were less
numerous than the Franks or Burgundians; and the conquerors of
Gaul must yield, in their turn, to the multitude of Saxons and
Angles who almost eradicated the idioms of Britain. The modern
Italian has been insensibly formed by the mixture of nations: the
awkwardness of the Barbarians in the nice management of
declensions and conjugations reduced them to the use of articles
and auxiliary verbs; and many new ideas have been expressed by
Teutonic appellations. Yet the principal stock of technical and
familiar words is found to be of Latin derivation; and, if we
were sufficiently conversant with the obsolete, the rustic, and
the municipal dialects of ancient Italy, we should trace the
origin of many terms which might, perhaps, be rejected by the
classic purity of Rome. A numerous army constitutes but a small
nation, and the powers of the Lombards were soon diminished by
the retreat of twenty thousand Saxons, who scorned a dependent
situation, and returned, after many bold and perilous adventures,
to their native country. The camp of Alboin was of formidable
extent, but the extent of a camp would be easily circumscribed
within the limits of a city; and its martial in habitants must be
thinly scattered over the face of a large country. When Alboin
descended from the Alps, he invested his nephew, the first duke
of Friuli, with the command of the province and the people: but
the prudent Gisulf would have declined the dangerous office,
unless he had been permitted to choose, among the nobles of the
Lombards, a sufficient number of families to form a perpetual
colony of soldiers and subjects. In the progress of conquest, the
same option could not be granted to the dukes of Brescia or
Bergamo, ot Pavia or Turin, of Spoleto or Beneventum; but each of
these, and each of their colleagues, settled in his appointed
district with a band of followers who resorted to his standard in
war and his tribunal in peace. Their attachment was free and
honorable: resigning the gifts and benefits which they had
accepted, they might emigrate with their families into the
jurisdiction of another duke; but their absence from the kingdom
was punished with death, as a crime of military desertion. The
posterity of the first conquerors struck a deeper root into the
soil, which, by every motive of interest and honor, they were
bound to defend. A Lombard was born the soldier of his king and
his duke; and the civil assemblies of the nation displayed the
banners, and assumed the appellation, of a regular army. Of this
army, the pay and the rewards were drawn from the conquered
provinces; and the distribution, which was not effected till
after the death of Alboin, is disgraced by the foul marks of
injustice and rapine. Many of the most wealthy Italians were
slain or banished; the remainder were divided among the
strangers, and a tributary obligation was imposed (under the name
of hospitality) of paying to the Lombards a third part of the
fruits of the earth. Within less than seventy years, this
artificial system was abolished by a more simple and solid
tenure. Either the Roman landlord was expelled by his strong and
insolent guest, or the annual payment, a third of the produce,
was exchanged by a more equitable transaction for an adequate
proportion of landed property. Under these foreign masters, the
business of agriculture, in the cultivation of corn, wines, and
olives, was exercised with degenerate skill and industry by the
labor of the slaves and natives. But the occupations of a
pastoral life were more pleasing to the idleness of the
Barbarian. In the rich meadows of Venetia, they restored and
improved the breed of horses, for which that province had once
been illustrious; and the Italians beheld with astonishment a
foreign race of oxen or buffaloes. The depopulation of Lombardy,
and the increase of forests, afforded an ample range for the
pleasures of the chase. That marvellous art which teaches the
birds of the air to acknowledge the voice, and execute the
commands, of their master, had been unknown to the ingenuity of
the Greeks and Romans. Scandinavia and Scythia produce the
boldest and most tractable falcons: they were tamed and educated
by the roving inhabitants, always on horseback and in the field.
This favorite amusement of our ancestors was introduced by the
Barbarians into the Roman provinces; and the laws of Italy
esteemed the sword and the hawk as of equal dignity and
importance in the hands of a noble Lombard.
Chapter XLV: State Of Italy Under The Lombards. --
Part III.
So rapid was the influence of climate and example, that the
Lombards of the fourth generation surveyed with curiosity and
affright the portraits of their savage forefathers. Their heads
were shaven behind, but the shaggy locks hung over their eyes and
mouth, and a long beard represented the name and character of the
nation. Their dress consisted of loose linen garments, after the
fashion of the Anglo-Saxons, which were decorated, in their
opinion, with broad stripes or variegated colors. The legs and
feet were clothed in long hose, and open sandals; and even in the
security of peace a trusty sword was constantly girt to their
side. Yet this strange apparel, and horrid aspect, often
concealed a gentle and generous disposition; and as soon as the
rage of battle had subsided, the captives and subjects were
sometimes surprised by the humanity of the victor. The vices of
the Lombards were the effect of passion, of ignorance, of
intoxication; their virtues are the more laudable, as they were
not affected by the hypocrisy of social manners, nor imposed by
the rigid constraint of laws and education. I should not be
apprehensive of deviating from my subject, if it were in my power
to delineate the private life of the conquerors of Italy; and I
shall relate with pleasure the adventurous gallantry of Autharis,
which breathes the true spirit of chivalry and romance. After the
loss of his promised bride, a Merovingian princess, he sought in
marriage the daughter of the king of Bavaria; and Garribald
accepted the alliance of the Italian monarch. Impatient of the
slow progress of negotiation, the ardent lover escaped from his
palace, and visited the court of Bavaria in the train of his own
embassy. At the public audience, the unknown stranger advanced to
the throne, and informed Garribald that the ambassador was indeed
the minister of state, but that he alone was the friend of
Autharis, who had trusted him with the delicate commission of
making a faithful report of the charms of his spouse. Theudelinda
was summoned to undergo this important examination; and, after a
pause of silent rapture, he hailed her as the queen of Italy, and
humbly requested that, according to the custom of the nation, she
would present a cup of wine to the first of her new subjects. By
the command of her father she obeyed: Autharis received the cup
in his turn, and, in restoring it to the princess, he secretly
touched her hand, and drew his own finger over his face and lips.
In the evening, Theudelinda imparted to her nurse the indiscreet
familiarity of the stranger, and was comforted by the assurance,
that such boldness could proceed only from the king her husband,
who, by his beauty and courage, appeared worthy of her love. The
ambassadors were dismissed: no sooner did they reach the confines
of Italy than Autharis, raising himself on his horse, darted his
battle-axe against a tree with incomparable strength and
dexterity. "Such," said he to the astonished Bavarians, "such are
the strokes of the king of the Lombards." On the approach of a
French army, Garribald and his daughter took refuge in the
dominions of their ally; and the marriage was consummated in the
palace of Verona. At the end of one year, it was dissolved by the
death of Autharis: but the virtues of Theudelinda had endeared
her to the nation, and she was permitted to bestow, with her
hand, the sceptre of the Italian kingdom.
From this fact, as well as from similar events, it is certain
that the Lombards possessed freedom to elect their sovereign, and
sense to decline the frequent use of that dangerous privilege.
The public revenue arose from the produce of land and the profits
of justice. When the independent dukes agreed that Autharis
should ascend the throne of his father, they endowed the regal
office with a fair moiety of their respective domains. The
proudest nobles aspired to the honors of servitude near the
person of their prince: he rewarded the fidelity of his vassals
by the precarious gift of pensions and
benefices; and atoned for the injuries
of war by the rich foundation of monasteries and churches. In
peace a judge, a leader in war, he never usurped the powers of a
sole and absolute legislator. The king of Italy convened the
national assemblies in the palace, or more probably in the
fields, of Pavia: his great council was composed of the persons
most eminent by their birth and dignities; but the validity, as
well as the execution, of their decrees depended on the
approbation of the faithful people, the
fortunate army of the Lombards. About
fourscore years after the conquest of Italy, their traditional
customs were transcribed in Teutonic Latin, and ratified by the
consent of the prince and people: some new regulations were
introduced, more suitable to their present condition; the example
of Rotharis was imitated by the wisest of his successors; and the
laws of the Lombards have been esteemed the least imperfect of
the Barbaric codes. Secure by their courage in the possession of
liberty, these rude and hasty legislators were incapable of
balancing the powers of the constitution, or of discussing the
nice theory of political government. Such crimes as threatened
the life of the sovereign, or the safety of the state, were
adjudged worthy of death; but their attention was principally
confined to the defence of the person and property of the
subject. According to the strange jurisprudence of the times, the
guilt of blood might be redeemed by a fine; yet the high price of
nine hundred pieces of gold declares a just sense of the value of
a simple citizen. Less atrocious injuries, a wound, a fracture, a
blow, an opprobrious word, were measured with scrupulous and
almost ridiculous diligence; and the prudence of the legislator
encouraged the ignoble practice of bartering honor and revenge
for a pecuniary compensation. The ignorance of the Lombards in
the state of Paganism or Christianity gave implicit credit to the
malice and mischief of witchcraft, but the judges of the
seventeenth century might have been instructed and confounded by
the wisdom of Rotharis, who derides the absurd superstition, and
protects the wretched victims of popular or judicial cruelty. The
same spirit of a legislator, superior to his age and country, may
be ascribed to Luitprand, who condemns, while he tolerates, the
impious and inveterate abuse of duels, observing, from his own
experience, that the juster cause had often been oppressed by
successful violence. Whatever merit may be discovered in the laws
of the Lombards, they are the genuine fruit of the reason of the
Barbarians, who never admitted the bishops of Italy to a seat in
their legislative councils. But the succession of their kings is
marked with virtue and ability; the troubled series of their
annals is adorned with fair intervals of peace, order, and
domestic happiness; and the Italians enjoyed a milder and more
equitable government, than any of the other kingdoms which had
been founded on the ruins of the Western empire.
Amidst the arms of the Lombards, and under the despotism of
the Greeks, we again inquire into the fate of Rome, which had
reached, about the close of the sixth century, the lowest period
of her depression. By the removal of the seat of empire, and the
successive loss of the provinces, the sources of public and
private opulence were exhausted: the lofty tree, under whose
shade the nations of the earth had reposed, was deprived of its
leaves and branches, and the sapless trunk was left to wither on
the ground. The ministers of command, and the messengers of
victory, no longer met on the Appian or Flaminian way; and the
hostile approach of the Lombards was often felt, and continually
feared. The inhabitants of a potent and peaceful capital, who
visit without an anxious thought the garden of the adjacent
country, will faintly picture in their fancy the distress of the
Romans: they shut or opened their gates with a trembling hand,
beheld from the walls the flames of their houses, and heard the
lamentations of their brethren, who were coupled together like
dogs, and dragged away into distant slavery beyond the sea and
the mountains. Such incessant alarms must annihilate the
pleasures and interrupt the labors of a rural life; and the
Campagna of Rome was speedily reduced to the state of a dreary
wilderness, in which the land is barren, the waters are impure,
and the air is infectious. Curiosity and ambition no longer
attracted the nations to the capital of the world: but, if chance
or necessity directed the steps of a wandering stranger, he
contemplated with horror the vacancy and solitude of the city,
and might be tempted to ask, Where is the senate, and where are
the people? In a season of excessive rains, the Tyber swelled
above its banks, and rushed with irresistible violence into the
valleys of the seven hills. A pestilential disease arose from the
stagnation of the deluge, and so rapid was the contagion, that
fourscore persons expired in an hour in the midst of a solemn
procession, which implored the mercy of Heaven. A society in
which marriage is encouraged and industry prevails soon repairs
the accidental losses of pestilence and war: but, as the far
greater part of the Romans was condemned to hopeless indigence
and celibacy, the depopulation was constant and visible, and the
gloomy enthusiasts might expect the approaching failure of the
human race. Yet the number of citizens still exceeded the measure
of subsistence: their precarious food was supplied from the
harvests of Sicily or Egypt; and the frequent repetition of
famine betrays the inattention of the emperor to a distant
province. The edifices of Rome were exposed to the same ruin and
decay: the mouldering fabrics were easily overthrown by
inundations, tempests, and earthquakes: and the monks, who had
occupied the most advantageous stations, exulted in their base
triumph over the ruins of antiquity. It is commonly believed,
that Pope Gregory the First attacked the temples and mutilated
the statues of the city; that, by the command of the Barbarian,
the Palatine library was reduced to ashes, and that the history
of Livy was the peculiar mark of his absurd and mischievous
fanaticism. The writings of Gregory himself reveal his implacable
aversion to the monuments of classic genius; and he points his
severest censure against the profane learning of a bishop, who
taught the art of grammar, studied the Latin poets, and
pronounced with the same voice the praises of Jupiter and those
of Christ. But the evidence of his destructive rage is doubtful
and recent: the Temple of Peace, or the theatre of Marcellus,
have been demolished by the slow operation of ages, and a formal
proscription would have multiplied the copies of Virgil and Livy
in the countries which were not subject to the ecclesiastical
dictator.
Like Thebes, or Babylon, or Carthage, the names of Rome might
have been erased from the earth, if the city had not been
animated by a vital principle, which again restored her to honor
and dominion. A vague tradition was embraced, that two Jewish
teachers, a tent-maker and a fisherman, had formerly been
executed in the circus of Nero, and at the end of five hundred
years, their genuine or fictitious relics were adored as the
Palladium of Christian Rome. The pilgrims of the East and West
resorted to the holy threshold; but the shrines of the apostles
were guarded by miracles and invisible terrors; and it was not
without fear that the pious Catholic approached the object of his
worship. It was fatal to touch, it was dangerous to behold, the
bodies of the saints; and those who, from the purest motives,
presumed to disturb the repose of the sanctuary, were affrighted
by visions, or punished with sudden death. The unreasonable
request of an empress, who wished to deprive the Romans of their
sacred treasure, the head of St. Paul, was rejected with the
deepest abhorrence; and the pope asserted, most probably with
truth, that a linen which had been sanctified in the neighborhood
of his body, or the filings of his chain, which it was sometimes
easy and sometimes impossible to obtain, possessed an equal
degree of miraculous virtue. But the power as well as virtue of
the apostles resided with living energy in the breast of their
successors; and the chair of St. Peter was filled under the reign
of Maurice by the first and greatest of the name of Gregory. His
grandfather Felix had himself been pope, and as the bishops were
already bound by the laws of celibacy, his consecration must have
been preceded by the death of his wife. The parents of Gregory,
Sylvia, and Gordian, were the noblest of the senate, and the most
pious of the church of Rome; his female relations were numbered
among the saints and virgins; and his own figure, with those of
his father and mother, were represented near three hundred years
in a family portrait, which he offered to the monastery of St.
Andrew. The design and coloring of this picture afford an
honorable testimony that the art of painting was cultivated by
the Italians of the sixth century; but the most abject ideas must
be entertained of their taste and learning, since the epistles of
Gregory, his sermons, and his dialogues, are the work of a man
who was second in erudition to none of his contemporaries: his
birth and abilities had raised him to the office of præfect
of the city, and he enjoyed the merit of renouncing the pomps and
vanities of this world. His ample patrimony was dedicated to the
foundation of seven monasteries, one in Rome, and six in Sicily;
and it was the wish of Gregory that he might be unknown in this
life, and glorious only in the next. Yet his devotion (and it
might be sincere) pursued the path which would have been chosen
by a crafty and ambitious statesman. The talents of Gregory, and
the splendor which accompanied his retreat, rendered him dear and
useful to the church; and implicit obedience has always been
inculcated as the first duty of a monk. As soon as he had
received the character of deacon, Gregory was sent to reside at
the Byzantine court, the nuncio or minister of the apostolic see;
and he boldly assumed, in the name of St. Peter, a tone of
independent dignity, which would have been criminal and dangerous
in the most illustrious layman of the empire. He returned to Rome
with a just increase of reputation, and, after a short exercise
of the monastic virtues, he was dragged from the cloister to the
papal throne, by the unanimous voice of the clergy, the senate,
and the people. He alone resisted, or seemed to resist, his own
elevation; and his humble petition, that Maurice would be pleased
to reject the choice of the Romans, could only serve to exalt his
character in the eyes of the emperor and the public. When the
fatal mandate was proclaimed, Gregory solicited the aid of some
friendly merchants to convey him in a basket beyond the gates of
Rome, and modestly concealed himself some days among the woods
and mountains, till his retreat was discovered, as it is said, by
a celestial light.
The pontificate of Gregory the
Great, which lasted thirteen years, six
months, and ten days, is one of the most edifying periods of the
history of the church. His virtues, and even his faults, a
singular mixture of simplicity and cunning, of pride and
humility, of sense and superstition, were happily suited to his
station and to the temper of the times. In his rival, the
patriarch of Constantinople, he condemned the anti-Christian
title of universal bishop, which the successor of St. Peter was
too haughty to concede, and too feeble to assume; and the
ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Gregory was confined to the triple
character of Bishop of Rome, Primate of Italy, and Apostle of the
West. He frequently ascended the pulpit, and kindled, by his
rude, though pathetic, eloquence, the congenial passions of his
audience: the language of the Jewish prophets was interpreted and
applied; and the minds of a people, depressed by their present
calamities, were directed to the hopes and fears of the invisible
world. His precepts and example defined the model of the Roman
liturgy; the distribution of the parishes, the calendar of the
festivals, the order of processions, the service of the priests
and deacons, the variety and change of sacerdotal garments. Till
the last days of his life, he officiated in the canon of the
mass, which continued above three hours: the Gregorian chant has
preserved the vocal and instrumental music of the theatre, and
the rough voices of the Barbarians attempted to imitate the
melody of the Roman school. Experience had shown him the efficacy
of these solemn and pompous rites, to soothe the distress, to
confirm the faith, to mitigate the fierceness, and to dispel the
dark enthusiasm of the vulgar, and he readily forgave their
tendency to promote the reign of priesthood and superstition. The
bishops of Italy and the adjacent islands acknowledged the Roman
pontiff as their special metropolitan. Even the existence, the
union, or the translation of episcopal seats was decided by his
absolute discretion: and his successful inroads into the
provinces of Greece, of Spain, and of Gaul, might countenance the
more lofty pretensions of succeeding popes. He interposed to
prevent the abuses of popular elections; his jealous care
maintained the purity of faith and discipline; and the apostolic
shepherd assiduously watched over the faith and discipline of the
subordinate pastors. Under his reign, the Arians of Italy and
Spain were reconciled to the Catholic church, and the conquest of
Britain reflects less glory on the name of Cæsar, than on
that of Gregory the First. Instead of six legions, forty monks
were embarked for that distant island, and the pontiff lamented
the austere duties which forbade him to partake the perils of
their spiritual warfare. In less than two years, he could
announce to the archbishop of Alexandria, that they had baptized
the king of Kent with ten thousand of his Anglo-Saxons, and that
the Roman missionaries, like those of the primitive church, were
armed only with spiritual and supernatural powers. The credulity
or the prudence of Gregory was always disposed to confirm the
truths of religion by the evidence of ghosts, miracles, and
resurrections; and posterity has paid to
his memory the same tribute which he
freely granted to the virtue of his own or the preceding
generation. The celestial honors have been liberally bestowed by
the authority of the popes, but Gregory is the last of their own
order whom they have presumed to inscribe in the calendar of
saints.
Their temporal power insensibly arose from the calamities of
the times: and the Roman bishops, who have deluged Europe and
Asia with blood, were compelled to reign as the ministers of
charity and peace. I. The church of Rome, as it has been formerly
observed, was endowed with ample possessions in Italy, Sicily,
and the more distant provinces; and her agents, who were commonly
sub-deacons, had acquired a civil, and even criminal,
jurisdiction over their tenants and husbandmen. The successor of
St. Peter administered his patrimony with the temper of a
vigilant and moderate landlord; and the epistles of Gregory are
filled with salutary instructions to abstain from doubtful or
vexatious lawsuits; to preserve the integrity of weights and
measures; to grant every reasonable delay; and to reduce the
capitation of the slaves of the glebe, who purchased the right of
marriage by the payment of an arbitrary fine. The rent or the
produce of these estates was transported to the mouth of the
Tyber, at the risk and expense of the pope: in the use of wealth
he acted like a faithful steward of the church and the poor, and
liberally applied to their wants the inexhaustible resources of
abstinence and order. The voluminous account of his receipts and
disbursements was kept above three hundred years in the Lateran,
as the model of Christian economy. On the four great festivals,
he divided their quarterly allowance to the clergy, to his
domestics, to the monasteries, the churches, the places of
burial, the almshouses, and the hospitals of Rome, and the rest
of the diocese. On the first day of every month, he distributed
to the poor, according to the season, their stated portion of
corn, wine, cheese, vegetables, oil, fish, fresh provisions,
clothes, and money; and his treasurers were continually summoned
to satisfy, in his name, the extraordinary demands of indigence
and merit. The instant distress of the sick and helpless, of
strangers and pilgrims, was relieved by the bounty of each day,
and of every hour; nor would the pontiff indulge himself in a
frugal repast, till he had sent the dishes from his own table to
some objects deserving of his compassion. The misery of the times
had reduced the nobles and matrons of Rome to accept, without a
blush, the benevolence of the church: three thousand virgins
received their food and raiment from the hand of their
benefactor; and many bishops of Italy escaped from the Barbarians
to the hospitable threshold of the Vatican. Gregory might justly
be styled the Father of his Country; and such was the extreme
sensibility of his conscience, that, for the death of a beggar
who had perished in the streets, he interdicted himself during
several days from the exercise of sacerdotal functions. II. The
misfortunes of Rome involved the apostolical pastor in the
business of peace and war; and it might be doubtful to himself,
whether piety or ambition prompted him to supply the place of his
absent sovereign. Gregory awakened the emperor from a long
slumber; exposed the guilt or incapacity of the exarch and his
inferior ministers; complained that the veterans were withdrawn
from Rome for the defence of Spoleto; encouraged the Italians to
guard their cities and altars; and condescended, in the crisis of
danger, to name the tribunes, and to direct the operations, of
the provincial troops. But the martial spirit of the pope was
checked by the scruples of humanity and religion: the imposition
of tribute, though it was employed in the Italian war, he freely
condemned as odious and oppressive; whilst he protected, against
the Imperial edicts, the pious cowardice of the soldiers who
deserted a military for a monastic life If we may credit his own
declarations, it would have been easy for Gregory to exterminate
the Lombards by their domestic factions, without leaving a king,
a duke, or a count, to save that unfortunate nation from the
vengeance of their foes As a Christian bishop, he preferred the
salutary offices of peace; his mediation appeased the tumult of
arms: but he was too conscious of the arts of the Greeks, and the
passions of the Lombards, to engage his sacred promise for the
observance of the truce. Disappointed in the hope of a general
and lasting treaty, he presumed to save his country without the
consent of the emperor or the exarch. The sword of the enemy was
suspended over Rome; it was averted by the mild eloquence and
seasonable gifts of the pontiff, who commanded the respect of
heretics and Barbarians. The merits of Gregory were treated by
the Byzantine court with reproach and insult; but in the
attachment of a grateful people, he found the purest reward of a
citizen, and the best right of a sovereign.
Chapter XLVI: Troubles In Persia.
Part I.
Revolutions On Persia After The Death Of Chosroes On
Nushirvan. -- His Son Hormouz, A Tyrant, Is Deposed. --
Usurpation Of Baharam. -- Flight And Restoration Of Chosroes II.
-- His Gratitude To The Romans. -- The Chagan Of The Avars. --
Revolt Of The Army Against Maurice. -- His Death. -- Tyranny Of
Phocas. -- Elevation Of Heraclius. -- The Persian War. --
Chosroes Subdues Syria, Egypt, And Asia Minor. -- Siege Of
Constantinople By The Persians And Avars. -- Persian Expeditions.
-- Victories And Triumph Of Heraclius.
The conflict of Rome and Persia was prolonged from the death
of Crassus to the reign of Heraclius. An experience of seven
hundred years might convince the rival nations of the
impossibility of maintaining their conquests beyond the fatal
limits of the Tigris and Euphrates. Yet the emulation of Trajan
and Julian was awakened by the trophies of Alexander, and the
sovereigns of Persia indulged the ambitious hope of restoring the
empire of Cyrus. Such extraordinary efforts of power and courage
will always command the attention of posterity; but the events by
which the fate of nations is not materially changed, leave a
faint impression on the page of history, and the patience of the
reader would be exhausted by the repetition of the same
hostilities, undertaken without cause, prosecuted without glory,
and terminated without effect. The arts of negotiation, unknown
to the simple greatness of the senate and the Cæsars, were
assiduously cultivated by the Byzantine princes; and the
memorials of their perpetual embassies repeat, with the same
uniform prolixity, the language of falsehood and declamation, the
insolence of the Barbarians, and the servile temper of the
tributary Greeks. Lamenting the barren superfluity of materials,
I have studied to compress the narrative of these uninteresting
transactions: but the just Nushirvan is still applauded as the
model of Oriental kings, and the ambition of his grandson
Chosroes prepared the revolution of the East, which was speedily
accomplished by the arms and the religion of the successors of
Mahomet.
In the useless altercations, that precede and justify the
quarrels of princes, the Greeks and the Barbarians accused each
other of violating the peace which had been concluded between the
two empires about four years before the death of Justinian. The
sovereign of Persia and India aspired to reduce under his
obedience the province of Yemen or Arabia Felix; the distant land
of myrrh and frankincense, which had escaped, rather than
opposed, the conquerors of the East. After the defeat of Abrahah
under the walls of Mecca, the discord of his sons and brothers
gave an easy entrance to the Persians: they chased the strangers
of Abyssinia beyond the Red Sea; and a native prince of the
ancient Homerites was restored to the throne as the vassal or
viceroy of the great Nushirvan. But the nephew of Justinian
declared his resolution to avenge the injuries of his Christian
ally the prince of Abyssinia, as they suggested a decent pretence
to discontinue the annual tribute,
which was poorly disguised by the name of pension. The churches
of Persarmenia were oppressed by the intolerant spirit of the
Magi; * they secretly invoked the protector of the Christians,
and, after the pious murder of their satraps, the rebels were
avowed and supported as the brethren and subjects of the Roman
emperor. The complaints of Nushirvan were disregarded by the
Byzantine court; Justin yielded to the importunities of the
Turks, who offered an alliance against the common enemy; and the
Persian monarchy was threatened at the same instant by the united
forces of Europe, of Æthiopia, and of Scythia. At the age
of fourscore the sovereign of the East would perhaps have chosen
the peaceful enjoyment of his glory and greatness; but as soon as
war became inevitable, he took the field with the alacrity of
youth, whilst the aggressor trembled in the palace of
Constantinople. Nushirvan, or Chosroes, conducted in person the
siege of Dara; and although that important fortress had been left
destitute of troops and magazines, the valor of the inhabitants
resisted above five months the archers, the elephants, and the
military engines of the Great King. In the mean while his general
Adarman advanced from Babylon, traversed the desert, passed the
Euphrates, insulted the suburbs of Antioch, reduced to ashes the
city of Apamea, and laid the spoils of Syria at the feet of his
master, whose perseverance in the midst of winter at length
subverted the bulwark of the East. But these losses, which
astonished the provinces and the court, produced a salutary
effect in the repentance and abdication of the emperor Justin: a
new spirit arose in the Byzantine councils; and a truce of three
years was obtained by the prudence of Tiberius. That seasonable
interval was employed in the preparations of war; and the voice
of rumor proclaimed to the world, that from the distant countries
of the Alps and the Rhine, from Scythia, Mæsia, Pannonia,
Illyricum, and Isauria, the strength of the Imperial cavalry was
reënforced with one hundred and fifty thousand soldiers. Yet
the king of Persia, without fear, or without faith, resolved to
prevent the attack of the enemy; again passed the Euphrates, and
dismissing the ambassadors of Tiberius, arrogantly commanded them
to await his arrival at Cæsarea, the metropolis of the
Cappadocian provinces. The two armies encountered each other in
the battle of Melitene: * the Barbarians, who darkened the air
with a cloud of arrows, prolonged their line, and extended their
wings across the plain; while the Romans, in deep and solid
bodies, expected to prevail in closer action, by the weight of
their swords and lances. A Scythian chief, who commanded their
right wing, suddenly turned the flank of the enemy, attacked
their rear-guard in the presence of Chosroes, penetrated to the
midst of the camp, pillaged the royal tent, profaned the eternal
fire, loaded a train of camels with the spoils of Asia, cut his
way through the Persian host, and returned with songs of victory
to his friends, who had consumed the day in single combats, or
ineffectual skirmishes. The darkness of the night, and the
separation of the Romans, afforded the Persian monarch an
opportunity of revenge; and one of their camps was swept away by
a rapid and impetuous assault. But the review of his loss, and
the consciousness of his danger, determined Chosroes to a speedy
retreat: he burnt, in his passage, the vacant town of Melitene;
and, without consulting the safety of his troops, boldly swam the
Euphrates on the back of an elephant. After this unsuccessful
campaign, the want of magazines, and perhaps some inroad of the
Turks, obliged him to disband or divide his forces; the Romans
were left masters of the field, and their general Justinian,
advancing to the relief of the Persarmenian rebels, erected his
standard on the banks of the Araxes. The great Pompey had
formerly halted within three days' march of the Caspian: that
inland sea was explored, for the first time, by a hostile fleet,
and seventy thousand captives were transplanted from Hyrcania to
the Isle of Cyprus. On the return of spring, Justinian descended
into the fertile plains of Assyria; the flames of war approached
the residence of Nushirvan; the indignant monarch sunk into the
grave; and his last edict restrained his successors from exposing
their person in battle against the Romans. * Yet the memory of
this transient affront was lost in the glories of a long reign;
and his formidable enemies, after indulging their dream of
conquest, again solicited a short respite from the calamities of
war.
The throne of Chosroes Nushirvan was filled by Hormouz, or
Hormisdas, the eldest or the most favored of his sons. With the
kingdoms of Persia and India, he inherited the reputation and
example of his father, the service, in every rank, of his wise
and valiant officers, and a general system of administration,
harmonized by time and political wisdom to promote the happiness
of the prince and people. But the royal youth enjoyed a still
more valuable blessing, the friendship of a sage who had presided
over his education, and who always preferred the honor to the
interest of his pupil, his interest to his inclination. In a
dispute with the Greek and Indian philosophers, Buzurg had once
maintained, that the most grievous misfortune of life is old age
without the remembrance of virtue; and our candor will presume
that the same principle compelled him, during three years, to
direct the councils of the Persian empire. His zeal was rewarded
by the gratitude and docility of Hormouz, who acknowledged
himself more indebted to his preceptor than to his parent: but
when age and labor had impaired the strength, and perhaps the
faculties, of this prudent counsellor, he retired from court, and
abandoned the youthful monarch to his own passions and those of
his favorites. By the fatal vicissitude of human affairs, the
same scenes were renewed at Ctesiphon, which had been exhibited
at Rome after the death of Marcus Antoninus. The ministers of
flattery and corruption, who had been banished by his father,
were recalled and cherished by the son; the disgrace and exile of
the friends of Nushirvan established their tyranny; and virtue
was driven by degrees from the mind of Hormouz, from his palace,
and from the government of the state. The faithful agents, the
eyes and ears of the king, informed him of the progress of
disorder, that the provincial governors flew to their prey with
the fierceness of lions and eagles, and that their rapine and
injustice would teach the most loyal of his subjects to abhor the
name and authority of their sovereign. The sincerity of this
advice was punished with death; the murmurs of the cities were
despised, their tumults were quelled by military execution: the
intermediate powers between the throne and the people were
abolished; and the childish vanity of Hormouz, who affected the
daily use of the tiara, was fond of declaring, that he alone
would be the judge as well as the master of his kingdom. In every
word, and in every action, the son of Nushirvan degenerated from
the virtues of his father. His avarice defrauded the troops; his
jealous caprice degraded the satraps; the palace, the tribunals,
the waters of the Tigris, were stained with the blood of the
innocent, and the tyrant exulted in the sufferings and execution
of thirteen thousand victims. As the excuse of his cruelty, he
sometimes condescended to observe, that the fears of the Persians
would be productive of hatred, and that their hatred must
terminate in rebellion but he forgot that his own guilt and folly
had inspired the sentiments which he deplored, and prepared the
event which he so justly apprehended. Exasperated by long and
hopeless oppression, the provinces of Babylon, Susa, and
Carmania, erected the standard of revolt; and the princes of
Arabia, India, and Scythia, refused the customary tribute to the
unworthy successor of Nushirvan. The arms of the Romans, in slow
sieges and frequent inroads, afflicted the frontiers of
Mesopotamia and Assyria: one of their generals professed himself
the disciple of Scipio; and the soldiers were animated by a
miraculous image of Christ, whose mild aspect should never have
been displayed in the front of battle. At the same time, the
eastern provinces of Persia were invaded by the great khan, who
passed the Oxus at the head of three or four hundred thousand
Turks. The imprudent Hormouz accepted their perfidious and
formidable aid; the cities of Khorassan or Bactriana were
commanded to open their gates the march of the Barbarians towards
the mountains of Hyrcania revealed the correspondence of the
Turkish and Roman arms; and their union must have subverted the
throne of the house of Sassan.
Persia had been lost by a king; it was saved by a hero. After
his revolt, Varanes or Bahram is stigmatized by the son of
Hormouz as an ungrateful slave; the proud and ambiguous reproach
of despotism, since he was truly descended from the ancient
princes of Rei, one of the seven families whose splendid, as well
as substantial, prerogatives exalted them above the heads of the
Persian nobility. At the siege of Dara, the valor of Bahram was
signalized under the eyes of Nushirvan, and both the father and
son successively promoted him to the command of armies, the
government of Media, and the superintendence of the palace. The
popular prediction which marked him as the deliverer of Persia,
might be inspired by his past victories and extraordinary figure:
the epithet Giubin * is expressive of
the quality of dry wood: he had the
strength and stature of a giant; and his savage countenance was
fancifully compared to that of a wild cat. While the nation
trembled, while Hormouz disguised his terror by the name of
suspicion, and his servants concealed their disloyalty under the
mask of fear, Bahram alone displayed his undaunted courage and
apparent fidelity: and as soon as he found that no more than
twelve thousand soldiers would follow him against the enemy; he
prudently declared, that to this fatal number Heaven had reserved
the honors of the triumph. The steep and narrow descent of the
Pule Rudbar, or Hyrcanian rock, is the only pass through which an
army can penetrate into the territory of Rei and the plains of
Media. From the commanding heights, a band of resolute men might
overwhelm with stones and darts the myriads of the Turkish host:
their emperor and his son were transpierced with arrows; and the
fugitives were left, without counsel or provisions, to the
revenge of an injured people. The patriotism of the Persian
general was stimulated by his affection for the city of his
forefathers: in the hour of victory, every peasant became a
soldier, and every soldier a hero; and their ardor was kindled by
the gorgeous spectacle of beds, and thrones, and tables of massy
gold, the spoils of Asia, and the luxury of the hostile camp. A
prince of a less malignant temper could not easily have forgiven
his benefactor; and the secret hatred of Hormouz was envenomed by
a malicious report, that Bahram had privately retained the most
precious fruits of his Turkish victory. But the approach of a
Roman army on the side of the Araxes compelled the implacable
tyrant to smile and to applaud; and the toils of Bahram were
rewarded with the permission of encountering a new enemy, by
their skill and discipline more formidable than a Scythian
multitude. Elated by his recent success, he despatched a herald
with a bold defiance to the camp of the Romans, requesting them
to fix a day of battle, and to choose whether they would pass the
river themselves, or allow a free passage to the arms of the
great king. The lieutenant of the emperor Maurice preferred the
safer alternative; and this local circumstance, which would have
enhanced the victory of the Persians, rendered their defeat more
bloody and their escape more difficult. But the loss of his
subjects, and the danger of his kingdom, were overbalanced in the
mind of Hormouz by the disgrace of his personal enemy; and no
sooner had Bahram collected and reviewed his forces, than he
received from a royal messenger the insulting gift of a distaff,
a spinning-wheel, and a complete suit of female apparel. Obedient
to the will of his sovereign he showed himself to the soldiers in
this unworthy disguise they resented his ignominy and their own;
a shout of rebellion ran through the ranks; and the general
accepted their oath of fidelity and vows of revenge. A second
messenger, who had been commanded to bring the rebel in chains,
was trampled under the feet of an elephant, and manifestos were
diligently circulated, exhorting the Persians to assert their
freedom against an odious and contemptible tyrant. The defection
was rapid and universal; his loyal slaves were sacrificed to the
public fury; the troops deserted to the standard of Bahram; and
the provinces again saluted the deliverer of his country.
As the passes were faithfully guarded, Hormouz could only
compute the number of his enemies by the testimony of a guilty
conscience, and the daily defection of those who, in the hour of
his distress, avenged their wrongs, or forgot their obligations.
He proudly displayed the ensigns of royalty; but the city and
palace of Modain had already escaped from the hand of the tyrant.
Among the victims of his cruelty, Bindoes, a Sassanian prince,
had been cast into a dungeon; his fetters were broken by the zeal
and courage of a brother; and he stood before the king at the
head of those trusty guards, who had been chosen as the ministers
of his confinement, and perhaps of his death. Alarmed by the
hasty intrusion and bold reproaches of the captive, Hormouz
looked round, but in vain, for advice or assistance; discovered
that his strength consisted in the obedience of others; and
patiently yielded to the single arm of Bindoes, who dragged him
from the throne to the same dungeon in which he himself had been
so lately confined. At the first tumult, Chosroes, the eldest of
the sons of Hormouz, escaped from the city; he was persuaded to
return by the pressing and friendly invitation of Bindoes, who
promised to seat him on his father's throne, and who expected to
reign under the name of an inexperienced youth. In the just
assurance, that his accomplices could neither forgive nor hope to
be forgiven, and that every Persian might be trusted as the judge
and enemy of the tyrant, he instituted a public trial without a
precedent and without a copy in the annals of the East. The son
of Nushirvan, who had requested to plead in his own defence, was
introduced as a criminal into the full assembly of the nobles and
satraps. He was heard with decent attention as long as he
expatiated on the advantages of order and obedience, the danger
of innovation, and the inevitable discord of those who had
encouraged each other to trample on their lawful and hereditary
sovereign. By a pathetic appeal to their humanity, he extorted
that pity which is seldom refused to the fallen fortunes of a
king; and while they beheld the abject posture and squalid
appearance of the prisoner, his tears, his chains, and the marks
of ignominious stripes, it was impossible to forget how recently
they had adored the divine splendor of his diadem and purple. But
an angry murmur arose in the assembly as soon as he presumed to
vindicate his conduct, and to applaud the victories of his reign.
He defined the duties of a king, and the Persian nobles listened
with a smile of contempt; they were fired with indignation when
he dared to vilify the character of Chosroes; and by the
indiscreet offer of resigning the sceptre to the second of his
sons, he subscribed his own condemnation, and sacrificed the life
of his own innocent favorite. The mangled bodies of the boy and
his mother were exposed to the people; the eyes of Hormouz were
pierced with a hot needle; and the punishment of the father was
succeeded by the coronation of his eldest son. Chosroes had
ascended the throne without guilt, and his piety strove to
alleviate the misery of the abdicated monarch; from the dungeon
he removed Hormouz to an apartment of the palace, supplied with
liberality the consolations of sensual enjoyment, and patiently
endured the furious sallies of his resentment and despair. He
might despise the resentment of a blind and unpopular tyrant, but
the tiara was trembling on his head, till he could subvert the
power, or acquire the friendship, of the great Bahram, who
sternly denied the justice of a revolution, in which himself and
his soldiers, the true representatives of Persia, had never been
consulted. The offer of a general amnesty, and of the second rank
in his kingdom, was answered by an epistle from Bahram, friend of
the gods, conqueror of men, and enemy of tyrants, the satrap of
satraps, general of the Persian armies, and a prince adorned with
the title of eleven virtues. He commands Chosroes, the son of
Hormouz, to shun the example and fate of his father, to confine
the traitors who had been released from their chains, to deposit
in some holy place the diadem which he had usurped, and to accept
from his gracious benefactor the pardon of his faults and the
government of a province. The rebel might not be proud, and the
king most assuredly was not humble; but the one was conscious of
his strength, the other was sensible of his weakness; and even
the modest language of his reply still left room for treaty and
reconciliation. Chosroes led into the field the slaves of the
palace and the populace of the capital: they beheld with terror
the banners of a veteran army; they were encompassed and
surprised by the evolutions of the general; and the satraps who
had deposed Hormouz, received the punishment of their revolt, or
expiated their first treason by a second and more criminal act of
disloyalty. The life and liberty of Chosroes were saved, but he
was reduced to the necessity of imploring aid or refuge in some
foreign land; and the implacable Bindoes, anxious to secure an
unquestionable title, hastily returned to the palace, and ended,
with a bowstring, the wretched existence of the son of
Nushirvan.
While Chosroes despatched the preparations of his retreat, he
deliberated with his remaining friends, whether he should lurk in
the valleys of Mount Caucasus, or fly to the tents of the Turks,
or solicit the protection of the emperor. The long emulation of
the successors of Artaxerxes and Constantine increased his
reluctance to appear as a suppliant in a rival court; but he
weighed the forces of the Romans, and prudently considered that
the neighborhood of Syria would render his escape more easy and
their succors more effectual. Attended only by his concubines,
and a troop of thirty guards, he secretly departed from the
capital, followed the banks of the Euphrates, traversed the
desert, and halted at the distance of ten miles from Circesium.
About the third watch of the night, the Roman præfect was
informed of his approach, and he introduced the royal stranger to
the fortress at the dawn of day. From thence the king of Persia
was conducted to the more honorable residence of Hierapolis; and
Maurice dissembled his pride, and displayed his benevolence, at
the reception of the letters and ambassadors of the grandson of
Nushirvan. They humbly represented the vicissitudes of fortune
and the common interest of princes, exaggerated the ingratitude
of Bahram, the agent of the evil principle, and urged, with
specious argument, that it was for the advantage of the Romans
themselves to support the two monarchies which balance the world,
the two great luminaries by whose salutary influence it is
vivified and adorned. The anxiety of Chosroes was soon relieved
by the assurance, that the emperor had espoused the cause of
justice and royalty; but Maurice prudently declined the expense
and delay of his useless visit to Constantinople. In the name of
his generous benefactor, a rich diadem was presented to the
fugitive prince, with an inestimable gift of jewels and gold; a
powerful army was assembled on the frontiers of Syria and
Armenia, under the command of the valiant and faithful Narses,
and this general, of his own nation, and his own choice, was
directed to pass the Tigris, and never to sheathe his sword till
he had restored Chosroes to the throne of his ancestors. * The
enterprise, however splendid, was less arduous than it might
appear. Persia had already repented of her fatal rashness, which
betrayed the heir of the house of Sassan to the ambition of a
rebellious subject: and the bold refusal of the Magi to
consecrate his usurpation, compelled Bahram to assume the
sceptre, regardless of the laws and prejudices of the nation. The
palace was soon distracted with conspiracy, the city with tumult,
the provinces with insurrection; and the cruel execution of the
guilty and the suspected served to irritate rather than subdue
the public discontent. No sooner did the grandson of Nushirvan
display his own and the Roman banners beyond the Tigris, than he
was joined, each day, by the increasing multitudes of the
nobility and people; and as he advanced, he received from every
side the grateful offerings of the keys of his cities and the
heads of his enemies. As soon as Modain was freed from the
presence of the usurper, the loyal inhabitants obeyed the first
summons of Mebodes at the head of only two thousand horse, and
Chosroes accepted the sacred and precious ornaments of the palace
as the pledge of their truth and the presage of his approaching
success. After the junction of the Imperial troops, which Bahram
vainly struggled to prevent, the contest was decided by two
battles on the banks of the Zab, and the confines of Media. The
Romans, with the faithful subjects of Persia, amounted to sixty
thousand, while the whole force of the usurper did not exceed
forty thousand men: the two generals signalized their valor and
ability; but the victory was finally determined by the prevalence
of numbers and discipline. With the remnant of a broken army,
Bahram fled towards the eastern provinces of the Oxus: the enmity
of Persia reconciled him to the Turks; but his days were
shortened by poison, perhaps the most incurable of poisons; the
stings of remorse and despair, and the bitter remembrance of lost
glory. Yet the modern Persians still commemorate the exploits of
Bahram; and some excellent laws have prolonged the duration of
his troubled and transitory reign. *
The restoration of Chosroes was celebrated with feasts and
executions; and the music of the royal banquet was often
disturbed by the groans of dying or mutilated criminals. A
general pardon might have diffused comfort and tranquillity
through a country which had been shaken by the late revolutions;
yet, before the sanguinary temper of Chosroes is blamed, we
should learn whether the Persians had not been accustomed either
to dread the rigor, or to despise the weakness, of their
sovereign. The revolt of Bahram, and the conspiracy of the
satraps, were impartially punished by the revenge or justice of
the conqueror; the merits of Bindoes himself could not purify his
hand from the guilt of royal blood: and the son of Hormouz was
desirous to assert his own innocence, and to vindicate the
sanctity of kings. During the vigor of the Roman power, several
princes were seated on the throne of Persia by the arms and the
authority of the first Cæsars. But their new subjects were
soon disgusted with the vices or virtues which they had imbibed
in a foreign land; the instability of their dominion gave birth
to a vulgar observation, that the choice of Rome was solicited
and rejected with equal ardor by the capricious levity of
Oriental slaves. But the glory of Maurice was conspicuous in the
long and fortunate reign of his son and
his ally. A band of a thousand Romans, who continued to guard the
person of Chosroes, proclaimed his confidence in the fidelity of
the strangers; his growing strength enabled him to dismiss this
unpopular aid, but he steadily professed the same gratitude and
reverence to his adopted father; and till the death of Maurice,
the peace and alliance of the two empires were faithfully
maintained. Yet the mercenary friendship of the Roman prince had
been purchased with costly and important gifts; the strong cities
of Martyropolis and Dara * were restored, and the Persarmenians
became the willing subjects of an empire, whose eastern limit was
extended, beyond the example of former times, as far as the banks
of the Araxes, and the neighborhood of the Caspian. A pious hope
was indulged, that the church as well as the state might triumph
in this revolution: but if Chosroes had sincerely listened to the
Christian bishops, the impression was erased by the zeal and
eloquence of the Magi: if he was armed with philosophic
indifference, he accommodated his belief, or rather his
professions, to the various circumstances of an exile and a
sovereign. The imaginary conversion of the king of Persia was
reduced to a local and superstitious veneration for Sergius, one
of the saints of Antioch, who heard his prayers and appeared to
him in dreams; he enriched the shrine with offerings of gold and
silver, and ascribed to this invisible patron the success of his
arms, and the pregnancy of Sira, a devout Christian and the best
beloved of his wives. The beauty of Sira, or Schirin, her wit,
her musical talents, are still famous in the history, or rather
in the romances, of the East: her own name is expressive, in the
Persian tongue, of sweetness and grace; and the epithet of
Parviz alludes to the charms of her
royal lover. Yet Sira never shared the passions which she
inspired, and the bliss of Chosroes was tortured by a jealous
doubt, that while he possessed her person, she had bestowed her
affections on a meaner favorite.
Chapter XLVI: Troubles In Persia. -- Part
II.
While the majesty of the Roman name was revived in the East,
the prospect of Europe is less pleasing and less glorious. By the
departure of the Lombards, and the ruin of the Gepidæ, the
balance of power was destroyed on the Danube; and the Avars
spread their permanent dominion from the foot of the Alps to the
sea-coast of the Euxine. The reign of Baian is the brightest
æra of their monarchy; their chagan, who occupied the
rustic palace of Attila, appears to have imitated his character
and policy; but as the same scenes were repeated in a smaller
circle, a minute representation of the copy would be devoid of
the greatness and novelty of the original. The pride of the
second Justin, of Tiberius, and Maurice, was humbled by a proud
Barbarian, more prompt to inflict, than exposed to suffer, the
injuries of war; and as often as Asia was threatened by the
Persian arms, Europe was oppressed by the dangerous inroads, or
costly friendship, of the Avars. When the Roman envoys approached
the presence of the chagan, they were commanded to wait at the
door of his tent, till, at the end perhaps of ten or twelve days,
he condescended to admit them. If the substance or the style of
their message was offensive to his ear, he insulted, with real or
affected fury, their own dignity, and that of their prince; their
baggage was plundered, and their lives were only saved by the
promise of a richer present and a more respectful address. But
his sacred ambassadors enjoyed and
abused an unbounded license in the midst of Constantinople: they
urged, with importunate clamors, the increase of tribute, or the
restitution of captives and deserters: and the majesty of the
empire was almost equally degraded by a base compliance, or by
the false and fearful excuses with which they eluded such
insolent demands. The chagan had never seen an elephant; and his
curiosity was excited by the strange, and perhaps fabulous,
portrait of that wonderful animal. At his command, one of the
largest elephants of the Imperial stables was equipped with
stately caparisons, and conducted by a numerous train to the
royal village in the plains of Hungary. He surveyed the enormous
beast with surprise, with disgust, and possibly with terror; and
smiled at the vain industry of the Romans, who, in search of such
useless rarities, could explore the limits of the land and sea.
He wished, at the expense of the emperor, to repose in a golden
bed. The wealth of Constantinople, and the skilful diligence of
her artists, were instantly devoted to the gratification of his
caprice; but when the work was finished, he rejected with scorn a
present so unworthy the majesty of a great king. These were the
casual sallies of his pride; but the avarice of the chagan was a
more steady and tractable passion: a rich and regular supply of
silk apparel, furniture, and plate, introduced the rudiments of
art and luxury among the tents of the Scythians; their appetite
was stimulated by the pepper and cinnamon of India; the annual
subsidy or tribute was raised from fourscore to one hundred and
twenty thousand pieces of gold; and after each hostile
interruption, the payment of the arrears, with exorbitant
interest, was always made the first condition of the new treaty.
In the language of a Barbarian, without guile, the prince of the
Avars affected to complain of the insincerity of the Greeks; yet
he was not inferior to the most civilized nations in the
refinement of dissimulation and perfidy. As the successor of the
Lombards, the chagan asserted his claim to the important city of
Sirmium, the ancient bulwark of the Illyrian provinces. The
plains of the Lower Hungary were covered with the Avar horse and
a fleet of large boats was built in the Hercynian wood, to
descend the Danube, and to transport into the Save the materials
of a bridge. But as the strong garrison of Singidunum, which
commanded the conflux of the two rivers, might have stopped their
passage and baffled his designs, he dispelled their apprehensions
by a solemn oath that his views were not hostile to the empire.
He swore by his sword, the symbol of the god of war, that he did
not, as the enemy of Rome, construct a bridge upon the Save. "If
I violate my oath," pursued the intrepid Baian, "may I myself,
and the last of my nation, perish by the sword! May the heavens,
and fire, the deity of the heavens, fall upon our heads! May the
forests and mountains bury us in their ruins! and the Save
returning, against the laws of nature, to his source, overwhelm
us in his angry waters!" After this barbarous imprecation, he
calmly inquired, what oath was most sacred and venerable among
the Christians, what guilt or perjury it was most dangerous to
incur. The bishop of Singidunum presented the gospel, which the
chagan received with devout reverence. "I swear," said he, "by
the God who has spoken in this holy book, that I have neither
falsehood on my tongue, nor treachery in my heart." As soon as he
rose from his knees, he accelerated the labor of the bridge, and
despatched an envoy to proclaim what he no longer wished to
conceal. "Inform the emperor," said the perfidious Baian, "that
Sirmium is invested on every side. Advise his prudence to
withdraw the citizens and their effects, and to resign a city
which it is now impossible to relieve or defend." Without the
hope of relief, the defence of Sirmium was prolonged above three
years: the walls were still untouched; but famine was enclosed
within the walls, till a merciful capitulation allowed the escape
of the naked and hungry inhabitants. Singidunum, at the distance
of fifty miles, experienced a more cruel fate: the buildings were
razed, and the vanquished people was condemned to servitude and
exile. Yet the ruins of Sirmium are no longer visible; the
advantageous situation of Singidunum soon attracted a new colony
of Sclavonians, and the conflux of the Save and Danube is still
guarded by the fortifications of Belgrade, or the
White City, so often and so obstinately
disputed by the Christian and Turkish arms. From Belgrade to the
walls of Constantinople a line may be measured of six hundred
miles: that line was marked with flames and with blood; the
horses of the Avars were alternately bathed in the Euxine and the
Adriatic; and the Roman pontiff, alarmed by the approach of a
more savage enemy, was reduced to cherish the Lombards, as the
protectors of Italy. The despair of a captive, whom his country
refused to ransom, disclosed to the Avars the invention and
practice of military engines. But in the first attempts they were
rudely framed, and awkwardly managed; and the resistance of
Diocletianopolis and Beræa, of Philippopolis and
Adrianople, soon exhausted the skill and patience of the
besiegers. The warfare of Baian was that of a Tartar; yet his
mind was susceptible of a humane and generous sentiment: he
spared Anchialus, whose salutary waters had restored the health
of the best beloved of his wives; and the Romans confessed, that
their starving army was fed and dismissed by the liberality of a
foe. His empire extended over Hungary, Poland, and Prussia, from
the mouth of the Danube to that of the Oder; and his new subjects
were divided and transplanted by the jealous policy of the
conqueror. The eastern regions of Germany, which had been left
vacant by the emigration of the Vandals, were replenished with
Sclavonian colonists; the same tribes are discovered in the
neighborhood of the Adriatic and of the Baltic, and with the name
of Baian himself, the Illyrian cities of Neyss and Lissa are
again found in the heart of Silesia. In the disposition both of
his troops and provinces the chagan exposed the vassals, whose
lives he disregarded, to the first assault; and the swords of the
enemy were blunted before they encountered the native valor of
the Avars.
The Persian alliance restored the troops of the East to the
defence of Europe: and Maurice, who had supported ten years the
insolence of the chagan, declared his resolution to march in
person against the Barbarians. In the space of two centuries,
none of the successors of Theodosius had appeared in the field:
their lives were supinely spent in the palace of Constantinople;
and the Greeks could no longer understand, that the name of
emperor, in its primitive sense,
denoted the chief of the armies of the republic. The martial
ardor of Maurice was opposed by the grave flattery of the senate,
the timid superstition of the patriarch, and the tears of the
empress Constantina; and they all conjured him to devolve on some
meaner general the fatigues and perils of a Scythian campaign.
Deaf to their advice and entreaty, the emperor boldly advanced
seven miles from the capital; the sacred ensign of the cross was
displayed in the front; and Maurice reviewed, with conscious
pride, the arms and numbers of the veterans who had fought and
conquered beyond the Tigris. Anchialus was the last term of his
progress by sea and land; he solicited, without success, a
miraculous answer to his nocturnal prayers; his mind was
confounded by the death of a favorite horse, the encounter of a
wild boar, a storm of wind and rain, and the birth of a monstrous
child; and he forgot that the best of omens is to unsheathe our
sword in the defence of our country. Under the pretence of
receiving the ambassadors of Persia, the emperor returned to
Constantinople, exchanged the thoughts of war for those of
devotion, and disappointed the public hope by his absence and the
choice of his lieutenants. The blind partiality of fraternal love
might excuse the promotion of his brother Peter, who fled with
equal disgrace from the Barbarians, from his own soldiers and
from the inhabitants of a Roman city. That city, if we may credit
the resemblance of name and character, was the famous Azimuntium,
which had alone repelled the tempest of Attila. The example of
her warlike youth was propagated to succeeding generations; and
they obtained, from the first or the second Justin, an honorable
privilege, that their valor should be always reserved for the
defence of their native country. The brother of Maurice attempted
to violate this privilege, and to mingle a patriot band with the
mercenaries of his camp; they retired to the church, he was not
awed by the sanctity of the place; the people rose in their
cause, the gates were shut, the ramparts were manned; and the
cowardice of Peter was found equal to his arrogance and
injustice. The military fame of Commentiolus is the object of
satire or comedy rather than of serious history, since he was
even deficient in the vile and vulgar qualification of personal
courage. His solemn councils, strange evolutions, and secret
orders, always supplied an apology for flight or delay. If he
marched against the enemy, the pleasant valleys of Mount
Hæmus opposed an insuperable barrier; but in his retreat,
he explored, with fearless curiosity, the most difficult and
obsolete paths, which had almost escaped the memory of the oldest
native. The only blood which he lost was drawn, in a real or
affected malady, by the lancet of a surgeon; and his health,
which felt with exquisite sensibility the approach of the
Barbarians, was uniformly restored by the repose and safety of
the winter season. A prince who could promote and support this
unworthy favorite must derive no glory from the accidental merit
of his colleague Priscus. In five successive battles, which seem
to have been conducted with skill and resolution, seventeen
thousand two hundred Barbarians were made prisoners: near sixty
thousand, with four sons of the chagan, were slain: the Roman
general surprised a peaceful district of the Gepidæ, who
slept under the protection of the Avars; and his last trophies
were erected on the banks of the Danube and the Teyss. Since the
death of Trajan the arms of the empire had not penetrated so
deeply into the old Dacia: yet the success of Priscus was
transient and barren; and he was soon recalled by the
apprehension that Baian, with dauntless spirit and recruited
forces, was preparing to avenge his defeat under the walls of
Constantinople.
The theory of war was not more familiar to the camps of
Cæsar and Trajan, than to those of Justinian and Maurice.
The iron of Tuscany or Pontus still received the keenest temper
from the skill of the Byzantine workmen. The magazines were
plentifully stored with every species of offensive and defensive
arms. In the construction and use of ships, engines, and
fortifications, the Barbarians admired the superior ingenuity of
a people whom they had so often vanquished in the field. The
science of tactics, the order, evolutions, and stratagems of
antiquity, was transcribed and studied in the books of the Greeks
and Romans. But the solitude or degeneracy of the provinces could
no longer supply a race of men to handle those weapons, to guard
those walls, to navigate those ships, and to reduce the theory of
war into bold and successful practice. The genius of Belisarius
and Narses had been formed without a master, and expired without
a disciple Neither honor, nor patriotism, nor generous
superstition, could animate the lifeless bodies of slaves and
strangers, who had succeeded to the honors of the legions: it was
in the camp alone that the emperor should have exercised a
despotic command; it was only in the camps that his authority was
disobeyed and insulted: he appeased and inflamed with gold the
licentiousness of the troops; but their vices were inherent,
their victories were accidental, and their costly maintenance
exhausted the substance of a state which they were unable to
defend. After a long and pernicious indulgence, the cure of this
inveterate evil was undertaken by Maurice; but the rash attempt,
which drew destruction on his own head, tended only to aggravate
the disease. A reformer should be exempt from the suspicion of
interest, and he must possess the confidence and esteem of those
whom he proposes to reclaim. The troops of Maurice might listen
to the voice of a victorious leader; they disdained the
admonitions of statesmen and sophists; and, when they received an
edict which deducted from their pay the price of their arms and
clothing, they execrated the avarice of a prince insensible of
the dangers and fatigues from which he had escaped. The camps
both of Asia and Europe were agitated with frequent and furious
seditions; the enraged soldiers of Edessa pursued with
reproaches, with threats, with wounds, their trembling generals;
they overturned the statues of the emperor, cast stones against
the miraculous image of Christ, and either rejected the yoke of
all civil and military laws, or instituted a dangerous model of
voluntary subordination. The monarch, always distant and often
deceived, was incapable of yielding or persisting, according to
the exigence of the moment. But the fear of a general revolt
induced him too readily to accept any act of valor, or any
expression of loyalty, as an atonement for the popular offence;
the new reform was abolished as hastily as it had been announced,
and the troops, instead of punishment and restraint, were
agreeably surprised by a gracious proclamation of immunities and
rewards. But the soldiers accepted without gratitude the tardy
and reluctant gifts of the emperor: their insolence was elated by
the discovery of his weakness and their own strength; and their
mutual hatred was inflamed beyond the desire of forgiveness or
the hope of reconciliation. The historians of the times adopt the
vulgar suspicion, that Maurice conspired to destroy the troops
whom he had labored to reform; the misconduct and favor of
Commentiolus are imputed to this malevolent design; and every age
must condemn the inhumanity of avarice of a prince, who, by the
trifling ransom of six thousand pieces of gold, might have
prevented the massacre of twelve thousand prisoners in the hands
of the chagan. In the just fervor of indignation, an order was
signified to the army of the Danube, that they should spare the
magazines of the province, and establish their winter quarters in
the hostile country of the Avars. The measure of their grievances
was full: they pronounced Maurice unworthy to reign, expelled or
slaughtered his faithful adherents, and, under the command of
Phocas, a simple centurion, returned by hasty marches to the
neighborhood of Constantinople. After a long series of legal
succession, the military disorders of the third century were
again revived; yet such was the novelty of the enterprise, that
the insurgents were awed by their own rashness. They hesitated to
invest their favorite with the vacant purple; and, while they
rejected all treaty with Maurice himself, they held a friendly
correspondence with his son Theodosius, and with Germanus, the
father-in-law of the royal youth. So obscure had been the former
condition of Phocas, that the emperor was ignorant of the name
and character of his rival; but as soon as he learned, that the
centurion, though bold in sedition, was timid in the face of
danger, "Alas!" cried the desponding prince, "if he is a coward,
he will surely be a murderer."
Yet if Constantinople had been firm and faithful, the murderer
might have spent his fury against the walls; and the rebel army
would have been gradually consumed or reconciled by the prudence
of the emperor. In the games of the Circus, which he repeated
with unusual pomp, Maurice disguised, with smiles of confidence,
the anxiety of his heart, condescended to solicit the applause of
the factions, and flattered their pride
by accepting from their respective tribunes a list of nine
hundred blues and fifteen hundred
greens, whom he affected to esteem as
the solid pillars of his throne Their treacherous or languid
support betrayed his weakness and hastened his fall: the green
faction were the secret accomplices of the rebels, and the blues
recommended lenity and moderation in a contest with their Roman
brethren The rigid and parsimonious virtues of Maurice had long
since alienated the hearts of his subjects: as he walked barefoot
in a religious procession, he was rudely assaulted with stones,
and his guards were compelled to present their iron maces in the
defence of his person. A fanatic monk ran through the streets
with a drawn sword, denouncing against him the wrath and the
sentence of God; and a vile plebeian, who represented his
countenance and apparel, was seated on an ass, and pursued by the
imprecations of the multitude. The emperor suspected the
popularity of Germanus with the soldiers and citizens: he feared,
he threatened, but he delayed to strike; the patrician fled to
the sanctuary of the church; the people rose in his defence, the
walls were deserted by the guards, and the lawless city was
abandoned to the flames and rapine of a nocturnal tumult. In a
small bark, the unfortunate Maurice, with his wife and nine
children, escaped to the Asiatic shore; but the violence of the
wind compelled him to land at the church of St. Autonomus, near
Chalcedon, from whence he despatched Theodosius, he eldest son,
to implore the gratitude and friendship of the Persian monarch.
For himself, he refused to fly: his body was tortured with
sciatic pains, his mind was enfeebled by superstition; he
patiently awaited the event of the revolution, and addressed a
fervent and public prayer to the Almighty, that the punishment of
his sins might be inflicted in this world rather than in a future
life. After the abdication of Maurice, the two factions disputed
the choice of an emperor; but the favorite of the blues was
rejected by the jealousy of their antagonists, and Germanus
himself was hurried along by the crowds who rushed to the palace
of Hebdomon, seven miles from the city, to adore the majesty of
Phocas the centurion. A modest wish of resigning the purple to
the rank and merit of Germanus was opposed by
his resolution, more obstinate and
equally sincere; the senate and clergy obeyed his summons; and,
as soon as the patriarch was assured of his orthodox belief, he
consecrated the successful usurper in the church of St. John the
Baptist. On the third day, amidst the acclamations of a
thoughtless people, Phocas made his public entry in a chariot
drawn by four white horses: the revolt of the troops was rewarded
by a lavish donative; and the new sovereign, after visiting the
palace, beheld from his throne the games of the hippodrome. In a
dispute of precedency between the two factions, his partial
judgment inclined in favor of the greens. "Remember that Maurice
is still alive," resounded from the opposite side; and the
indiscreet clamor of the blues admonished and stimulated the
cruelty of the tyrant. The ministers of death were despatched to
Chalcedon: they dragged the emperor from his sanctuary; and the
five sons of Maurice were successively murdered before the eyes
of their agonizing parent. At each stroke, which he felt in his
heart, he found strength to rehearse a pious ejaculation: "Thou
art just, O Lord! and thy judgments are righteous." And such, in
the last moments, was his rigid attachment to truth and justice,
that he revealed to the soldiers the pious falsehood of a nurse
who presented her own child in the place of a royal infant. The
tragic scene was finally closed by the execution of the emperor
himself, in the twentieth year of his reign, and the sixty-third
of his age. The bodies of the father and his five sons were cast
into the sea; their heads were exposed at Constantinople to the
insults or pity of the multitude; and it was not till some signs
of putrefaction had appeared, that Phocas connived at the private
burial of these venerable remains. In that grave, the faults and
errors of Maurice were kindly interred. His fate alone was
remembered; and at the end of twenty years, in the recital of the
history of Theophylact, the mournful tale was interrupted by the
tears of the audience.
Such tears must have flowed in secret, and such compassion
would have been criminal, under the reign of Phocas, who was
peaceably acknowledged in the provinces of the East and West. The
images of the emperor and his wife Leontia were exposed in the
Lateran to the veneration of the clergy and senate of Rome, and
afterwards deposited in the palace of the Cæsars, between
those of Constantine and Theodosius. As a subject and a
Christian, it was the duty of Gregory to acquiesce in the
established government; but the joyful applause with which he
salutes the fortune of the assassin, has sullied, with indelible
disgrace, the character of the saint. The successor of the
apostles might have inculcated with decent firmness the guilt of
blood, and the necessity of repentance; he is content to
celebrate the deliverance of the people and the fall of the
oppressor; to rejoice that the piety and benignity of Phocas have
been raised by Providence to the Imperial throne; to pray that
his hands may be strengthened against all his enemies; and to
express a wish, perhaps a prophecy, that, after a long and
triumphant reign, he may be transferred from a temporal to an
everlasting kingdom. I have already traced the steps of a
revolution so pleasing, in Gregory's opinion, both to heaven and
earth; and Phocas does not appear less hateful in the exercise
than in the acquisition of power The pencil of an impartial
historian has delineated the portrait of a monster: his
diminutive and deformed person, the closeness of his shaggy
eyebrows, his red hair, his beardless chin, and his cheek
disfigured and discolored by a formidable scar. Ignorant of
letters, of laws, and even of arms, he indulged in the supreme
rank a more ample privilege of lust and drunkenness; and his
brutal pleasures were either injurious to his subjects or
disgraceful to himself. Without assuming the office of a prince,
he renounced the profession of a soldier; and the reign of Phocas
afflicted Europe with ignominious peace, and Asia with desolating
war. His savage temper was inflamed by passion, hardened by fear,
and exasperated by resistance of reproach. The flight of
Theodosius to the Persian court had been intercepted by a rapid
pursuit, or a deceitful message: he was beheaded at Nice, and the
last hours of the young prince were soothed by the comforts of
religion and the consciousness of innocence. Yet his phantom
disturbed the repose of the usurper: a whisper was circulated
through the East, that the son of Maurice was still alive: the
people expected their avenger, and the widow and daughters of the
late emperor would have adopted as their son and brother the
vilest of mankind. In the massacre of the Imperial family, the
mercy, or rather the discretion, of Phocas had spared these
unhappy females, and they were decently confined to a private
house. But the spirit of the empress Constantina, still mindful
of her father, her husband, and her sons, aspired to freedom and
revenge. At the dead of night, she escaped to the sanctuary of
St. Sophia; but her tears, and the gold of her associate
Germanus, were insufficient to provoke an insurrection. Her life
was forfeited to revenge, and even to justice: but the patriarch
obtained and pledged an oath for her safety: a monastery was
allotted for her prison, and the widow of Maurice accepted and
abused the lenity of his assassin. The discovery or the suspicion
of a second conspiracy, dissolved the engagements, and rekindled
the fury, of Phocas. A matron who commanded the respect and pity
of mankind, the daughter, wife, and mother of emperors, was
tortured like the vilest malefactor, to force a confession of her
designs and associates; and the empress Constantina, with her
three innocent daughters, was beheaded at Chalcedon, on the same
ground which had been stained with the blood of her husband and
five sons. After such an example, it would be superfluous to
enumerate the names and sufferings of meaner victims. Their
condemnation was seldom preceded by the forms of trial, and their
punishment was embittered by the refinements of cruelty: their
eyes were pierced, their tongues were torn from the root, the
hands and feet were amputated; some expired under the lash,
others in the flames; others again were transfixed with arrows;
and a simple speedy death was mercy which they could rarely
obtain. The hippodrome, the sacred asylum of the pleasures and
the liberty of the Romans, was polluted with heads and limbs, and
mangled bodies; and the companions of Phocas were the most
sensible, that neither his favor, nor their services, could
protect them from a tyrant, the worthy rival of the Caligulas and
Domitians of the first age of the empire.
Chapter XLVI: Troubles In Persia. -- Part
III.
A daughter of Phocas, his only child, was given in marriage to
the patrician Crispus, and the royal
images of the bride and bridegroom were indiscreetly placed in
the circus, by the side of the emperor. The father must desire
that his posterity should inherit the fruit of his crimes, but
the monarch was offended by this premature and popular
association: the tribunes of the green faction, who accused the
officious error of their sculptors, were condemned to instant
death: their lives were granted to the prayers of the people; but
Crispus might reasonably doubt, whether a jealous usurper could
forget and pardon his involuntary competition. The green faction
was alienated by the ingratitude of Phocas and the loss of their
privileges; every province of the empire was ripe for rebellion;
and Heraclius, exarch of Africa, persisted above two years in
refusing all tribute and obedience to the centurion who disgraced
the throne of Constantinople. By the secret emissaries of Crispus
and the senate, the independent exarch was solicited to save and
to govern his country; but his ambition was chilled by age, and
he resigned the dangerous enterprise to his son Heraclius, and to
Nicetas, the son of Gregory, his friend and lieutenant. The
powers of Africa were armed by the two adventurous youths; they
agreed that the one should navigate the fleet from Carthage to
Constantinople, that the other should lead an army through Egypt
and Asia, and that the Imperial purple should be the reward of
diligence and success. A faint rumor of their undertaking was
conveyed to the ears of Phocas, and the wife and mother of the
younger Heraclius were secured as the hostages of his faith: but
the treacherous heart of Crispus extenuated the distant peril,
the means of defence were neglected or delayed, and the tyrant
supinely slept till the African navy cast anchor in the
Hellespont. Their standard was joined at Abidus by the fugitives
and exiles who thirsted for revenge; the ships of Heraclius,
whose lofty masts were adorned with the holy symbols of religion,
steered their triumphant course through the Propontis; and Phocas
beheld from the windows of the palace his approaching and
inevitable fate. The green faction was tempted, by gifts and
promises, to oppose a feeble and fruitless resistance to the
landing of the Africans: but the people, and even the guards,
were determined by the well-timed defection of Crispus; and they
tyrant was seized by a private enemy, who boldly invaded the
solitude of the palace. Stripped of the diadem and purple,
clothed in a vile habit, and loaded with chains, he was
transported in a small boat to the Imperial galley of Heraclius,
who reproached him with the crimes of his abominable reign. "Wilt
thou govern better?" were the last words of the despair of
Phocas. After suffering each variety of insult and torture, his
head was severed from his body, the mangled trunk was cast into
the flames, and the same treatment was inflicted on the statues
of the vain usurper, and the seditious banner of the green
faction. The voice of the clergy, the senate, and the people,
invited Heraclius to ascend the throne which he had purified from
guilt and ignominy; after some graceful hesitation, he yielded to
their entreaties. His coronation was accompanied by that of his
wife Eudoxia; and their posterity, till the fourth generation,
continued to reign over the empire of the East. The voyage of
Heraclius had been easy and prosperous; the tedious march of
Nicetas was not accomplished before the decision of the contest:
but he submitted without a murmur to the fortune of his friend,
and his laudable intentions were rewarded with an equestrian
statue, and a daughter of the emperor. It was more difficult to
trust the fidelity of Crispus, whose recent services were
recompensed by the command of the Cappadocian army. His arrogance
soon provoked, and seemed to excuse, the ingratitude of his new
sovereign. In the presence of the senate, the son-in-law of
Phocas was condemned to embrace the monastic life; and the
sentence was justified by the weighty observation of Heraclius,
that the man who had betrayed his father could never be faithful
to his friend.
Even after his death the republic was afflicted by the crimes
of Phocas, which armed with a pious cause the most formidable of
her enemies. According to the friendly and equal forms of the
Byzantine and Persian courts, he announced his exaltation to the
throne; and his ambassador Lilius, who had presented him with the
heads of Maurice and his sons, was the best qualified to describe
the circumstances of the tragic scene. However it might be
varnished by fiction or sophistry, Chosroes turned with horror
from the assassin, imprisoned the pretended envoy, disclaimed the
usurper, and declared himself the avenger of his father and
benefactor. The sentiments of grief and resentment, which
humanity would feel, and honor would dictate, promoted on this
occasion the interest of the Persian king; and his interest was
powerfully magnified by the national and religious prejudices of
the Magi and satraps. In a strain of artful adulation, which
assumed the language of freedom, they presumed to censure the
excess of his gratitude and friendship for the Greeks; a nation
with whom it was dangerous to conclude either peace or alliance;
whose superstition was devoid of truth and justice, and who must
be incapable of any virtue, since they could perpetrate the most
atrocious of crimes, the impious murder of their sovereign. For
the crime of an ambitious centurion, the nation which he
oppressed was chastised with the calamities of war; and the same
calamities, at the end of twenty years, were retaliated and
redoubled on the heads of the Persians. The general who had
restored Chosroes to the throne still commanded in the East; and
the name of Narses was the formidable sound with which the
Assyrian mothers were accustomed to terrify their infants. It is
not improbable, that a native subject of Persia should encourage
his master and his friend to deliver and possess the provinces of
Asia. It is still more probable, that Chosroes should animate his
troops by the assurance that the sword which they dreaded the
most would remain in its scabbard, or be drawn in their favor.
The hero could not depend on the faith of a tyrant; and the
tyrant was conscious how little he deserved the obedience of a
hero. Narses was removed from his military command; he reared an
independent standard at Hierapolis, in Syria: he was betrayed by
fallacious promises, and burnt alive in the market-place of
Constantinople. Deprived of the only chief whom they could fear
or esteem, the bands which he had led to victory were twice
broken by the cavalry, trampled by the elephants, and pierced by
the arrows of the Barbarians; and a great number of the captives
were beheaded on the field of battle by the sentence of the
victor, who might justly condemn these seditious mercenaries as
the authors or accomplices of the death of Maurice. Under the
reign of Phocas, the fortifications of Merdin, Dara, Amida, and
Edessa, were successively besieged, reduced, and destroyed, by
the Persian monarch: he passed the Euphrates, occupied the Syrian
cities, Hierapolis, Chalcis, and Berrhæa or Aleppo, and
soon encompassed the walls of Antioch with his irresistible arms.
The rapid tide of success discloses the decay of the empire, the
incapacity of Phocas, and the disaffection of his subjects; and
Chosroes provided a decent apology for their submission or
revolt, by an impostor, who attended his camp as the son of
Maurice and the lawful heir of the monarchy.
The first intelligence from the East which Heraclius received,
was that of the loss of Antioch; but the aged metropolis, so
often overturned by earthquakes, and pillaged by the enemy, could
supply but a small and languid stream of treasure and blood. The
Persians were equally successful, and more fortunate, in the sack
of Cæsarea, the capital of Cappadocia; and as they advanced
beyond the ramparts of the frontier, the boundary of ancient war,
they found a less obstinate resistance and a more plentiful
harvest. The pleasant vale of Damascus has been adorned in every
age with a royal city: her obscure felicity has hitherto escaped
the historian of the Roman empire: but Chosroes reposed his
troops in the paradise of Damascus before he ascended the hills
of Libanus, or invaded the cities of the Phnician coast. The
conquest of Jerusalem, which had been meditated by Nushirvan, was
achieved by the zeal and avarice of his grandson; the ruin of the
proudest monument of Christianity was vehemently urged by the
intolerant spirit of the Magi; and he could enlist for this holy
warfare with an army of six-and-twenty thousand Jews, whose
furious bigotry might compensate, in some degree, for the want of
valor and discipline. * After the reduction of Galilee, and the
region beyond the Jordan, whose resistance appears to have
delayed the fate of the capital, Jerusalem itself was taken by
assault. The sepulchre of Christ, and the stately churches of
Helena and Constantine, were consumed, or at least damaged, by
the flames; the devout offerings of three hundred years were
rifled in one sacrilegious day; the Patriarch Zachariah, and the
true cross, were transported into
Persia; and the massacre of ninety thousand Christians is imputed
to the Jews and Arabs, who swelled the disorder of the Persian
march. The fugitives of Palestine were entertained at Alexandria
by the charity of John the Archbishop, who is distinguished among
a crowd of saints by the epithet of
almsgiver: and the revenues of the
church, with a treasure of three hundred thousand pounds, were
restored to the true proprietors, the poor of every country and
every denomination. But Egypt itself, the only province which had
been exempt, since the time of Diocletian, from foreign and
domestic war, was again subdued by the successors of Cyrus.
Pelusium, the key of that impervious country, was surprised by
the cavalry of the Persians: they passed, with impunity, the
innumerable channels of the Delta, and explored the long valley
of the Nile, from the pyramids of Memphis to the confines of
Æthiopia. Alexandria might have been relieved by a naval
force, but the archbishop and the præfect embarked for
Cyprus; and Chosroes entered the second city of the empire, which
still preserved a wealthy remnant of industry and commerce. His
western trophy was erected, not on the walls of Carthage, but in
the neighborhood of Tripoli; the Greek colonies of Cyrene were
finally extirpated; and the conqueror, treading in the footsteps
of Alexander, returned in triumph through the sands of the Libyan
desert. In the same campaign, another army advanced from the
Euphrates to the Thracian Bosphorus; Chalcedon surrendered after
a long siege, and a Persian camp was maintained above ten years
in the presence of Constantinople. The sea-coast of Pontus, the
city of Ancyra, and the Isle of Rhodes, are enumerated among the
last conquests of the great king; and if Chosroes had possessed
any maritime power, his boundless ambition would have spread
slavery and desolation over the provinces of Europe.
From the long-disputed banks of the Tigris and Euphrates, the
reign of the grandson of Nushirvan was suddenly extended to the
Hellespont and the Nile, the ancient limits of the Persian
monarchy. But the provinces, which had been fashioned by the
habits of six hundred years to the virtues and vices of the Roman
government, supported with reluctance the yoke of the Barbarians.
The idea of a republic was kept alive by the institutions, or at
least by the writings, of the Greeks and Romans, and the subjects
of Heraclius had been educated to pronounce the words of liberty
and law. But it has always been the pride and policy of Oriental
princes to display the titles and attributes of their
omnipotence; to upbraid a nation of slaves with their true name
and abject condition, and to enforce, by cruel and insolent
threats, the rigor of their absolute commands. The Christians of
the East were scandalized by the worship of fire, and the impious
doctrine of the two principles: the Magi were not less intolerant
than the bishops; and the martyrdom of some native Persians, who
had deserted the religion of Zoroaster, was conceived to be the
prelude of a fierce and general persecution. By the oppressive
laws of Justinian, the adversaries of the church were made the
enemies of the state; the alliance of the Jews, Nestorians, and
Jacobites, had contributed to the success of Chosroes, and his
partial favor to the sectaries provoked the hatred and fears of
the Catholic clergy. Conscious of their fear and hatred, the
Persian conqueror governed his new subjects with an iron sceptre;
and, as if he suspected the stability of his dominion, he
exhausted their wealth by exorbitant tributes and licentious
rapine despoiled or demolished the temples of the East; and
transported to his hereditary realms the gold, the silver, the
precious marbles, the arts, and the artists of the Asiatic
cities. In the obscure picture of the calamities of the empire,
it is not easy to discern the figure of Chosroes himself, to
separate his actions from those of his lieutenants, or to
ascertain his personal merit in the general blaze of glory and
magnificence. He enjoyed with ostentation the fruits of victory,
and frequently retired from the hardships of war to the luxury of
the palace. But in the space of twenty-four years, he was
deterred by superstition or resentment from approaching the gates
of Ctesiphon: and his favorite residence of Artemita, or
Dastagerd, was situate beyond the Tigris, about sixty miles to
the north of the capital. The adjacent pastures were covered with
flocks and herds: the paradise or park was replenished with
pheasants, peacocks, ostriches, roebucks, and wild boars, and the
noble game of lions and tigers was sometimes turned loose for the
bolder pleasures of the chase. Nine hundred and sixty elephants
were maintained for the use or splendor of the great king: his
tents and baggage were carried into the field by twelve thousand
great camels and eight thousand of a smaller size; and the royal
stables were filled with six thousand mules and horses, among
whom the names of Shebdiz and Barid are renowned for their speed
or beauty. * Six thousand guards successively mounted before the
palace gate; the service of the interior apartments was performed
by twelve thousand slaves, and in the number of three thousand
virgins, the fairest of Asia, some happy concubine might console
her master for the age or the indifference of Sira. The various
treasures of gold, silver, gems, silks, and aromatics, were
deposited in a hundred subterraneous vaults and the chamber
Badaverd denoted the accidental gift of
the winds which had wafted the spoils of Heraclius into one of
the Syrian harbors of his rival. The vice of flattery, and
perhaps of fiction, is not ashamed to compute the thirty thousand
rich hangings that adorned the walls; the forty thousand columns
of silver, or more probably of marble, and plated wood, that
supported the roof; and the thousand globes of gold suspended in
the dome, to imitate the motions of the planets and the
constellations of the zodiac. While the Persian monarch
contemplated the wonders of his art and power, he received an
epistle from an obscure citizen of Mecca, inviting him to
acknowledge Mahomet as the apostle of God. He rejected the
invitation, and tore the epistle. "It is thus," exclaimed the
Arabian prophet, "that God will tear the kingdom, and reject the
supplications of Chosroes." Placed on the verge of the two great
empires of the East, Mahomet observed with secret joy the
progress of their mutual destruction; and in the midst of the
Persian triumphs, he ventured to foretell, that before many years
should elapse, victory should again return to the banners of the
Romans.
At the time when this prediction is said to have been
delivered, no prophecy could be more distant from its
accomplishment, since the first twelve years of Heraclius
announced the approaching dissolution of the empire. If the
motives of Chosroes had been pure and honorable, he must have
ended the quarrel with the death of Phocas, and he would have
embraced, as his best ally, the fortunate African who had so
generously avenged the injuries of his benefactor Maurice. The
prosecution of the war revealed the true character of the
Barbarian; and the suppliant embassies of Heraclius to beseech
his clemency, that he would spare the innocent, accept a tribute,
and give peace to the world, were rejected with contemptuous
silence or insolent menace. Syria, Egypt, and the provinces of
Asia, were subdued by the Persian arms, while Europe, from the
confines of Istria to the long wall of Thrace, was oppressed by
the Avars, unsatiated with the blood and rapine of the Italian
war. They had coolly massacred their male captives in the sacred
field of Pannonia; the women and children were reduced to
servitude, and the noblest virgins were abandoned to the
promiscuous lust of the Barbarians. The amorous matron who opened
the gates of Friuli passed a short night in the arms of her royal
lover; the next evening, Romilda was condemned to the embraces of
twelve Avars, and the third day the Lombard princess was impaled
in the sight of the camp, while the chagan observed with a cruel
smile, that such a husband was the fit recompense of her lewdness
and perfidy. By these implacable enemies, Heraclius, on either
side, was insulted and besieged: and the Roman empire was reduced
to the walls of Constantinople, with the remnant of Greece,
Italy, and Africa, and some maritime cities, from Tyre to
Trebizond, of the Asiatic coast. After the loss of Egypt, the
capital was afflicted by famine and pestilence; and the emperor,
incapable of resistance, and hopeless of relief, had resolved to
transfer his person and government to the more secure residence
of Carthage. His ships were already laden with the treasures of
the palace; but his flight was arrested by the patriarch, who
armed the powers of religion in the defence of his country; led
Heraclius to the altar of St. Sophia, and extorted a solemn oath,
that he would live and die with the people whom God had intrusted
to his care. The chagan was encamped in the plains of Thrace; but
he dissembled his perfidious designs, and solicited an interview
with the emperor near the town of Heraclea. Their reconciliation
was celebrated with equestrian games; the senate and people, in
their gayest apparel, resorted to the festival of peace; and the
Avars beheld, with envy and desire, the spectacle of Roman
luxury. On a sudden the hippodrome was encompassed by the
Scythian cavalry, who had pressed their secret and nocturnal
march: the tremendous sound of the chagan's whip gave the signal
of the assault, and Heraclius, wrapping his diadem round his arm,
was saved with extreme hazard, by the fleetness of his horse. So
rapid was the pursuit, that the Avars almost entered the golden
gate of Constantinople with the flying crowds: but the plunder of
the suburbs rewarded their treason, and they transported beyond
the Danube two hundred and seventy thousand captives. On the
shore of Chalcedon, the emperor held a safer conference with a
more honorable foe, who, before Heraclius descended from his
galley, saluted with reverence and pity the majesty of the
purple. The friendly offer of Sain, the Persian general, to
conduct an embassy to the presence of the great king, was
accepted with the warmest gratitude, and the prayer for pardon
and peace was humbly presented by the Prætorian
præfect, the præfect of the city, and one of the
first ecclesiastics of the patriarchal church. But the lieutenant
of Chosroes had fatally mistaken the intentions of his master.
"It was not an embassy," said the tyrant of Asia, "it was the
person of Heraclius, bound in chains, that he should have brought
to the foot of my throne. I will never give peace to the emperor
of Rome, till he had abjured his crucified God, and embraced the
worship of the sun." Sain was flayed alive, according to the
inhuman practice of his country; and the separate and rigorous
confinement of the ambassadors violated the law of nations, and
the faith of an express stipulation. Yet the experience of six
years at length persuaded the Persian monarch to renounce the
conquest of Constantinople, and to specify the annual tribute or
ransom of the Roman empire; a thousand talents of gold, a
thousand talents of silver, a thousand silk robes, a thousand
horses, and a thousand virgins. Heraclius subscribed these
ignominious terms; but the time and space which he obtained to
collect such treasures from the poverty of the East, was
industriously employed in the preparations of a bold and
desperate attack.
Of the characters conspicuous in history, that of Heraclius is
one of the most extraordinary and inconsistent. In the first and
last years of a long reign, the emperor appears to be the slave
of sloth, of pleasure, or of superstition, the careless and
impotent spectator of the public calamities. But the languid
mists of the morning and evening are separated by the brightness
of the meridian sun; the Arcadius of the palace arose the
Cæsar of the camp; and the honor of Rome and Heraclius was
gloriously retrieved by the exploits and trophies of six
adventurous campaigns. It was the duty of the Byzantine
historians to have revealed the causes of his slumber and
vigilance. At this distance we can only conjecture, that he was
endowed with more personal courage than political resolution;
that he was detained by the charms, and perhaps the arts, of his
niece Martina, with whom, after the death of Eudocia, he
contracted an incestuous marriage; and that he yielded to the
base advice of the counsellors, who urged, as a fundamental law,
that the life of the emperor should never be exposed in the
field. Perhaps he was awakened by the last insolent demand of the
Persian conqueror; but at the moment when Heraclius assumed the
spirit of a hero, the only hopes of the Romans were drawn from
the vicissitudes of fortune, which might threaten the proud
prosperity of Chosroes, and must be favorable to those who had
attained the lowest period of depression. To provide for the
expenses of war, was the first care of the emperor; and for the
purpose of collecting the tribute, he was allowed to solicit the
benevolence of the eastern provinces. But the revenue no longer
flowed in the usual channels; the credit of an arbitrary prince
is annihilated by his power; and the courage of Heraclius was
first displayed in daring to borrow the consecrated wealth of
churches, under the solemn vow of restoring, with usury, whatever
he had been compelled to employ in the service of religion and
the empire. The clergy themselves appear to have sympathized with
the public distress; and the discreet patriarch of Alexandria,
without admitting the precedent of sacrilege, assisted his
sovereign by the miraculous or seasonable revelation of a secret
treasure. Of the soldiers who had conspired with Phocas, only two
were found to have survived the stroke of time and of the
Barbarians; the loss, even of these seditious veterans, was
imperfectly supplied by the new levies of Heraclius, and the gold
of the sanctuary united, in the same camp, the names, and arms,
and languages of the East and West. He would have been content
with the neutrality of the Avars; and his friendly entreaty, that
the chagan would act, not as the enemy, but as the guardian, of
the empire, was accompanied with a more persuasive donative of
two hundred thousand pieces of gold. Two days after the festival
of Easter, the emperor, exchanging his purple for the simple garb
of a penitent and warrior, gave the signal of his departure. To
the faith of the people Heraclius recommended his children; the
civil and military powers were vested in the most deserving
hands, and the discretion of the patriarch and senate was
authorized to save or surrender the city, if they should be
oppressed in his absence by the superior forces of the enemy.
The neighboring heights of Chalcedon were covered with tents
and arms: but if the new levies of Heraclius had been rashly led
to the attack, the victory of the Persians in the sight of
Constantinople might have been the last day of the Roman empire.
As imprudent would it have been to advance into the provinces of
Asia, leaving their innumerable cavalry to intercept his convoys,
and continually to hang on the lassitude and disorder of his
rear. But the Greeks were still masters of the sea; a fleet of
galleys, transports, and store-ships, was assembled in the
harbor; the Barbarians consented to embark; a steady wind carried
them through the Hellespont the western and southern coast of
Asia Minor lay on their left hand; the spirit of their chief was
first displayed in a storm, and even the eunuchs of his train
were excited to suffer and to work by the example of their
master. He landed his troops on the confines of Syria and
Cilicia, in the Gulf of Scanderoon, where the coast suddenly
turns to the south; and his discernment was expressed in the
choice of this important post. From all sides, the scattered
garrisons of the maritime cities and the mountains might repair
with speed and safety to his Imperial standard. The natural
fortifications of Cilicia protected, and even concealed, the camp
of Heraclius, which was pitched near Issus, on the same ground
where Alexander had vanquished the host of Darius. The angle
which the emperor occupied was deeply indented into a vast
semicircle of the Asiatic, Armenian, and Syrian provinces; and to
whatsoever point of the circumference he should direct his
attack, it was easy for him to dissemble his own motions, and to
prevent those of the enemy. In the camp of Issus, the Roman
general reformed the sloth and disorder of the veterans, and
educated the new recruits in the knowledge and practice of
military virtue. Unfolding the miraculous image of Christ, he
urged them to revenge the holy altars
which had been profaned by the worshippers of fire; addressing
them by the endearing appellations of sons and brethren, he
deplored the public and private wrongs of the republic. The
subjects of a monarch were persuaded that they fought in the
cause of freedom; and a similar enthusiasm was communicated to
the foreign mercenaries, who must have viewed with equal
indifference the interest of Rome and of Persia. Heraclius
himself, with the skill and patience of a centurion, inculcated
the lessons of the school of tactics, and the soldiers were
assiduously trained in the use of their weapons, and the
exercises and evolutions of the field. The cavalry and infantry
in light or heavy armor were divided into two parties; the
trumpets were fixed in the centre, and their signals directed the
march, the charge, the retreat or pursuit; the direct or oblique
order, the deep or extended phalanx; to represent in fictitious
combat the operations of genuine war. Whatever hardships the
emperor imposed on the troops, he inflicted with equal severity
on himself; their labor, their diet, their sleep, were measured
by the inflexible rules of discipline; and, without despising the
enemy, they were taught to repose an implicit confidence in their
own valor and the wisdom of their leader. Cilicia was soon
encompassed with the Persian arms; but their cavalry hesitated to
enter the defiles of Mount Taurus, till they were circumvented by
the evolutions of Heraclius, who insensibly gained their rear,
whilst he appeared to present his front in order of battle. By a
false motion, which seemed to threaten Armenia, he drew them,
against their wishes, to a general action. They were tempted by
the artful disorder of his camp; but when they advanced to
combat, the ground, the sun, and the expectation of both armies,
were unpropitious to the Barbarians; the Romans successfully
repeated their tactics in a field of battle, and the event of the
day declared to the world, that the Persians were not invincible,
and that a hero was invested with the purple. Strong in victory
and fame, Heraclius boldly ascended the heights of Mount Taurus,
directed his march through the plains of Cappadocia, and
established his troops, for the winter season, in safe and
plentiful quarters on the banks of the River Halys. His soul was
superior to the vanity of entertaining Constantinople with an
imperfect triumph; but the presence of the emperor was
indispensably required to soothe the restless and rapacious
spirit of the Avars.
Since the days of Scipio and Hannibal, no bolder enterprise
has been attempted than that which Heraclius achieved for the
deliverance of the empire He permitted the Persians to oppress
for a while the provinces, and to insult with impunity the
capital of the East; while the Roman emperor explored his
perilous way through the Black Sea, and the mountains of Armenia,
penetrated into the heart of Persia, and recalled the armies of
the great king to the defence of their bleeding country. With a
select band of five thousand soldiers, Heraclius sailed from
Constantinople to Trebizond; assembled his forces which had
wintered in the Pontic regions; and, from the mouth of the Phasis
to the Caspian Sea, encouraged his subjects and allies to march
with the successor of Constantine under the faithful and
victorious banner of the cross. When the legions of Lucullus and
Pompey first passed the Euphrates, they blushed at their easy
victory over the natives of Armenia. But the long experience of
war had hardened the minds and bodies of that effeminate people;
their zeal and bravery were approved in the service of a
declining empire; they abhorred and feared the usurpation of the
house of Sassan, and the memory of persecution envenomed their
pious hatred of the enemies of Christ. The limits of Armenia, as
it had been ceded to the emperor Maurice, extended as far as the
Araxes: the river submitted to the indignity of a bridge, and
Heraclius, in the footsteps of Mark Antony, advanced towards the
city of Tauris or Gandzaca, the ancient and modern capital of one
of the provinces of Media. At the head of forty thousand men,
Chosroes himself had returned from some distant expedition to
oppose the progress of the Roman arms; but he retreated on the
approach of Heraclius, declining the generous alternative of
peace or of battle. Instead of half a million of inhabitants,
which have been ascribed to Tauris under the reign of the Sophys,
the city contained no more than three thousand houses; but the
value of the royal treasures was enhanced by a tradition, that
they were the spoils of Crsus, which had been transported by
Cyrus from the citadel of Sardes. The rapid conquests of
Heraclius were suspended only by the winter season; a motive of
prudence, or superstition, determined his retreat into the
province of Albania, along the shores of the Caspian; and his
tents were most probably pitched in the plains of Mogan, the
favorite encampment of Oriental princes. In the course of this
successful inroad, he signalized the zeal and revenge of a
Christian emperor: at his command, the soldiers extinguished the
fire, and destroyed the temples, of the Magi; the statues of
Chosroes, who aspired to divine honors, were abandoned to the
flames; and the ruins of Thebarma or Ormia, which had given birth
to Zoroaster himself, made some atonement for the injuries of the
holy sepulchre. A purer spirit of religion was shown in the
relief and deliverance of fifty thousand captives. Heraclius was
rewarded by their tears and grateful acclamations; but this wise
measure, which spread the fame of his benevolence, diffused the
murmurs of the Persians against the pride and obstinacy of their
own sovereign.
Chapter XLVI: Troubles In Persia. -- Part
IV.
Amidst the glories of the succeeding campaign, Heraclius is
almost lost to our eyes, and to those of the Byzantine
historians. From the spacious and fruitful plains of Albania, the
emperor appears to follow the chain of Hyrcanian Mountains, to
descend into the province of Media or Irak, and to carry his
victorious arms as far as the royal cities of Casbin and Ispahan,
which had never been approached by a Roman conqueror. Alarmed by
the danger of his kingdom, the powers of Chosroes were already
recalled from the Nile and the Bosphorus, and three formidable
armies surrounded, in a distant and hostile land, the camp of the
emperor. The Colchian allies prepared to desert his standard; and
the fears of the bravest veterans were expressed, rather than
concealed, by their desponding silence. "Be not terrified," said
the intrepid Heraclius, "by the multitude of your foes. With the
aid of Heaven, one Roman may triumph over a thousand Barbarians.
But if we devote our lives for the salvation of our brethren, we
shall obtain the crown of martyrdom, and our immortal reward will
be liberally paid by God and posterity." These magnanimous
sentiments were supported by the vigor of his actions. He
repelled the threefold attack of the Persians, improved the
divisions of their chiefs, and, by a well-concerted train of
marches, retreats, and successful actions, finally chased them
from the field into the fortified cities of Media and Assyria. In
the severity of the winter season, Sarbaraza deemed himself
secure in the walls of Salban: he was surprised by the activity
of Heraclius, who divided his troops, and performed a laborious
march in the silence of the night. The flat roofs of the houses
were defended with useless valor against the darts and torches of
the Romans: the satraps and nobles of Persia, with their wives
and children, and the flower of their martial youth, were either
slain or made prisoners. The general escaped by a precipitate
flight, but his golden armor was the prize of the conqueror; and
the soldiers of Heraclius enjoyed the wealth and repose which
they had so nobly deserved. On the return of spring, the emperor
traversed in seven days the mountains of Curdistan, and passed
without resistance the rapid stream of the Tigris. Oppressed by
the weight of their spoils and captives, the Roman army halted
under the walls of Amida; and Heraclius informed the senate of
Constantinople of his safety and success, which they had already
felt by the retreat of the besiegers. The bridges of the
Euphrates were destroyed by the Persians; but as soon as the
emperor had discovered a ford, they hastily retired to defend the
banks of the Sarus, in Cilicia. That river, an impetuous torrent,
was about three hundred feet broad; the bridge was fortified with
strong turrets; and the banks were lined with Barbarian archers.
After a bloody conflict, which continued till the evening, the
Romans prevailed in the assault; and a Persian of gigantic size
was slain and thrown into the Sarus by the hand of the emperor
himself. The enemies were dispersed and dismayed; Heraclius
pursued his march to Sebaste in Cappadocia; and at the expiration
of three years, the same coast of the Euxine applauded his return
from a long and victorious expedition.
Instead of skirmishing on the frontier, the two monarchs who
disputed the empire of the East aimed their desperate strokes at
the heart of their rival. The military force of Persia was wasted
by the marches and combats of twenty years, and many of the
veterans, who had survived the perils of the sword and the
climate, were still detained in the fortresses of Egypt and
Syria. But the revenge and ambition of Chosroes exhausted his
kingdom; and the new levies of subjects, strangers, and slaves,
were divided into three formidable bodies. The first army of
fifty thousand men, illustrious by the ornament and title of the
golden spears, was destined to march
against Heraclius; the second was stationed to prevent his
junction with the troops of his brother Theodore's; and the third
was commanded to besiege Constantinople, and to second the
operations of the chagan, with whom the Persian king had ratified
a treaty of alliance and partition. Sarbar, the general of the
third army, penetrated through the provinces of Asia to the
well-known camp of Chalcedon, and amused himself with the
destruction of the sacred and profane buildings of the Asiatic
suburbs, while he impatiently waited the arrival of his Scythian
friends on the opposite side of the Bosphorus. On the
twenty-ninth of June, thirty thousand Barbarians, the vanguard of
the Avars, forced the long wall, and drove into the capital a
promiscuous crowd of peasants, citizens, and soldiers. Fourscore
thousand of his native subjects, and of the vassal tribes of
Gepidæ, Russians, Bulgarians, and Sclavonians, advanced
under the standard of the chagan; a month was spent in marches
and negotiations, but the whole city was invested on the
thirty-first of July, from the suburbs of Pera and Galata to the
Blachernæ and seven towers; and the inhabitants descried
with terror the flaming signals of the European and Asiatic
shores. In the mean while, the magistrates of Constantinople
repeatedly strove to purchase the retreat of the chagan; but
their deputies were rejected and insulted; and he suffered the
patricians to stand before his throne, while the Persian envoys,
in silk robes, were seated by his side. "You see," said the
haughty Barbarian, "the proofs of my perfect union with the great
king; and his lieutenant is ready to send into my camp a select
band of three thousand warriors. Presume no longer to tempt your
master with a partial and inadequate ransom your wealth and your
city are the only presents worthy of my acceptance. For
yourselves, I shall permit you to depart, each with an
under-garment and a shirt; and, at my entreaty, my friend Sarbar
will not refuse a passage through his lines. Your absent prince,
even now a captive or a fugitive, has left Constantinople to its
fate; nor can you escape the arms of the Avars and Persians,
unless you could soar into the air like birds, unless like fishes
you could dive into the waves." During ten successive days, the
capital was assaulted by the Avars, who had made some progress in
the science of attack; they advanced to sap or batter the wall,
under the cover of the impenetrable tortoise; their engines
discharged a perpetual volley of stones and darts; and twelve
lofty towers of wood exalted the combatants to the height of the
neighboring ramparts. But the senate and people were animated by
the spirit of Heraclius, who had detached to their relief a body
of twelve thousand cuirassiers; the powers of fire and mechanics
were used with superior art and success in the defence of
Constantinople; and the galleys, with two and three ranks of
oars, commanded the Bosphorus, and rendered the Persians the idle
spectators of the defeat of their allies. The Avars were
repulsed; a fleet of Sclavonian canoes was destroyed in the
harbor; the vassals of the chagan threatened to desert, his
provisions were exhausted, and after burning his engines, he gave
the signal of a slow and formidable retreat. The devotion of the
Romans ascribed this signal deliverance to the Virgin Mary; but
the mother of Christ would surely have condemned their inhuman
murder of the Persian envoys, who were entitled to the rights of
humanity, if they were not protected by the laws of nations.
After the division of his army, Heraclius prudently retired to
the banks of the Phasis, from whence he maintained a defensive
war against the fifty thousand gold spears of Persia. His anxiety
was relieved by the deliverance of Constantinople; his hopes were
confirmed by a victory of his brother Theodorus; and to the
hostile league of Chosroes with the Avars, the Roman emperor
opposed the useful and honorable alliance of the Turks. At his
liberal invitation, the horde of Chozars transported their tents
from the plains of the Volga to the mountains of Georgia;
Heraclius received them in the neighborhood of Teflis, and the
khan with his nobles dismounted from their horses, if we may
credit the Greeks, and fell prostrate on the ground, to adore the
purple of the Cæsars. Such voluntary homage and important
aid were entitled to the warmest acknowledgments; and the
emperor, taking off his own diadem, placed it on the head of the
Turkish prince, whom he saluted with a tender embrace and the
appellation of son. After a sumptuous banquet, he presented
Ziebel with the plate and ornaments, the gold, the gems, and the
silk, which had been used at the Imperial table, and, with his
own hand, distributed rich jewels and ear-rings to his new
allies. In a secret interview, he produced the portrait of his
daughter Eudocia, condescended to flatter the Barbarian with the
promise of a fair and august bride; obtained an immediate succor
of forty thousand horse, and negotiated a strong diversion of the
Turkish arms on the side of the Oxus. The Persians, in their
turn, retreated with precipitation; in the camp of Edessa,
Heraclius reviewed an army of seventy thousand Romans and
strangers; and some months were successfully employed in the
recovery of the cities of Syria, Mesopotamia and Armenia, whose
fortifications had been imperfectly restored. Sarbar still
maintained the important station of Chalcedon; but the jealousy
of Chosroes, or the artifice of Heraclius, soon alienated the
mind of that powerful satrap from the service of his king and
country. A messenger was intercepted with a real or fictitious
mandate to the cadarigan, or second in command, directing him to
send, without delay, to the throne, the head of a guilty or
unfortunate general. The despatches were transmitted to Sarbar
himself; and as soon as he read the sentence of his own death, he
dexterously inserted the names of four hundred officers,
assembled a military council, and asked the
cadarigan whether he was prepared to
execute the commands of their tyrant. The Persians unanimously
declared, that Chosroes had forfeited the sceptre; a separate
treaty was concluded with the government of Constantinople; and
if some considerations of honor or policy restrained Sarbar from
joining the standard of Heraclius, the emperor was assured that
he might prosecute, without interruption, his designs of victory
and peace.
Deprived of his firmest support, and doubtful of the fidelity
of his subjects, the greatness of Chosroes was still conspicuous
in its ruins. The number of five hundred thousand may be
interpreted as an Oriental metaphor, to describe the men and
arms, the horses and elephants, that covered Media and Assyria
against the invasion of Heraclius. Yet the Romans boldly advanced
from the Araxes to the Tigris, and the timid prudence of Rhazates
was content to follow them by forced marches through a desolate
country, till he received a peremptory mandate to risk the fate
of Persia in a decisive battle. Eastward of the Tigris, at the
end of the bridge of Mosul, the great Nineveh had formerly been
erected: the city, and even the ruins of the city, had long since
disappeared; the vacant space afforded a spacious field for the
operations of the two armies. But these operations are neglected
by the Byzantine historians, and, like the authors of epic poetry
and romance, they ascribe the victory, not to the military
conduct, but to the personal valor, of their favorite hero. On
this memorable day, Heraclius, on his horse Phallas, surpassed
the bravest of his warriors: his lip was pierced with a spear;
the steed was wounded in the thigh; but he carried his master
safe and victorious through the triple phalanx of the Barbarians.
In the heat of the action, three valiant chiefs were successively
slain by the sword and lance of the emperor: among these was
Rhazates himself; he fell like a soldier, but the sight of his
head scattered grief and despair through the fainting ranks of
the Persians. His armor of pure and massy gold, the shield of one
hundred and twenty plates, the sword and belt, the saddle and
cuirass, adorned the triumph of Heraclius; and if he had not been
faithful to Christ and his mother, the champion of Rome might
have offered the fourth opime spoils to
the Jupiter of the Capitol. In the battle of Nineveh, which was
fiercely fought from daybreak to the eleventh hour, twenty-eight
standards, besides those which might be broken or torn, were
taken from the Persians; the greatest part of their army was cut
in pieces, and the victors, concealing their own loss, passed the
night on the field. They acknowledged, that on this occasion it
was less difficult to kill than to discomfit the soldiers of
Chosroes; amidst the bodies of their friends, no more than two
bow-shot from the enemy the remnant of the Persian cavalry stood
firm till the seventh hour of the night; about the eighth hour
they retired to their unrifled camp, collected their baggage, and
dispersed on all sides, from the want of orders rather than of
resolution. The diligence of Heraclius was not less admirable in
the use of victory; by a march of forty-eight miles in
four-and-twenty hours, his vanguard occupied the bridges of the
great and the lesser Zab; and the cities and palaces of Assyria
were open for the first time to the Romans. By a just gradation
of magnificent scenes, they penetrated to the royal seat of
Dastagerd, * and, though much of the treasure had been removed,
and much had been expended, the remaining wealth appears to have
exceeded their hopes, and even to have satiated their avarice.
Whatever could not be easily transported, they consumed with
fire, that Chosroes might feel the anguish of those wounds which
he had so often inflicted on the provinces of the empire: and
justice might allow the excuse, if the desolation had been
confined to the works of regal luxury, if national hatred,
military license, and religious zeal, had not wasted with equal
rage the habitations and the temples of the guiltless subject.
The recovery of three hundred Roman standards, and the
deliverance of the numerous captives of Edessa and Alexandria,
reflect a purer glory on the arms of Heraclius. From the palace
of Dastagerd, he pursued his march within a few miles of Modain
or Ctesiphon, till he was stopped, on the banks of the Arba, by
the difficulty of the passage, the rigor of the season, and
perhaps the fame of an impregnable capital. The return of the
emperor is marked by the modern name of the city of Sherhzour: he
fortunately passed Mount Zara, before the snow, which fell
incessantly thirty-four days; and the citizens of Gandzca, or
Tauris, were compelled to entertain the soldiers and their horses
with a hospitable reception.
When the ambition of Chosroes was reduced to the defence of
his hereditary kingdom, the love of glory, or even the sense of
shame, should have urged him to meet his rival in the field. In
the battle of Nineveh, his courage might have taught the Persians
to vanquish, or he might have fallen with honor by the lance of a
Roman emperor. The successor of Cyrus chose rather, at a secure
distance, to expect the event, to assemble the relics of the
defeat, and to retire, by measured steps, before the march of
Heraclius, till he beheld with a sigh the once loved mansions of
Dastagerd. Both his friends and enemies were persuaded, that it
was the intention of Chosroes to bury himself under the ruins of
the city and palace: and as both might have been equally adverse
to his flight, the monarch of Asia, with Sira, * and three
concubines, escaped through a hole in the wall nine days before
the arrival of the Romans. The slow and stately procession in
which he showed himself to the prostrate crowd, was changed to a
rapid and secret journey; and the first evening he lodged in the
cottage of a peasant, whose humble door would scarcely give
admittance to the great king. His superstition was subdued by
fear: on the third day, he entered with joy the fortifications of
Ctesiphon; yet he still doubted of his safety till he had opposed
the River Tigris to the pursuit of the Romans. The discovery of
his flight agitated with terror and tumult the palace, the city,
and the camp of Dastagerd: the satraps hesitated whether they had
most to fear from their sovereign or the enemy; and the females
of the harem were astonished and pleased by the sight of mankind,
till the jealous husband of three thousand wives again confined
them to a more distant castle. At his command, the army of
Dastagerd retreated to a new camp: the front was covered by the
Arba, and a line of two hundred elephants; the troops of the more
distant provinces successively arrived, and the vilest domestics
of the king and satraps were enrolled for the last defence of the
throne. It was still in the power of Chosroes to obtain a
reasonable peace; and he was repeatedly pressed by the messengers
of Heraclius to spare the blood of his subjects, and to relieve a
humane conqueror from the painful duty of carrying fire and sword
through the fairest countries of Asia. But the pride of the
Persian had not yet sunk to the level of his fortune; he derived
a momentary confidence from the retreat of the emperor; he wept
with impotent rage over the ruins of his Assyrian palaces, and
disregarded too long the rising murmurs of the nation, who
complained that their lives and fortunes were sacrificed to the
obstinacy of an old man. That unhappy old man was himself
tortured with the sharpest pains both of mind and body; and, in
the consciousness of his approaching end, he resolved to fix the
tiara on the head of Merdaza, the most favored of his sons. But
the will of Chosroes was no longer revered, and Siroes, * who
gloried in the rank and merit of his mother Sira, had conspired
with the malecontents to assert and anticipate the rights of
primogeniture. Twenty-two satraps (they styled themselves
patriots) were tempted by the wealth and honors of a new reign:
to the soldiers, the heir of Chosroes promised an increase of
pay; to the Christians, the free exercise of their religion; to
the captives, liberty and rewards; and to the nation, instant
peace and the reduction of taxes. It was determined by the
conspirators, that Siroes, with the ensigns of royalty, should
appear in the camp; and if the enterprise should fail, his escape
was contrived to the Imperial court. But the new monarch was
saluted with unanimous acclamations; the flight of Chosroes (yet
where could he have fled?) was rudely arrested, eighteen sons
were massacred * before his face, and he was thrown into a
dungeon, where he expired on the fifth day. The Greeks and modern
Persians minutely describe how Chosroes was insulted, and
famished, and tortured, by the command of an inhuman son, who so
far surpassed the example of his father: but at the time of his
death, what tongue would relate the story of the parricide? what
eye could penetrate into the tower of
darkness? According to the faith and mercy of his
Christian enemies, he sunk without hope into a still deeper
abyss; and it will not be denied, that tyrants of every age and
sect are the best entitled to such infernal abodes. The glory of
the house of Sassan ended with the life of Chosroes: his
unnatural son enjoyed only eight months the fruit of his crimes:
and in the space of four years, the regal title was assumed by
nine candidates, who disputed, with the sword or dagger, the
fragments of an exhausted monarchy. Every province, and each city
of Persia, was the scene of independence, of discord, and of
blood; and the state of anarchy prevailed about eight years
longer, till the factions were silenced and united under the
common yoke of the Arabian caliphs.
As soon as the mountains became passable, the emperor received
the welcome news of the success of the conspiracy, the death of
Chosroes, and the elevation of his eldest son to the throne of
Persia. The authors of the revolution, eager to display their
merits in the court or camp of Tauris, preceded the ambassadors
of Siroes, who delivered the letters of their master to his
brother the emperor of the Romans. In
the language of the usurpers of every age, he imputes his own
crimes to the Deity, and, without degrading his equal majesty, he
offers to reconcile the long discord of the two nations, by a
treaty of peace and alliance more durable than brass or iron. The
conditions of the treaty were easily defined and faithfully
executed. In the recovery of the standards and prisoners which
had fallen into the hands of the Persians, the emperor imitated
the example of Augustus: their care of the national dignity was
celebrated by the poets of the times, but the decay of genius may
be measured by the distance between Horace and George of Pisidia:
the subjects and brethren of Heraclius were redeemed from
persecution, slavery, and exile; but, instead of the Roman
eagles, the true wood of the holy cross was restored to the
importunate demands of the successor of Constantine. The victor
was not ambitious of enlarging the weakness of the empire; the
son of Chosroes abandoned without regret the conquests of his
father; the Persians who evacuated the cities of Syria and Egypt
were honorably conducted to the frontier, and a war which had
wounded the vitals of the two monarchies, produced no change in
their external and relative situation. The return of Heraclius
from Tauris to Constantinople was a perpetual triumph; and after
the exploits of six glorious campaigns, he peaceably enjoyed the
Sabbath of his toils. After a long impatience, the senate, the
clergy, and the people, went forth to meet their hero, with tears
and acclamations, with olive branches and innumerable lamps; he
entered the capital in a chariot drawn by four elephants; and as
soon as the emperor could disengage himself from the tumult of
public joy, he tasted more genuine satisfaction in the embraces
of his mother and his son.
The succeeding year was illustrated by a triumph of a very
different kind, the restitution of the true cross to the holy
sepulchre. Heraclius performed in person the pilgrimage of
Jerusalem, the identity of the relic was verified by the discreet
patriarch, and this august ceremony has been commemorated by the
annual festival of the exaltation of the cross. Before the
emperor presumed to tread the consecrated ground, he was
instructed to strip himself of the diadem and purple, the pomp
and vanity of the world: but in the judgment of his clergy, the
persecution of the Jews was more easily reconciled with the
precepts of the gospel. * He again ascended his throne to receive
the congratulations of the ambassadors of France and India: and
the fame of Moses, Alexander, and Hercules, was eclipsed in the
popular estimation, by the superior merit and glory of the great
Heraclius. Yet the deliverer of the East was indigent and feeble.
Of the Persian spoils, the most valuable portion had been
expended in the war, distributed to the soldiers, or buried, by
an unlucky tempest, in the waves of the Euxine. The conscience of
the emperor was oppressed by the obligation of restoring the
wealth of the clergy, which he had borrowed for their own
defence: a perpetual fund was required to satisfy these
inexorable creditors; the provinces, already wasted by the arms
and avarice of the Persians, were compelled to a second payment
of the same taxes; and the arrears of a simple citizen, the
treasurer of Damascus, were commuted to a fine of one hundred
thousand pieces of gold. The loss of two hundred thousand
soldiers who had fallen by the sword, was of less fatal
importance than the decay of arts, agriculture, and population,
in this long and destructive war: and although a victorious army
had been formed under the standard of Heraclius, the unnatural
effort appears to have exhausted rather than exercised their
strength. While the emperor triumphed at Constantinople or
Jerusalem, an obscure town on the confines of Syria was pillaged
by the Saracens, and they cut in pieces some troops who advanced
to its relief; an ordinary and trifling occurrence, had it not
been the prelude of a mighty revolution. These robbers were the
apostles of Mahomet; their fanatic valor had emerged from the
desert; and in the last eight years of his reign, Heraclius lost
to the Arabs the same provinces which he had rescued from the
Persians.
Chapter XLVII: Ecclesiastical Discord.
Part I.
Theological History Of The Doctrine Of The Incarnation. -- The
Human And Divine Nature Of Christ. -- Enmity Of The Patriarchs Of
Alexandria And Constantinople. -- St. Cyril And Nestorius. --
Third General Council Of Ephesus. -- Heresy Of Eutyches. --
Fourth General Council Of Chalcedon. -- Civil And Ecclesiastical
Discord. -- Intolerance Of Justinian. -- The Three Chapters. --
The Monothelite Controversy. -- State Of The Oriental Sects: --
I. The Nestorians. -- II. The Jacobites. -- III. The Maronites.
-- IV. The Armenians. -- V. The Copts And Abyssinians.
After the extinction of paganism, the Christians in peace and
piety might have enjoyed their solitary triumph. But the
principle of discord was alive in their bosom, and they were more
solicitous to explore the nature, than to practice the laws, of
their founder. I have already observed, that the disputes of the
Trinity were succeeded by those of the Incarnation; alike
scandalous to the church, alike pernicious to the state, still
more minute in their origin, still more durable in their effects.
It is my design to comprise in the present chapter a religious
war of two hundred and fifty years, to represent the
ecclesiastical and political schism of the Oriental sects, and to
introduce their clamorous or sanguinary contests, by a modest
inquiry into the doctrines of the primitive church.
I. A laudable regard for the honor of the first proselyte has
countenanced the belief, the hope, the wish, that the Ebionites,
or at least the Nazarenes, were distinguished only by their
obstinate perseverance in the practice of the Mosaic rites. Their
churches have disappeared, their books are obliterated: their
obscure freedom might allow a latitude of faith, and the softness
of their infant creed would be variously moulded by the zeal or
prudence of three hundred years. Yet the most charitable
criticism must refuse these sectaries any knowledge of the pure
and proper divinity of Christ. Educated in the school of Jewish
prophecy and prejudice, they had never been taught to elevate
their hopes above a human and temporal Messiah. If they had
courage to hail their king when he appeared in a plebeian garb,
their grosser apprehensions were incapable of discerning their
God, who had studiously disguised his celestial character under
the name and person of a mortal. The familiar companions of Jesus
of Nazareth conversed with their friend and countryman, who, in
all the actions of rational and animal life, appeared of the same
species with themselves. His progress from infancy to youth and
manhood was marked by a regular increase in stature and wisdom;
and after a painful agony of mind and body, he expired on the
cross. He lived and died for the service of mankind: but the life
and death of Socrates had likewise been devoted to the cause of
religion and justice; and although the stoic or the hero may
disdain the humble virtues of Jesus, the tears which he shed over
his friend and country may be esteemed the purest evidence of his
humanity. The miracles of the gospel could not astonish a people
who held with intrepid faith the more splendid prodigies of the
Mosaic law. The prophets of ancient days had cured diseases,
raised the dead, divided the sea, stopped the sun, and ascended
to heaven in a fiery chariot. And the metaphorical style of the
Hebrews might ascribe to a saint and martyr the adoptive title of
Son of God.
Yet in the insufficient creed of the Nazarenes and the
Ebionites, a distinction is faintly noticed between the heretics,
who confounded the generation of Christ in the common order of
nature, and the less guilty schismatics, who revered the
virginity of his mother, and excluded the aid of an earthly
father. The incredulity of the former was countenanced by the
visible circumstances of his birth, the legal marriage of the
reputed parents, Joseph and Mary, and his lineal claim to the
kingdom of David and the inheritance of Judah. But the secret and
authentic history has been recorded in several copies of the
Gospel according to St. Matthew, which these sectaries long
preserved in the original Hebrew, as the sole evidence of their
faith. The natural suspicions of the husband, conscious of his
own chastity, were dispelled by the assurance (in a dream) that
his wife was pregnant of the Holy Ghost: and as this distant and
domestic prodigy could not fall under the personal observation of
the historian, he must have listened to the same voice which
dictated to Isaiah the future conception of a virgin. The son of
a virgin, generated by the ineffable operation of the Holy
Spirit, was a creature without example or resemblance, superior
in every attribute of mind and body to the children of Adam.
Since the introduction of the Greek or Chaldean philosophy, the
Jews were persuaded of the preexistence, transmigration, and
immortality of souls; and providence was justified by a
supposition, that they were confined in their earthly prisons to
expiate the stains which they had contracted in a former state.
But the degrees of purity and corruption are almost immeasurable.
It might be fairly presumed, that the most sublime and virtuous
of human spirits was infused into the offspring of Mary and the
Holy Ghost; that his abasement was the result of his voluntary
choice; and that the object of his mission was, to purify, not
his own, but the sins of the world. On his return to his native
skies, he received the immense reward of his obedience; the
everlasting kingdom of the Messiah, which had been darkly
foretold by the prophets, under the carnal images of peace, of
conquest, and of dominion. Omnipotence could enlarge the human
faculties of Christ to the extend of is celestial office. In the
language of antiquity, the title of God has not been severely
confined to the first parent, and his incomparable minister, his
only-begotten son, might claim, without presumption, the
religious, though secondary, worship of a subject of a subject
world.
II. The seeds of the faith, which had slowly arisen in the
rocky and ungrateful soil of Judea, were transplanted, in full
maturity, to the happier climes of the Gentiles; and the
strangers of Rome or Asia, who never beheld the manhood, were the
more readily disposed to embrace the divinity, of Christ. The
polytheist and the philosopher, the Greek and the Barbarian, were
alike accustomed to conceive a long succession, an infinite chain
of angels or dæmons, or deities, or æons, or
emanations, issuing from the throne of light. Nor could it seem
strange or incredible, that the first of these æons, the
Logos, or Word of God, of the same
substance with the Father, should descend upon earth, to deliver
the human race from vice and error, and to conduct them in the
paths of life and immortality. But the prevailing doctrine of the
eternity and inherent pravity of matter infected the primitive
churches of the East. Many among the Gentile proselytes refused
to believe that a celestial spirit, an undivided portion of the
first essence, had been personally united with a mass of impure
and contaminated flesh; and, in their zeal for the divinity, they
piously abjured the humanity, of Christ. While his blood was
still recent on Mount Calvary, the
Docetes, a numerous and learned sect of
Asiatics, invented the phantastic
system, which was afterwards propagated by the Marcionites, the
Manichæans, and the various names of the Gnostic heresy.
They denied the truth and authenticity of the Gospels, as far as
they relate the conception of Mary, the birth of Christ, and the
thirty years that preceded the exercise of his ministry. He first
appeared on the banks of the Jordan in the form of perfect
manhood; but it was a form only, and not a substance; a human
figure created by the hand of Omnipotence to imitate the
faculties and actions of a man, and to impose a perpetual
illusion on the senses of his friends and enemies. Articulate
sounds vibrated on the ears of the disciples; but the image which
was impressed on their optic nerve eluded the more stubborn
evidence of the touch; and they enjoyed the spiritual, not the
corporeal, presence of the Son of God. The rage of the Jews was
idly wasted against an impassive phantom; and the mystic scenes
of the passion and death, the resurrection and ascension, of
Christ were represented on the theatre of Jerusalem for the
benefit of mankind. If it were urged, that such ideal mimicry,
such incessant deception, was unworthy of the God of truth, the
Docetes agreed with too many of their orthodox brethren in the
justification of pious falsehood. In the system of the Gnostics,
the Jehovah of Israel, the Creator of this lower world, was a
rebellious, or at least an ignorant, spirit. The Son of God
descended upon earth to abolish his temple and his law; and, for
the accomplishment of this salutary end, he dexterously
transferred to his own person the hope and prediction of a
temporal Messiah.
One of the most subtile disputants of the Manichæan
school has pressed the danger and indecency of supposing, that
the God of the Christians, in the state of a human ftus, emerged
at the end of nine months from a female womb. The pious horror of
his antagonists provoked them to disclaim all sensual
circumstances of conception and delivery; to maintain that the
divinity passed through Mary like a sunbeam through a plate of
glass; and to assert, that the seal of her virginity remained
unbroken even at the moment when she became the mother of Christ.
But the rashness of these concessions has encouraged a milder
sentiment of those of the Docetes, who taught, not that Christ
was a phantom, but that he was clothed with an impassible and
incorruptible body. Such, indeed, in the more orthodox system, he
has acquired since his resurrection, and such he must have always
possessed, if it were capable of pervading, without resistance or
injury, the density of intermediate matter. Devoid of its most
essential properties, it might be exempt from the attributes and
infirmities of the flesh. A ftus that could increase from an
invisible point to its full maturity; a child that could attain
the stature of perfect manhood without deriving any nourishment
from the ordinary sources, might continue to exist without
repairing a daily waste by a daily supply of external matter.
Jesus might share the repasts of his disciples without being
subject to the calls of thirst or hunger; and his virgin purity
was never sullied by the involuntary stains of sensual
concupiscence. Of a body thus singularly constituted, a question
would arise, by what means, and of what materials, it was
originally framed; and our sounder theology is startled by an
answer which was not peculiar to the Gnostics, that both the form
and the substance proceeded from the divine essence. The idea of
pure and absolute spirit is a refinement of modern philosophy:
the incorporeal essence, ascribed by the ancients to human souls,
celestial beings, and even the Deity himself, does not exclude
the notion of extended space; and their imagination was satisfied
with a subtile nature of air, or fire, or æther,
incomparably more perfect than the grossness of the material
world. If we define the place, we must describe the figure, of
the Deity. Our experience, perhaps our vanity, represents the
powers of reason and virtue under a human form. The
Anthropomorphites, who swarmed among the monks of Egypt and the
Catholics of Africa, could produce the express declaration of
Scripture, that man was made after the image of his Creator. The
venerable Serapion, one of the saints of the Nitrian deserts,
relinquished, with many a tear, his darling prejudice; and
bewailed, like an infant, his unlucky conversion, which had
stolen away his God, and left his mind without any visible object
of faith or devotion.
III. Such were the fleeting shadows of the Docetes. A more
substantial, though less simple, hypothesis, was contrived by
Cerinthus of Asia, who dared to oppose the last of the apostles.
Placed on the confines of the Jewish and Gentile world, he
labored to reconcile the Gnostic with the Ebionite, by confessing
in the same Messiah the supernatural union of a man and a God;
and this mystic doctrine was adopted with many fanciful
improvements by Carpocrates, Basilides, and Valentine, the
heretics of the Egyptian school. In their eyes, Jesus of Nazareth
was a mere mortal, the legitimate son of Joseph and Mary: but he
was the best and wisest of the human race, selected as the worthy
instrument to restore upon earth the worship of the true and
supreme Deity. When he was baptized in the Jordan, the Christ,
the first of the æons, the Son of God himself, descended on
Jesus in the form of a dove, to inhabit his mind, and direct his
actions during the allotted period of his ministry. When the
Messiah was delivered into the hands of the Jews, the Christ, an
immortal and impassible being, forsook his earthly tabernacle,
flew back to the pleroma or world of
spirits, and left the solitary Jesus to suffer, to complain, and
to expire. But the justice and generosity of such a desertion are
strongly questionable; and the fate of an innocent martyr, at
first impelled, and at length abandoned, by his divine companion,
might provoke the pity and indignation of the profane. Their
murmurs were variously silenced by the sectaries who espoused and
modified the double system of Cerinthus. It was alleged, that
when Jesus was nailed to the cross, he was endowed with a
miraculous apathy of mind and body, which rendered him insensible
of his apparent sufferings. It was affirmed, that these
momentary, though real, pangs would be abundantly repaid by the
temporal reign of a thousand years reserved for the Messiah in
his kingdom of the new Jerusalem. It was insinuated, that if he
suffered, he deserved to suffer; that human nature is never
absolutely perfect; and that the cross and passion might serve to
expiate the venial transgressions of the son of Joseph, before
his mysterious union with the Son of God.
IV. All those who believe the immateriality of the soul, a
specious and noble tenet, must confess, from their present
experience, the incomprehensible union of mind and matter. A
similar union is not inconsistent with a much higher, or even
with the highest, degree of mental faculties; and the incarnation
of an æon or archangel, the most perfect of created
spirits, does not involve any positive contradiction or
absurdity. In the age of religious freedom, which was determined
by the council of Nice, the dignity of Christ was measured by
private judgment according to the indefinite rule of Scripture,
or reason, or tradition. But when his pure and proper divinity
had been established on the ruins of Arianism, the faith of the
Catholics trembled on the edge of a precipice where it was
impossible to recede, dangerous to stand, dreadful to fall and
the manifold inconveniences of their creed were aggravated by the
sublime character of their theology. They hesitated to pronounce;
that God himself, the second person of
an equal and consubstantial trinity, was manifested in the flesh;
that a being who pervades the universe,
had been confined in the womb of Mary;
that his eternal duration had been
marked by the days, and months, and years of human existence;
that the Almighty had been scourged and
crucified; that his impassible essence
had felt pain and anguish; that his
omniscience was not exempt from ignorance; and that the source of
life and immortality expired on Mount Calvary. These alarming
consequences were affirmed with unblushing simplicity by
Apollinaris, bishop of Laodicea, and one of the luminaries of the
church. The son of a learned grammarian, he was skilled in all
the sciences of Greece; eloquence, erudition, and philosophy,
conspicuous in the volumes of Apollinaris, were humbly devoted to
the service of religion. The worthy friend of Athanasius, the
worthy antagonist of Julian, he bravely wrestled with the Arians
and Polytheists, and though he affected the rigor of geometrical
demonstration, his commentaries revealed the literal and
allegorical sense of the Scriptures. A mystery, which had long
floated in the looseness of popular belief, was defined by his
perverse diligence in a technical form; and he first proclaimed
the memorable words, "One incarnate nature of Christ," which are
still reëchoed with hostile clamors in the churches of Asia,
Egypt, and Æthiopia. He taught that the Godhead was united
or mingled with the body of a man; and that the
Logos, the eternal wisdom, supplied in
the flesh the place and office of a human soul. Yet as the
profound doctor had been terrified at his own rashness,
Apollinaris was heard to mutter some faint accents of excuse and
explanation. He acquiesced in the old distinction of the Greek
philosophers between the rational and sensitive soul of man; that
he might reserve the Logos for
intellectual functions, and employ the subordinate human
principle in the meaner actions of animal life. With the moderate
Docetes, he revered Mary as the spiritual, rather than as the
carnal, mother of Christ, whose body either came from heaven,
impassible and incorruptible, or was absorbed, and as it were
transformed, into the essence of the Deity. The system of
Apollinaris was strenuously encountered by the Asiatic and Syrian
divines whose schools are honored by the names of Basil, Gregory
and Chrysostom, and tainted by those of Diodorus, Theodore, and
Nestorius. But the person of the aged bishop of Laodicea, his
character and dignity, remained inviolate; and his rivals, since
we may not suspect them of the weakness of toleration, were
astonished, perhaps, by the novelty of the argument, and
diffident of the final sentence of the Catholic church. Her
judgment at length inclined in their favor; the heresy of
Apollinaris was condemned, and the separate congregations of his
disciples were proscribed by the Imperial laws. But his
principles were secretly entertained in the monasteries of Egypt,
and his enemies felt the hatred of Theophilus and Cyril, the
successive patriarchs of Alexandria.
V. The grovelling Ebionite, and the fantastic Docetes, were
rejected and forgotten: the recent zeal against the errors of
Apollinaris reduced the Catholics to a seeming agreement with the
double nature of Cerinthus. But instead of a temporary and
occasional alliance, they established,
and we still embrace, the substantial, indissoluble, and
everlasting union of a perfect God with a perfect man, of the
second person of the trinity with a reasonable soul and human
flesh. In the beginning of the fifth century, the
unity of the two
natureswas the prevailing doctrine of the church.
On all sides, it was confessed, that the mode of their
coexistence could neither be represented by our ideas, nor
expressed by our language. Yet a secret and incurable discord was
cherished, between those who were most apprehensive of
confounding, and those who were most fearful of separating, the
divinity, and the humanity, of Christ. Impelled by religious
frenzy, they fled with adverse haste from the error which they
mutually deemed most destructive of truth and salvation. On
either hand they were anxious to guard, they were jealous to
defend, the union and the distinction of the two natures, and to
invent such forms of speech, such symbols of doctrine, as were
least susceptible of doubt or ambiguity. The poverty of ideas and
language tempted them to ransack art and nature for every
possible comparison, and each comparison mislead their fancy in
the explanation of an incomparable mystery. In the polemic
microscope, an atom is enlarged to a monster, and each party was
skilful to exaggerate the absurd or impious conclusions that
might be extorted from the principles of their adversaries. To
escape from each other, they wandered through many a dark and
devious thicket, till they were astonished by the horrid phantoms
of Cerinthus and Apollinaris, who guarded the opposite issues of
the theological labyrinth. As soon as they beheld the twilight of
sense and heresy, they started, measured back their steps, and
were again involved in the gloom of impenetrable orthodoxy. To
purge themselves from the guilt or reproach of damnable error,
they disavowed their consequences, explained their principles,
excused their indiscretions, and unanimously pronounced the
sounds of concord and faith. Yet a latent and almost invisible
spark still lurked among the embers of controversy: by the breath
of prejudice and passion, it was quickly kindled to a mighty
flame, and the verbal disputes of the Oriental sects have shaken
the pillars of the church and state.
The name of Cyril of Alexandria is famous in controversial
story, and the title of saint is a mark
that his opinions and his party have finally prevailed. In the
house of his uncle, the archbishop Theophilus, he imbibed the
orthodox lessons of zeal and dominion, and five years of his
youth were profitably spent in the adjacent monasteries of
Nitria. Under the tuition of the abbot Serapion, he applied
himself to ecclesiastical studies, with such indefatigable ardor,
that in the course of one sleepless
night, he has perused the four Gospels, the Catholic Epistles,
and the Epistle to the Romans. Origen he detested; but the
writings of Clemens and Dionysius, of Athanasius and Basil, were
continually in his hands: by the theory and practice of dispute,
his faith was confirmed and his wit was sharpened; he extended
round his cell the cobwebs of scholastic theology, and meditated
the works of allegory and metaphysics, whose remains, in seven
verbose folios, now peaceably slumber by the side of their
rivals. Cyril prayed and fasted in the desert, but his thoughts
(it is the reproach of a friend) were still fixed on the world;
and the call of Theophilus, who summoned him to the tumult of
cities and synods, was too readily obeyed by the aspiring hermit.
With the approbation of his uncle, he assumed the office, and
acquired the fame, of a popular preacher. His comely person
adorned the pulpit; the harmony of his voice resounded in the
cathedral; his friends were stationed to lead or second the
applause of the congregation; and the hasty notes of the scribes
preserved his discourses, which in their effect, though not in
their composition, might be compared with those of the Athenian
orators. The death of Theophilus expanded and realized the hopes
of his nephew. The clergy of Alexandria was divided; the soldiers
and their general supported the claims of the archdeacon; but a
resistless multitude, with voices and with hands, asserted the
cause of their favorite; and after a period of thirty-nine years,
Cyril was seated on the throne of Athanasius.
Chapter XLVII: Ecclesiastical Discord. -- Part
II.
The prize was not unworthy of his ambition. At a distance from
the court, and at the head of an immense capital, the patriarch,
as he was now styled, of Alexandria had gradually usurped the
state and authority of a civil magistrate. The public and private
charities of the city were blindly obeyed by his numerous and
fanatic parabolani, familiarized in
their daily office with scenes of death; and the præfects
of Egypt were awed or provoked by the temporal power of these
Christian pontiffs. Ardent in the prosecution of heresy, Cyril
auspiciously opened his reign by oppressing the Novatians, the
most innocent and harmless of the sectaries. The interdiction of
their religious worship appeared in his eyes a just and
meritorious act; and he confiscated their holy vessels, without
apprehending the guilt of sacrilege. The toleration, and even the
privileges of the Jews, who had multiplied to the number of forty
thousand, were secured by the laws of the Cæsars and
Ptolemies, and a long prescription of seven hundred years since
the foundation of Alexandria. Without any legal sentence, without
any royal mandate, the patriarch, at the dawn of day, led a
seditious multitude to the attack of the synagogues. Unarmed and
unprepared, the Jews were incapable of resistance; their houses
of prayer were levelled with the ground, and the episcopal
warrior, after-rewarding his troops with the plunder of their
goods, expelled from the city the remnant of the unbelieving
nation. Perhaps he might plead the insolence of their prosperity,
and their deadly hatred of the Christians, whose blood they had
recently shed in a malicious or accidental tumult. Such crimes
would have deserved the animadversion of the magistrate; but in
this promiscuous outrage, the innocent were confounded with the
guilty, and Alexandria was impoverished by the loss of a wealthy
and industrious colony. The zeal of Cyril exposed him to the
penalties of the Julian law; but in a feeble government and a
superstitious age, he was secure of impunity, and even of praise.
Orestes complained; but his just complaints were too quickly
forgotten by the ministers of Theodosius, and too deeply
remembered by a priest who affected to pardon, and continued to
hate, the præfect of Egypt. As he passed through the
streets, his chariot was assaulted by a band of five hundred of
the Nitrian monks his guards fled from the wild beasts of the
desert; his protestations that he was a Christian and a Catholic
were answered by a volley of stones, and the face of Orestes was
covered with blood. The loyal citizens of Alexandria hastened to
his rescue; he instantly satisfied his justice and revenge
against the monk by whose hand he had been wounded, and Ammonius
expired under the rod of the lictor. At the command of Cyril his
body was raised from the ground, and transported, in solemn
procession, to the cathedral; the name of Ammonius was changed to
that of Thaumasius the wonderful; his
tomb was decorated with the trophies of martyrdom, and the
patriarch ascended the pulpit to celebrate the magnanimity of an
assassin and a rebel. Such honors might incite the faithful to
combat and die under the banners of the saint; and he soon
prompted, or accepted, the sacrifice of a virgin, who professed
the religion of the Greeks, and cultivated the friendship of
Orestes. Hypatia, the daughter of Theon the mathematician, was
initiated in her father's studies; her learned comments have
elucidated the geometry of Apollonius and Diophantus, and she
publicly taught, both at Athens and Alexandria, the philosophy of
Plato and Aristotle. In the bloom of beauty, and in the maturity
of wisdom, the modest maid refused her lovers and instructed her
disciples; the persons most illustrious for their rank or merit
were impatient to visit the female philosopher; and Cyril beheld,
with a jealous eye, the gorgeous train of horses and slaves who
crowded the door of her academy. A rumor was spread among the
Christians, that the daughter of Theon was the only obstacle to
the reconciliation of the præfect and the archbishop; and
that obstacle was speedily removed. On a fatal day, in the holy
season of Lent, Hypatia was torn from her chariot, stripped
naked, dragged to the church, and inhumanly butchered by the
hands of Peter the reader, and a troop of savage and merciless
fanatics: her flesh was scraped from her bones with sharp oyster
shells, and her quivering limbs were delivered to the flames. The
just progress of inquiry and punishment was stopped by seasonable
gifts; but the murder of Hypatia has imprinted an indelible stain
on the character and religion of Cyril of Alexandria.
Superstition, perhaps, would more gently expiate the blood of
a virgin, than the banishment of a saint; and Cyril had
accompanied his uncle to the iniquitous synod of the Oak. When
the memory of Chrysostom was restored and consecrated, the nephew
of Theophilus, at the head of a dying faction, still maintained
the justice of his sentence; nor was it till after a tedious
delay and an obstinate resistance, that he yielded to the consent
of the Catholic world. His enmity to the Byzantine pontiffs was a
sense of interest, not a sally of passion: he envied their
fortunate station in the sunshine of the Imperial court; and he
dreaded their upstart ambition. which oppressed the metropolitans
of Europe and Asia, invaded the provinces of Antioch and
Alexandria, and measured their diocese by the limits of the
empire. The long moderation of Atticus, the mild usurper of the
throne of Chrysostom, suspended the animosities of the Eastern
patriarchs; but Cyril was at length awakened by the exaltation of
a rival more worthy of his esteem and hatred. After the short and
troubled reign of Sisinnius, bishop of Constantinople, the
factions of the clergy and people were appeased by the choice of
the emperor, who, on this occasion, consulted the voice of fame,
and invited the merit of a stranger. Nestorius, native of
Germanicia, and a monk of Antioch, was recommended by the
austerity of his life, and the eloquence of his sermons; but the
first homily which he preached before the devout Theodosius
betrayed the acrimony and impatience of his zeal. "Give me, O
Cæsar!" he exclaimed, "give me the earth purged of
heretics, and I will give you in exchange the kingdom of heaven.
Exterminate with me the heretics; and with you I will exterminate
the Persians." On the fifth day as if the treaty had been already
signed, the patriarch of Constantinople discovered, surprised,
and attacked a secret conventicle of the Arians: they preferred
death to submission; the flames that were kindled by their
despair, soon spread to the neighboring houses, and the triumph
of Nestorius was clouded by the name of
incendiary. On either side of the
Hellespont his episcopal vigor imposed a rigid formulary of faith
and discipline; a chronological error concerning the festival of
Easter was punished as an offence against the church and state.
Lydia and Caria, Sardes and Miletus, were purified with the blood
of the obstinate Quartodecimans; and the edict of the emperor, or
rather of the patriarch, enumerates three-and-twenty degrees and
denominations in the guilt and punishment of heresy. But the
sword of persecution which Nestorius so furiously wielded was
soon turned against his own breast. Religion was the pretence;
but, in the judgment of a contemporary saint, ambition was the
genuine motive of episcopal warfare.
In the Syrian school, Nestorius had been taught to abhor the
confusion of the two natures, and nicely to discriminate the
humanity of his master Christ from the
divinity of the Lord Jesus. The Blessed
Virgin he revered as the mother of Christ, but his ears were
offended with the rash and recent title of mother of God, which
had been insensibly adopted since the origin of the Arian
controversy. From the pulpit of Constantinople, a friend of the
patriarch, and afterwards the patriarch himself, repeatedly
preached against the use, or the abuse, of a word unknown to the
apostles, unauthorized by the church, and which could only tend
to alarm the timorous, to mislead the simple, to amuse the
profane, and to justify, by a seeming resemblance, the old
genealogy of Olympus. In his calmer moments Nestorius confessed,
that it might be tolerated or excused by the union of the two
natures, and the communication of their
idioms: but he was exasperated, by
contradiction, to disclaim the worship of a new-born, an infant
Deity, to draw his inadequate similes from the conjugal or civil
partnerships of life, and to describe the manhood of Christ as
the robe, the instrument, the tabernacle of his Godhead. At these
blasphemous sounds, the pillars of the sanctuary were shaken. The
unsuccessful competitors of Nestorius indulged their pious or
personal resentment, the Byzantine clergy was secretly displeased
with the intrusion of a stranger: whatever is superstitious or
absurd, might claim the protection of the monks; and the people
were interested in the glory of their virgin patroness. The
sermons of the archbishop, and the service of the altar, were
disturbed by seditious clamor; his authority and doctrine were
renounced by separate congregations; every wind scattered round
the empire the leaves of controversy; and the voice of the
combatants on a sonorous theatre reëchoed in the cells of
Palestine and Egypt. It was the duty of Cyril to enlighten the
zeal and ignorance of his innumerable monks: in the school of
Alexandria, he had imbibed and professed the incarnation of one
nature; and the successor of Athanasius consulted his pride and
ambition, when he rose in arms against another Arius, more
formidable and more guilty, on the second throne of the
hierarchy. After a short correspondence, in which the rival
prelates disguised their hatred in the hollow language of respect
and charity, the patriarch of Alexandria denounced to the prince
and people, to the East and to the West, the damnable errors of
the Byzantine pontiff. From the East, more especially from
Antioch, he obtained the ambiguous counsels of toleration and
silence, which were addressed to both parties while they favored
the cause of Nestorius. But the Vatican received with open arms
the messengers of Egypt. The vanity of Celestine was flattered by
the appeal; and the partial version of a monk decided the faith
of the pope, who with his Latin clergy was ignorant of the
language, the arts, and the theology of the Greeks. At the head
of an Italian synod, Celestine weighed the merits of the cause,
approved the creed of Cyril, condemned the sentiments and person
of Nestorius, degraded the heretic from his episcopal dignity,
allowed a respite of ten days for recantation and penance, and
delegated to his enemy the execution of this rash and illegal
sentence. But the patriarch of Alexandria, while he darted the
thunders of a god, exposed the errors and passions of a mortal;
and his twelve anathemas still torture the orthodox slaves, who
adore the memory of a saint, without forfeiting their allegiance
to the synod of Chalcedon. These bold assertions are indelibly
tinged with the colors of the Apollinarian heresy; but the
serious, and perhaps the sincere professions of Nestorius have
satisfied the wiser and less partial theologians of the present
times.
Yet neither the emperor nor the primate of the East were
disposed to obey the mandate of an Italian priest; and a synod of
the Catholic, or rather of the Greek church, was unanimously
demanded as the sole remedy that could appease or decide this
ecclesiastical quarrel. Ephesus, on all sides accessible by sea
and land, was chosen for the place, the festival of Pentecost for
the day, of the meeting; a writ of summons was despatched to each
metropolitan, and a guard was stationed to protect and confine
the fathers till they should settle the mysteries of heaven, and
the faith of the earth. Nestorius appeared not as a criminal, but
as a judge; be depended on the weight rather than the number of
his prelates, and his sturdy slaves from the baths of Zeuxippus
were armed for every service of injury or defence. But his
adversary Cyril was more powerful in the weapons both of the
flesh and of the spirit. Disobedient to the letter, or at least
to the meaning, of the royal summons, he was attended by fifty
Egyptian bishops, who expected from their patriarch's nod the
inspiration of the Holy Ghost. He had contracted an intimate
alliance with Memnon, bishop of Ephesus. The despotic primate of
Asia disposed of the ready succors of thirty or forty episcopal
votes: a crowd of peasants, the slaves of the church, was poured
into the city to support with blows and clamors a metaphysical
argument; and the people zealously asserted the honor of the
Virgin, whose body reposed within the walls of Ephesus. The fleet
which had transported Cyril from Alexandria was laden with the
riches of Egypt; and he disembarked a numerous body of mariners,
slaves, and fanatics, enlisted with blind obedience under the
banner of St. Mark and the mother of God. The fathers, and even
the guards, of the council were awed by this martial array; the
adversaries of Cyril and Mary were insulted in the streets, or
threatened in their houses; his eloquence and liberality made a
daily increase in the number of his adherents; and the Egyptian
soon computed that he might command the attendance and the voices
of two hundred bishops. But the author of the twelve anathemas
foresaw and dreaded the opposition of John of Antioch, who, with
a small, but respectable, train of metropolitans and divines, was
advancing by slow journeys from the distant capital of the East.
Impatient of a delay, which he stigmatized as voluntary and
culpable, Cyril announced the opening of the synod sixteen days
after the festival of Pentecost. Nestorius, who depended on the
near approach of his Eastern friends, persisted, like his
predecessor Chrysostom, to disclaim the jurisdiction, and to
disobey the summons, of his enemies: they hastened his trial, and
his accuser presided in the seat of judgment. Sixty-eight
bishops, twenty-two of metropolitan rank, defended his cause by a
modest and temperate protest: they were excluded from the
councils of their brethren. Candidian, in the emperor's name,
requested a delay of four days; the profane magistrate was driven
with outrage and insult from the assembly of the saints. The
whole of this momentous transaction was crowded into the compass
of a summer's day: the bishops delivered their separate opinions;
but the uniformity of style reveals the influence or the hand of
a master, who has been accused of corrupting the public evidence
of their acts and subscriptions. Without a dissenting voice, they
recognized in the epistles of Cyril the Nicene creed and the
doctrine of the fathers: but the partial extracts from the
letters and homilies of Nestorius were interrupted by curses and
anathemas: and the heretic was degraded from his episcopal and
ecclesiastical dignity. The sentence, maliciously inscribed to
the new Judas, was affixed and proclaimed in the streets of
Ephesus: the weary prelates, as they issued from the church of
the mother of God, were saluted as her champions; and her victory
was celebrated by the illuminations, the songs, and the tumult of
the night.
On the fifth day, the triumph was clouded by the arrival and
indignation of the Eastern bishops. In a chamber of the inn,
before he had wiped the dust from his shoes, John of Antioch gave
audience to Candidian, the Imperial minister; who related his
ineffectual efforts to prevent or to annul the hasty violence of
the Egyptian. With equal haste and violence, the Oriental synod
of fifty bishops degraded Cyril and Memnon from their episcopal
honors, condemned, in the twelve anathemas, the purest venom of
the Apollinarian heresy, and described the Alexandrian primate as
a monster, born and educated for the destruction of the church.
His throne was distant and inaccessible; but they instantly
resolved to bestow on the flock of Ephesus the blessing of a
faithful shepherd. By the vigilance of Memnon, the churches were
shut against them, and a strong garrison was thrown into the
cathedral. The troops, under the command of Candidian, advanced
to the assault; the outguards were routed and put to the sword,
but the place was impregnable: the besiegers retired; their
retreat was pursued by a vigorous sally; they lost their horses,
and many of their soldiers were dangerously wounded with clubs
and stones. Ephesus, the city of the Virgin, was defiled with
rage and clamor, with sedition and blood; the rival synods darted
anathemas and excommunications from their spiritual engines; and
the court of Theodosius was perplexed by the adverse and
contradictory narratives of the Syrian and Egyptian factions.
During a busy period of three months, the emperor tried every
method, except the most effectual means of indifference and
contempt, to reconcile this theological quarrel. He attempted to
remove or intimidate the leaders by a common sentence, of
acquittal or condemnation; he invested his representatives at
Ephesus with ample power and military force; he summoned from
either party eight chosen deputies to a free and candid
conference in the neighborhood of the capital, far from the
contagion of popular frenzy. But the Orientals refused to yield,
and the Catholics, proud of their numbers and of their Latin
allies, rejected all terms of union or toleration. The patience
of the meek Theodosius was provoked; and he dissolved in anger
this episcopal tumult, which at the distance of thirteen
centuries assumes the venerable aspect of the third cumenical
council. "God is my witness," said the pious prince, "that I am
not the author of this confusion. His providence will discern and
punish the guilty. Return to your provinces, and may your private
virtues repair the mischief and scandal of your meeting." They
returned to their provinces; but the same passions which had
distracted the synod of Ephesus were diffused over the Eastern
world. After three obstinate and equal campaigns, John of Antioch
and Cyril of Alexandria condescended to explain and embrace: but
their seeming reunion must be imputed rather to prudence than to
reason, to the mutual lassitude rather than to the Christian
charity of the patriarchs.
The Byzantine pontiff had instilled into the royal ear a
baleful prejudice against the character and conduct of his
Egyptian rival. An epistle of menace and invective, which
accompanied the summons, accused him as a busy, insolent, and
envious priest, who perplexed the simplicity of the faith,
violated the peace of the church and state, and, by his artful
and separate addresses to the wife and sister of Theodosius,
presumed to suppose, or to scatter, the seeds of discord in the
Imperial family. At the stern command of his sovereign. Cyril had
repaired to Ephesus, where he was resisted, threatened, and
confined, by the magistrates in the interest of Nestorius and the
Orientals; who assembled the troops of Lydia and Ionia to
suppress the fanatic and disorderly train of the patriarch.
Without expecting the royal license, he escaped from his guards,
precipitately embarked, deserted the imperfect synod, and retired
to his episcopal fortress of safety and independence. But his
artful emissaries, both in the court and city, successfully
labored to appease the resentment, and to conciliate the favor,
of the emperor. The feeble son of Arcadius was alternately swayed
by his wife and sister, by the eunuchs and women of the palace:
superstition and avarice were their ruling passions; and the
orthodox chiefs were assiduous in their endeavors to alarm the
former, and to gratify the latter. Constantinople and the suburbs
were sanctified with frequent monasteries, and the holy abbots,
Dalmatius and Eutyches, had devoted their zeal and fidelity to
the cause of Cyril, the worship of Mary, and the unity of Christ.
From the first moment of their monastic life, they had never
mingled with the world, or trod the profane ground of the city.
But in this awful moment of the danger of the church, their vow
was superseded by a more sublime and indispensable duty. At the
head of a long order of monks and hermits, who carried burning
tapers in their hands, and chanted litanies to the mother of God,
they proceeded from their monasteries to the palace. The people
was edified and inflamed by this extraordinary spectacle, and the
trembling monarch listened to the prayers and adjurations of the
saints, who boldly pronounced, that none could hope for
salvation, unless they embraced the person and the creed of the
orthodox successor of Athanasius. At the same time, every avenue
of the throne was assaulted with gold. Under the decent names of
eulogies and
benedictions, the courtiers of both
sexes were bribed according to the measure of their power and
rapaciousness. But their incessant demands despoiled the
sanctuaries of Constantinople and Alexandria; and the authority
of the patriarch was unable to silence the just murmur of his
clergy, that a debt of sixty thousand pounds had already been
contracted to support the expense of this scandalous corruption.
Pulcheria, who relieved her brother from the weight of an empire,
was the firmest pillar of orthodoxy; and so intimate was the
alliance between the thunders of the synod and the whispers of
the court, that Cyril was assured of success if he could displace
one eunuch, and substitute another in the favor of Theodosius.
Yet the Egyptian could not boast of a glorious or decisive
victory. The emperor, with unaccustomed firmness, adhered to his
promise of protecting the innocence of the Oriental bishops; and
Cyril softened his anathemas, and confessed, with ambiguity and
reluctance, a twofold nature of Christ, before he was permitted
to satiate his revenge against the unfortunate Nestorius.
The rash and obstinate Nestorius, before the end of the synod,
was oppressed by Cyril, betrayed by the court, and faintly
supported by his Eastern friends. A sentiment or fear or
indignation prompted him, while it was yet time, to affect the
glory of a voluntary abdication: his wish, or at least his
request, was readily granted; he was conducted with honor from
Ephesus to his old monastery of Antioch; and, after a short
pause, his successors, Maximian and Proclus, were acknowledged as
the lawful bishops of Constantinople. But in the silence of his
cell, the degraded patriarch could no longer resume the innocence
and security of a private monk. The past he regretted, he was
discontented with the present, and the future he had reason to
dread: the Oriental bishops successively disengaged their cause
from his unpopular name, and each day decreased the number of the
schismatics who revered Nestorius as the confessor of the faith.
After a residence at Antioch of four years, the hand of
Theodosius subscribed an edict, which ranked him with Simon the
magician, proscribed his opinions and followers, condemned his
writings to the flames, and banished his person first to Petra,
in Arabia, and at length to Oasis, one of the islands of the
Libyan desert. Secluded from the church and from the world, the
exile was still pursued by the rage of bigotry and war. A
wandering tribe of the Blemmyes or Nubians invaded his solitary
prison: in their retreat they dismissed a crowd of useless
captives: but no sooner had Nestorius reached the banks of the
Nile, than he would gladly have escaped from a Roman and orthodox
city, to the milder servitude of the savages. His flight was
punished as a new crime: the soul of the patriarch inspired the
civil and ecclesiastical powers of Egypt; the magistrates, the
soldiers, the monks, devoutly tortured the enemy of Christ and
St. Cyril; and, as far as the confines of Æthiopia, the
heretic was alternately dragged and recalled, till his aged body
was broken by the hardships and accidents of these reiterated
journeys. Yet his mind was still independent and erect; the
president of Thebais was awed by his pastoral letters; he
survived the Catholic tyrant of Alexandria, and, after sixteen
years' banishment, the synod of Chalcedon would perhaps have
restored him to the honors, or at least to the communion, of the
church. The death of Nestorius prevented his obedience to their
welcome summons; and his disease might afford some color to the
scandalous report, that his tongue, the organ of blasphemy, had
been eaten by the worms. He was buried in a city of Upper Egypt,
known by the names of Chemnis, or Panopolis, or Akmim; but the
immortal malice of the Jacobites has persevered for ages to cast
stones against his sepulchre, and to propagate the foolish
tradition, that it was never watered by the rain of heaven, which
equally descends on the righteous and the ungodly. Humanity may
drop a tear on the fate of Nestorius; yet justice must observe,
that he suffered the persecution which he had approved and
inflicted.
Chapter XLVII: Ecclesiastical Discord. -- Part
III.
The death of the Alexandrian primate, after a reign of
thirty-two years, abandoned the Catholics to the intemperance of
zeal and the abuse of victory. The
monophysite doctrine (one incarnate
nature) was rigorously preached in the churches of Egypt and the
monasteries of the East; the primitive creed of Apollinarius was
protected by the sanctity of Cyril; and the name of Eutyches, his
venerable friend, has been applied to the sect most adverse to
the Syrian heresy of Nestorius. His rival Eutyches was the abbot,
or archimandrite, or superior of three hundred monks, but the
opinions of a simple and illiterate recluse might have expired in
the cell, where he had slept above seventy years, if the
resentment or indiscretion of Flavian, the Byzantine pontiff, had
not exposed the scandal to the eyes of the Christian world. His
domestic synod was instantly convened, their proceedings were
sullied with clamor and artifice, and the aged heretic was
surprised into a seeming confession, that Christ had not derived
his body from the substance of the Virgin Mary. From their
partial decree, Eutyches appealed to a general council; and his
cause was vigorously asserted by his godson Chrysaphius, the
reigning eunuch of the palace, and his accomplice Dioscorus, who
had succeeded to the throne, the creed, the talents, and the
vices, of the nephew of Theophilus. By the special summons of
Theodosius, the second synod of Ephesus was judiciously composed
of ten metropolitans and ten bishops from each of the six
dioceses of the Eastern empire: some exceptions of favor or merit
enlarged the number to one hundred and thirty-five; and the
Syrian Barsumas, as the chief and representative of the monks,
was invited to sit and vote with the successors of the apostles.
But the despotism of the Alexandrian patriarch again oppressed
the freedom of debate: the same spiritual and carnal weapons were
again drawn from the arsenals of Egypt: the Asiatic veterans, a
band of archers, served under the orders of Dioscorus; and the
more formidable monks, whose minds were inaccessible to reason or
mercy, besieged the doors of the cathedral. The general, and, as
it should seem, the unconstrained voice of the fathers, accepted
the faith and even the anathemas of Cyril; and the heresy of the
two natures was formally condemned in the persons and writings of
the most learned Orientals. "May those who divide Christ be
divided with the sword, may they be hewn in pieces, may they be
burned alive!" were the charitable wishes of a Christian synod.
The innocence and sanctity of Eutyches were acknowledged without
hesitation; but the prelates, more especially those of Thrace and
Asia, were unwilling to depose their patriarch for the use or
even the abuse of his lawful jurisdiction. They embraced the
knees of Dioscorus, as he stood with a threatening aspect on the
footstool of his throne, and conjured him to forgive the
offences, and to respect the dignity, of his brother. "Do you
mean to raise a sedition?" exclaimed the relentless tyrant.
"Where are the officers?" At these words a furious multitude of
monks and soldiers, with staves, and swords, and chains, burst
into the church; the trembling bishops hid themselves behind the
altar, or under the benches, and as they were not inspired with
the zeal of martyrdom, they successively subscribed a blank
paper, which was afterwards filled with the condemnation of the
Byzantine pontiff. Flavian was instantly delivered to the wild
beasts of this spiritual amphitheatre: the monks were stimulated
by the voice and example of Barsumas to avenge the injuries of
Christ: it is said that the patriarch of Alexandria reviled, and
buffeted, and kicked, and trampled his brother of Constantinople:
it is certain, that the victim, before he could reach the place
of his exile, expired on the third day of the wounds and bruises
which he had received at Ephesus. This second synod has been
justly branded as a gang of robbers and assassins; yet the
accusers of Dioscorus would magnify his violence, to alleviate
the cowardice and inconstancy of their own behavior.
The faith of Egypt had prevailed: but the vanquished party was
supported by the same pope who encountered without fear the
hostile rage of Attila and Genseric. The theology of Leo, his
famous tome or epistle on the mystery
of the incarnation, had been disregarded by the synod of Ephesus:
his authority, and that of the Latin church, was insulted in his
legates, who escaped from slavery and death to relate the
melancholy tale of the tyranny of Dioscorus and the martyrdom of
Flavian. His provincial synod annulled the irregular proceedings
of Ephesus; but as this step was itself irregular, he solicited
the convocation of a general council in the free and orthodox
provinces of Italy. From his independent throne, the Roman bishop
spoke and acted without danger as the head of the Christians, and
his dictates were obsequiously transcribed by Placidia and her
son Valentinian; who addressed their Eastern colleague to restore
the peace and unity of the church. But the pageant of Oriental
royalty was moved with equal dexterity by the hand of the eunuch;
and Theodosius could pronounce, without hesitation, that the
church was already peaceful and triumphant, and that the recent
flame had been extinguished by the just punishment of the
Nestorians. Perhaps the Greeks would be still involved in the
heresy of the Monophysites, if the emperor's horse had not
fortunately stumbled; Theodosius expired; his orthodox sister
Pulcheria, with a nominal husband, succeeded to the throne;
Chrysaphius was burnt, Dioscorus was disgraced, the exiles were
recalled, and the tome of Leo was subscribed by the Oriental
bishops. Yet the pope was disappointed in his favorite project of
a Latin council: he disdained to preside in the Greek synod,
which was speedily assembled at Nice in Bithynia; his legates
required in a peremptory tone the presence of the emperor; and
the weary fathers were transported to Chalcedon under the
immediate eye of Marcian and the senate of Constantinople. A
quarter of a mile from the Thracian Bosphorus, the church of St.
Euphemia was built on the summit of a gentle though lofty ascent:
the triple structure was celebrated as a prodigy of art, and the
boundless prospect of the land and sea might have raised the mind
of a sectary to the contemplation of the God of the universe. Six
hundred and thirty bishops were ranged in order in the nave of
the church; but the patriarchs of the East were preceded by the
legates, of whom the third was a simple priest; and the place of
honor was reserved for twenty laymen of consular or senatorian
rank. The gospel was ostentatiously displayed in the centre, but
the rule of faith was defined by the Papal and Imperial
ministers, who moderated the thirteen sessions of the council of
Chalcedon. Their partial interposition silenced the intemperate
shouts and execrations, which degraded the episcopal gravity;
but, on the formal accusation of the legates, Dioscorus was
compelled to descend from his throne to the rank of a criminal,
already condemned in the opinion of his judges. The Orientals,
less adverse to Nestorius than to Cyril, accepted the Romans as
their deliverers: Thrace, and Pontus, and Asia, were exasperated
against the murderer of Flavian, and the new patriarchs of
Constantinople and Antioch secured their places by the sacrifice
of their benefactor. The bishops of Palestine, Macedonia, and
Greece, were attached to the faith of Cyril; but in the face of
the synod, in the heat of the battle, the leaders, with their
obsequious train, passed from the right to the left wing, and
decided the victory by this seasonable desertion. Of the
seventeen suffragans who sailed from Alexandria, four were
tempted from their allegiance, and the thirteen, falling
prostrate on the ground, implored the mercy of the council, with
sighs and tears, and a pathetic declaration, that, if they
yielded, they should be massacred, on their return to Egypt, by
the indignant people. A tardy repentance was allowed to expiate
the guilt or error of the accomplices of Dioscorus: but their
sins were accumulated on his head; he neither asked nor hoped for
pardon, and the moderation of those who pleaded for a general
amnesty was drowned in the prevailing cry of victory and revenge.
To save the reputation of his late adherents, some
personal offences were skilfully
detected; his rash and illegal excommunication of the pope, and
his contumacious refusal (while he was detained a prisoner) to
attend to the summons of the synod. Witnesses were introduced to
prove the special facts of his pride, avarice, and cruelty; and
the fathers heard with abhorrence, that the alms of the church
were lavished on the female dancers, that his palace, and even
his bath, was open to the prostitutes of Alexandria, and that the
infamous Pansophia, or Irene, was publicly entertained as the
concubine of the patriarch.
For these scandalous offences, Dioscorus was deposed by the
synod, and banished by the emperor; but the purity of his faith
was declared in the presence, and with the tacit approbation, of
the fathers. Their prudence supposed rather than pronounced the
heresy of Eutyches, who was never summoned before their tribunal;
and they sat silent and abashed, when a bold Monophysite casting
at their feet a volume of Cyril, challenged them to anathematize
in his person the doctrine of the saint. If we fairly peruse the
acts of Chalcedon as they are recorded by the orthodox party, we
shall find that a great majority of the bishops embraced the
simple unity of Christ; and the ambiguous concession that he was
formed Of or From two natures, might imply either their previous
existence, or their subsequent confusion, or some dangerous
interval between the conception of the man and the assumption of
the God. The Roman theology, more positive and precise, adopted
the term most offensive to the ears of the Egyptians, that Christ
existed In two natures; and this momentous particle (which the
memory, rather than the understanding, must retain) had almost
produced a schism among the Catholic bishops. The
tome of Leo had been respectfully,
perhaps sincerely, subscribed; but they protested, in two
successive debates, that it was neither expedient nor lawful to
transgress the sacred landmarks which had been fixed at Nice,
Constantinople, and Ephesus, according to the rule of Scripture
and tradition. At length they yielded to the importunities of
their masters; but their infallible decree, after it had been
ratified with deliberate votes and vehement acclamations, was
overturned in the next session by the opposition of the legates
and their Oriental friends. It was in vain that a multitude of
episcopal voices repeated in chorus, "The definition of the
fathers is orthodox and immutable! The heretics are now
discovered! Anathema to the Nestorians! Let them depart from the
synod! Let them repair to Rome." The legates threatened, the
emperor was absolute, and a committee of eighteen bishops
prepared a new decree, which was imposed on the reluctant
assembly. In the name of the fourth general council, the Christ
in one person, but in two natures, was announced to the Catholic
world: an invisible line was drawn between the heresy of
Apollinaris and the faith of St. Cyril; and the road to paradise,
a bridge as sharp as a razor, was suspended over the abyss by the
master-hand of the theological artist. During ten centuries of
blindness and servitude, Europe received her religious opinions
from the oracle of the Vatican; and the same doctrine, already
varnished with the rust of antiquity, was admitted without
dispute into the creed of the reformers, who disclaimed the
supremacy of the Roman pontiff. The synod of Chalcedon still
triumphs in the Protestant churches; but the ferment of
controversy has subsided, and the most pious Christians of the
present day are ignorant, or careless, of their own belief
concerning the mystery of the incarnation.
Far different was the temper of the Greeks and Egyptians under
the orthodox reigns of Leo and Marcian. Those pious emperors
enforced with arms and edicts the symbol of their faith; and it
was declared by the conscience or honor of five hundred bishops,
that the decrees of the synod of Chalcedon might be lawfully
supported, even with blood. The Catholics observed with
satisfaction, that the same synod was odious both to the
Nestorians and the Monophysites; but the Nestorians were less
angry, or less powerful, and the East was distracted by the
obstinate and sanguinary zeal of the Monophysites. Jerusalem was
occupied by an army of monks; in the name of the one incarnate
nature, they pillaged, they burnt, they murdered; the sepulchre
of Christ was defiled with blood; and the gates of the city were
guarded in tumultuous rebellion against the troops of the
emperor. After the disgrace and exile of Dioscorus, the Egyptians
still regretted their spiritual father; and detested the
usurpation of his successor, who was introduced by the fathers of
Chalcedon. The throne of Proterius was supported by a guard of
two thousand soldiers: he waged a five years' war against the
people of Alexandria; and on the first intelligence of the death
of Marcian, he became the victim of their zeal. On the third day
before the festival of Easter, the patriarch was besieged in the
cathedral, and murdered in the baptistery. The remains of his
mangled corpse were delivered to the flames, and his ashes to the
wind; and the deed was inspired by the vision of a pretended
angel: an ambitious monk, who, under the name of Timothy the Cat,
succeeded to the place and opinions of Dioscorus. This deadly
superstition was inflamed, on either side, by the principle and
the practice of retaliation: in the pursuit of a metaphysical
quarrel, many thousands were slain, and the Christians of every
degree were deprived of the substantial enjoyments of social
life, and of the invisible gifts of baptism and the holy
communion. Perhaps an extravagant fable of the times may conceal
an allegorical picture of these fanatics, who tortured each other
and themselves. "Under the consulship of Venantius and Celer,"
says a grave bishop, "the people of Alexandria, and all Egypt,
were seized with a strange and diabolical frenzy: great and
small, slaves and freedmen, monks and clergy, the natives of the
land, who opposed the synod of Chalcedon, lost their speech and
reason, barked like dogs, and tore, with their own teeth the
flesh from their hands and arms."
The disorders of thirty years at length produced the famous
Henoticon of the emperor Zeno, which in his reign, and in that of
Anastasius, was signed by all the bishops of the East, under the
penalty of degradation and exile, if they rejected or infringed
this salutary and fundamental law. The clergy may smile or groan
at the presumption of a layman who defines the articles of faith;
yet if he stoops to the humiliating task, his mind is less
infected by prejudice or interest, and the authority of the
magistrate can only be maintained by the concord of the people.
It is in ecclesiastical story, that Zeno appears least
contemptible; and I am not able to discern any Manichæan or
Eutychian guilt in the generous saying of Anastasius. That it was
unworthy of an emperor to persecute the worshippers of Christ and
the citizens of Rome. The Henoticon was most pleasing to the
Egyptians; yet the smallest blemish has not been described by the
jealous, and even jaundiced eyes of our orthodox schoolmen, and
it accurately represents the Catholic faith of the incarnation,
without adopting or disclaiming the peculiar terms of tenets of
the hostile sects. A solemn anathema is pronounced against
Nestorius and Eutyches; against all heretics by whom Christ is
divided, or confounded, or reduced to a phantom. Without defining
the number or the article of the word
nature, the pure system of St. Cyril,
the faith of Nice, Constantinople, and Ephesus, is respectfully
confirmed; but, instead of bowing at the name of the fourth
council, the subject is dismissed by the censure of all contrary
doctrines, ifany such have been taught
either elsewhere or at Chalcedon. Under this ambiguous
expression, the friends and the enemies of the last synod might
unite in a silent embrace. The most reasonable Christians
acquiesced in this mode of toleration; but their reason was
feeble and inconstant, and their obedience was despised as timid
and servile by the vehement spirit of their brethren. On a
subject which engrossed the thoughts and discourses of men, it
was difficult to preserve an exact neutrality; a book, a sermon,
a prayer, rekindled the flame of controversy; and the bonds of
communion were alternately broken and renewed by the private
animosity of the bishops. The space between Nestorius and
Eutyches was filled by a thousand shades of language and opinion;
the acephali of Egypt, and the Roman
pontiffs, of equal valor, though of unequal strength, may be
found at the two extremities of the theological scale. The
acephali, without a king or a bishop, were separated above three
hundred years from the patriarchs of Alexandria, who had accepted
the communion of Constantinople, without exacting a formal
condemnation of the synod of Chalcedon. For accepting the
communion of Alexandria, without a formal approbation of the same
synod, the patriarchs of Constantinople were anathematized by the
popes. Their inflexible despotism involved the most orthodox of
the Greek churches in this spiritual contagion, denied or doubted
the validity of their sacraments, and fomented, thirty-five
years, the schism of the East and West, till they finally
abolished the memory of four Byzantine pontiffs, who had dared to
oppose the supremacy of St. Peter. Before that period, the
precarious truce of Constantinople and Egypt had been violated by
the zeal of the rival prelates. Macedonius, who was suspected of
the Nestorian heresy, asserted, in disgrace and exile, the synod
of Chalcedon, while the successor of Cyril would have purchased
its overthrow with a bribe of two thousand pounds of gold.
In the fever of the times, the sense, or rather the sound of a
syllable, was sufficient to disturb the peace of an empire. The
Trisagion (thrice holy,) "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of Hosts!"
is supposed, by the Greeks, to be the identical hymn which the
angels and cherubim eternally repeat before the throne of God,
and which, about the middle of the fifth century, was
miraculously revealed to the church of Constantinople. The
devotion of Antioch soon added, "who was crucified for us!" and
this grateful address, either to Christ alone, or to the whole
Trinity, may be justified by the rules of theology, and has been
gradually adopted by the Catholics of the East and West. But it
had been imagined by a Monophysite bishop; the gift of an enemy
was at first rejected as a dire and dangerous blasphemy, and the
rash innovation had nearly cost the emperor Anastasius his throne
and his life. The people of Constantinople was devoid of any
rational principles of freedom; but they held, as a lawful cause
of rebellion, the color of a livery in the races, or the color of
a mystery in the schools. The Trisagion, with and without this
obnoxious addition, was chanted in the cathedral by two adverse
choirs, and when their lungs were exhausted, they had recourse to
the more solid arguments of sticks and stones; the aggressors
were punished by the emperor, and defended by the patriarch; and
the crown and mitre were staked on the event of this momentous
quarrel. The streets were instantly crowded with innumerable
swarms of men, women, and children; the legions of monks, in
regular array, marched, and shouted, and fought at their head,
"Christians! this is the day of martyrdom: let us not desert our
spiritual father; anathema to the Manichæan tyrant! he is
unworthy to reign." Such was the Catholic cry; and the galleys of
Anastasius lay upon their oars before the palace, till the
patriarch had pardoned his penitent, and hushed the waves of the
troubled multitude. The triumph of Macedonius was checked by a
speedy exile; but the zeal of his flock was again exasperated by
the same question, "Whether one of the Trinity had been
crucified?" On this momentous occasion, the blue and green
factions of Constantinople suspended their discord, and the civil
and military powers were annihilated in their presence. The keys
of the city, and the standards of the guards, were deposited in
the forum of Constantine, the principal station and camp of the
faithful. Day and night they were incessantly busied either in
singing hymns to the honor of their God, or in pillaging and
murdering the servants of their prince. The head of his favorite
monk, the friend, as they styled him, of the enemy of the Holy
Trinity, was borne aloft on a spear; and the firebrands, which
had been darted against heretical structures, diffused the
undistinguishing flames over the most orthodox buildings. The
statues of the emperor were broken, and his person was concealed
in a suburb, till, at the end of three days, he dared to implore
the mercy of his subjects. Without his diadem, and in the posture
of a suppliant, Anastasius appeared on the throne of the circus.
The Catholics, before his face, rehearsed their genuine
Trisagion; they exulted in the offer, which he proclaimed by the
voice of a herald, of abdicating the purple; they listened to the
admonition, that, since all could not
reign, they should previously agree in the choice of a sovereign;
and they accepted the blood of two unpopular ministers, whom
their master, without hesitation, condemned to the lions. These
furious but transient seditions were encouraged by the success of
Vitalian, who, with an army of Huns and Bulgarians, for the most
part idolaters, declared himself the champion of the Catholic
faith. In this pious rebellion he depopulated Thrace, besieged
Constantinople, exterminated sixty-five thousand of his
fellow-Christians, till he obtained the recall of the bishops,
the satisfaction of the pope, and the establishment of the
council of Chalcedon, an orthodox treaty, reluctantly signed by
the dying Anastasius, and more faithfully performed by the uncle
of Justinian. And such was the event of the
first of the religious wars which have
been waged in the name and by the disciples, of the God of
peace.
Chapter XLVII: Ecclesiastical Discord. -- Part
III.
Justinian has been already seen in the various lights of a
prince, a conqueror, and a lawgiver: the theologian still
remains, and it affords an unfavorable prejudice, that his
theology should form a very prominent feature of his portrait.
The sovereign sympathized with his subjects in their
superstitious reverence for living and departed saints: his Code,
and more especially his Novels, confirm and enlarge the
privileges of the clergy; and in every dispute between a monk and
a layman, the partial judge was inclined to pronounce, that
truth, and innocence, and justice, were always on the side of the
church. In his public and private devotions, the emperor was
assiduous and exemplary; his prayers, vigils, and fasts,
displayed the austere penance of a monk; his fancy was amused by
the hope, or belief, of personal inspiration; he had secured the
patronage of the Virgin and St. Michael the archangel; and his
recovery from a dangerous disease was ascribed to the miraculous
succor of the holy martyrs Cosmas and Damian. The capital and the
provinces of the East were decorated with the monuments of his
religion; and though the far greater part of these costly
structures may be attributed to his taste or ostentation, the
zeal of the royal architect was probably quickened by a genuine
sense of love and gratitude towards his invisible benefactors.
Among the titles of Imperial greatness, the name of
Pious was most pleasing to his ear; to
promote the temporal and spiritual interest of the church was the
serious business of his life; and the duty of father of his
country was often sacrificed to that of defender of the faith.
The controversies of the times were congenial to his temper and
understanding and the theological professors must inwardly deride
the diligence of a stranger, who cultivated their art and
neglected his own. "What can ye fear," said a bold conspirator to
his associates, "from your bigoted tyrant? Sleepless and unarmed,
he sits whole nights in his closet, debating with reverend
graybeards, and turning over the pages of ecclesiastical
volumes." The fruits of these lucubrations were displayed in many
a conference, where Justinian might shine as the loudest and most
subtile of the disputants; in many a sermon, which, under the
name of edicts and epistles, proclaimed to the empire the
theology of their master. While the Barbarians invaded the
provinces, while the victorious legion marched under the banners
of Belisarius and Narses, the successor of Trajan, unknown to the
camp, was content to vanquish at the head of a synod. Had he
invited to these synods a disinterested and rational spectator,
Justinian might have learned, "that
religious controversy is the offspring of arrogance and folly;
that true piety is most laudably
expressed by silence and submission;
that man, ignorant of his own nature,
should not presume to scrutinize the nature of his God; and
that it is sufficient for us to know,
that power and benevolence are the perfect attributes of the
Deity."
Toleration was not the virtue of the times, and indulgence to
rebels has seldom been the virtue of princes. But when the prince
descends to the narrow and peevish character of a disputant, he
is easily provoked to supply the defect of argument by the
plenitude of power, and to chastise without mercy the perverse
blindness of those who wilfully shut their eyes against the light
of demonstration. The reign of Justinian was a uniform yet
various scene of persecution; and he appears to have surpassed
his indolent predecessors, both in the contrivance of his laws
and the rigor of their execution. The insufficient term of three
months was assigned for the conversion or exile of all heretics;
and if he still connived at their precarious stay, they were
deprived, under his iron yoke, not only of the benefits of
society, but of the common birth-right of men and Christians. At
the end of four hundred years, the Montanists of Phrygia still
breathed the wild enthusiasm of perfection and prophecy which
they had imbibed from their male and female apostles, the special
organs of the Paraclete. On the approach of the Catholic priests
and soldiers, they grasped with alacrity the crown of martyrdom
the conventicle and the congregation perished in the flames, but
these primitive fanatics were not extinguished three hundred
years after the death of their tyrant. Under the protection of
their Gothic confederates, the church of the Arians at
Constantinople had braved the severity of the laws: their clergy
equalled the wealth and magnificence of the senate; and the gold
and silver which were seized by the rapacious hand of Justinian
might perhaps be claimed as the spoils of the provinces, and the
trophies of the Barbarians. A secret remnant of Pagans, who still
lurked in the most refined and most rustic conditions of mankind,
excited the indignation of the Christians, who were perhaps
unwilling that any strangers should be the witnesses of their
intestine quarrels. A bishop was named as the inquisitor of the
faith, and his diligence soon discovered, in the court and city,
the magistrates, lawyers, physicians, and sophists, who still
cherished the superstition of the Greeks. They were sternly
informed that they must choose without delay between the
displeasure of Jupiter or Justinian, and that their aversion to
the gospel could no longer be distinguished under the scandalous
mask of indifference or impiety. The patrician Photius, perhaps,
alone was resolved to live and to die like his ancestors: he
enfranchised himself with the stroke of a dagger, and left his
tyrant the poor consolation of exposing with ignominy the
lifeless corpse of the fugitive. His weaker brethren submitted to
their earthly monarch, underwent the ceremony of baptism, and
labored, by their extraordinary zeal, to erase the suspicion, or
to expiate the guilt, of idolatry. The native country of Homer,
and the theatre of the Trojan war, still retained the last sparks
of his mythology: by the care of the same bishop, seventy
thousand Pagans were detected and converted in Asia, Phrygia,
Lydia, and Caria; ninety-six churches were built for the new
proselytes; and linen vestments, Bibles, and liturgies, and vases
of gold and silver, were supplied by the pious munificence of
Justinian. The Jews, who had been gradually stripped of their
immunities, were oppressed by a vexatious law, which compelled
them to observe the festival of Easter the same day on which it
was celebrated by the Christians. And they might complain with
the more reason, since the Catholics themselves did not agree
with the astronomical calculations of their sovereign: the people
of Constantinople delayed the beginning of their Lent a whole
week after it had been ordained by authority; and they had the
pleasure of fasting seven days, while meat was exposed for sale
by the command of the emperor. The Samaritans of Palestine were a
motley race, an ambiguous sect, rejected as Jews by the Pagans,
by the Jews as schismatics, and by the Christians as idolaters.
The abomination of the cross had already been planted on their
holy mount of Garizim, but the persecution of Justinian offered
only the alternative of baptism or rebellion. They chose the
latter: under the standard of a desperate leader, they rose in
arms, and retaliated their wrongs on the lives, the property, and
the temples, of a defenceless people. The Samaritans were finally
subdued by the regular forces of the East: twenty thousand were
slain, twenty thousand were sold by the Arabs to the infidels of
Persia and India, and the remains of that unhappy nation atoned
for the crime of treason by the sin of hypocrisy. It has been
computed that one hundred thousand Roman subjects were extirpated
in the Samaritan war, which converted the once fruitful province
into a desolate and smoking wilderness. But in the creed of
Justinian, the guilt of murder could not be applied to the
slaughter of unbelievers; and he piously labored to establish
with fire and sword the unity of the Christian faith.
With these sentiments, it was incumbent on him, at least, to
be always in the right. In the first years of his administration,
he signalized his zeal as the disciple and patron of orthodoxy:
the reconciliation of the Greeks and Latins established the
tome of St. Leo as the creed of the
emperor and the empire; the Nestorians and Eutychians were
exposed. on either side, to the double edge of persecution; and
the four synods of Nice, Constantinople, Ephesus, and
Chalcedon, were ratified by the code of
a Catholic lawgiver. But while Justinian strove to maintain the
uniformity of faith and worship, his wife Theodora, whose vices
were not incompatible with devotion, had listened to the
Monophysite teachers; and the open or clandestine enemies of the
church revived and multiplied at the smile of their gracious
patroness. The capital, the palace, the nuptial bed, were torn by
spiritual discord; yet so doubtful was the sincerity of the royal
consorts, that their seeming disagreement was imputed by many to
a secret and mischievous confederacy against the religion and
happiness of their people. The famous dispute of the Three
Chapters, which has filled more volumes than it deserves lines,
is deeply marked with this subtile and disingenuous spirit. It
was now three hundred years since the body of Origen had been
eaten by the worms: his soul, of which he held the preexistence,
was in the hands of its Creator; but his writings were eagerly
perused by the monks of Palestine. In these writings, the
piercing eye of Justinian descried more than ten metaphysical
errors; and the primitive doctor, in the company of Pythagoras
and Plato, was devoted by the clergy to the
eternity of hell-fire, which he had
presumed to deny. Under the cover of this precedent, a
treacherous blow was aimed at the council of Chalcedon. The
fathers had listened without impatience to the praise of Theodore
of Mopsuestia; and their justice or indulgence had restored both
Theodore of Cyrrhus, and Ibas of Edessa, to the communion of the
church. But the characters of these Oriental bishops were tainted
with the reproach of heresy; the first had been the master, the
two others were the friends, of Nestorius; their most suspicious
passages were accused under the title of the three
chapters; and the condemnation of their memory must
involve the honor of a synod, whose name was pronounced with
sincere or affected reverence by the Catholic world. If these
bishops, whether innocent or guilty, were annihilated in the
sleep of death, they would not probably be awakened by the clamor
which, after the a hundred years, was raised over their grave. If
they were already in the fangs of the dæmon, their torments
could neither be aggravated nor assuaged by human industry. If in
the company of saints and angels they enjoyed the rewards of
piety, they must have smiled at the idle fury of the theological
insects who still crawled on the surface of the earth. The
foremost of these insects, the emperor of the Romans, darted his
sting, and distilled his venom, perhaps without discerning the
true motives of Theodora and her ecclesiastical faction. The
victims were no longer subject to his power, and the vehement
style of his edicts could only proclaim their damnation, and
invite the clergy of the East to join in a full chorus of curses
and anathemas. The East, with some hesitation, consented to the
voice of her sovereign: the fifth general council, of three
patriarchs and one hundred and sixty-five bishops, was held at
Constantinople; and the authors, as well as the defenders, of the
three chapters were separated from the communion of the saints,
and solemnly delivered to the prince of darkness. But the Latin
churches were more jealous of the honor of Leo and the synod of
Chalcedon: and if they had fought as they usually did under the
standard of Rome, they might have prevailed in the cause of
reason and humanity. But their chief was a prisoner in the hands
of the enemy; the throne of St. Peter, which had been disgraced
by the simony, was betrayed by the cowardice, of Vigilius, who
yielded, after a long and inconsistent struggle, to the despotism
of Justinian and the sophistry of the Greeks. His apostasy
provoked the indignation of the Latins, and no more than two
bishops could be found who would impose their hands on his deacon
and successor Pelagius. Yet the perseverance of the popes
insensibly transferred to their adversaries the appellation of
schismatics; the Illyrian, African, and Italian churches were
oppressed by the civil and ecclesiastical powers, not without
some effort of military force; the distant Barbarians transcribed
the creed of the Vatican, and, in the period of a century, the
schism of the three chapters expired in an obscure angle of the
Venetian province. But the religious discontent of the Italians
had already promoted the conquests of the Lombards, and the
Romans themselves were accustomed to suspect the faith and to
detest the government of their Byzantine tyrant.
Justinian was neither steady nor consistent in the nice
process of fixing his volatile opinions and those of his
subjects. In his youth he was, offended by the slightest
deviation from the orthodox line; in his old age he transgressed
the measure of temperate heresy, and the Jacobites, not less than
the Catholics, were scandalized by his declaration, that the body
of Christ was incorruptible, and that his manhood was never
subject to any wants and infirmities, the inheritance of our
mortal flesh. This fantastic opinion
was announced in the last edicts of Justinian; and at the moment
of his seasonable departure, the clergy had refused to subscribe,
the prince was prepared to persecute, and the people were
resolved to suffer or resist. A bishop of Treves, secure beyond
the limits of his power, addressed the monarch of the East in the
language of authority and affection. "Most gracious Justinian,
remember your baptism and your creed. Let not your gray hairs be
defiled with heresy. Recall your fathers from exile, and your
followers from perdition. You cannot be ignorant, that Italy and
Gaul, Spain and Africa, already deplore your fall, and
anathematize your name. Unless, without delay, you destroy what
you have taught; unless you exclaim with a loud voice, I have
erred, I have sinned, anathema to Nestorius, anathema to
Eutyches, you deliver your soul to the same flames in which
they will eternally burn." He died and
made no sign. His death restored in some degree the peace of the
church, and the reigns of his four successors, Justin Tiberius,
Maurice, and Phocas, are distinguished by a rare, though
fortunate, vacancy in the ecclesiastical history of the East.
The faculties of sense and reason are least capable of acting
on themselves; the eye is most inaccessible to the sight, the
soul to the thought; yet we think, and even feel, that
one will, a sole principle of action,
is essential to a rational and conscious being. When Heraclius
returned from the Persian war, the orthodox hero consulted his
bishops, whether the Christ whom he adored, of one person, but of
two natures, was actuated by a single or a double will. They
replied in the singular, and the emperor was encouraged to hope
that the Jacobites of Egypt and Syria might be reconciled by the
profession of a doctrine, most certainly harmless, and most
probably true, since it was taught even by the Nestorians
themselves. The experiment was tried without effect, and the
timid or vehement Catholics condemned even the semblance of a
retreat in the presence of a subtle and audacious enemy. The
orthodox (the prevailing) party devised new modes of speech, and
argument, and interpretation: to either nature of Christ they
speciously applied a proper and distinct energy; but the
difference was no longer visible when they allowed that the human
and the divine will were invariably the same. The disease was
attended with the customary symptoms: but the Greek clergy, as if
satiated with the endless controversy of the incarnation,
instilled a healing counsel into the ear of the prince and
people. They declared themselves monothelites, (asserters of the
unity of will,) but they treated the words as new, the questions
as superfluous; and recommended a religious silence as the most
agreeable to the prudence and charity of the gospel. This law of
silence was successively imposed by the
ecthesis or exposition of Heraclius,
the type or model of his grandson
Constans; and the Imperial edicts were subscribed with alacrity
or reluctance by the four patriarchs of Rome, Constantinople,
Alexandria, and Antioch. But the bishop and monks of Jerusalem
sounded the alarm: in the language, or even in the silence, of
the Greeks, the Latin churches detected a latent heresy: and the
obedience of Pope Honorius to the commands of his sovereign was
retracted and censured by the bolder ignorance of his successors.
They condemned the execrable and abominable heresy of the
Monothelites, who revived the errors of Manes, Apollinaris,
Eutyches, &c.; they signed the sentence of excommunication on
the tomb of St. Peter; the ink was mingled with the sacramental
wine, the blood of Christ; and no ceremony was omitted that could
fill the superstitious mind with horror and affright. As the
representative of the Western church, Pope Martin and his Lateran
synod anathematized the perfidious and guilty silence of the
Greeks: one hundred and five bishops of Italy, for the most part
the subjects of Constans, presumed to reprobate his wicked
type, and the impious
ecthesis of his grandfather; and to
confound the authors and their adherents with the twenty-one
notorious heretics, the apostates from the church, and the organs
of the devil. Such an insult under the tamest reign could not
pass with impunity. Pope Martin ended his days on the
inhospitable shore of the Tauric Chersonesus, and his oracle, the
abbot Maximus, was inhumanly chastised by the amputation of his
tongue and his right hand. But the same invincible spirit
survived in their successors; and the triumph of the Latins
avenged their recent defeat, and obliterated the disgrace of the
three chapters. The synods of Rome were confirmed by the sixth
general council of Constantinople, in the palace and the presence
of a new Constantine, a descendant of Heraclius. The royal
convert converted the Byzantine pontiff and a majority of the
bishops; the dissenters, with their chief, Macarius of Antioch,
were condemned to the spiritual and temporal pains of heresy; the
East condescended to accept the lessons of the West; and the
creed was finally settled, which teaches the Catholics of every
age, that two wills or energies are harmonized in the person of
Christ. The majesty of the pope and the Roman synod was
represented by two priests, one deacon, and three bishops; but
these obscure Latins had neither arms to compel, nor treasures to
bribe, nor language to persuade; and I am ignorant by what arts
they could determine the lofty emperor of the Greeks to abjure
the catechism of his infancy, and to persecute the religion of
his fathers. Perhaps the monks and people of Constantinople were
favorable to the Lateran creed, which is indeed the least
reasonable of the two: and the suspicion is countenanced by the
unnatural moderation of the Greek clergy, who appear in this
quarrel to be conscious of their weakness. While the synod
debated, a fanatic proposed a more summary decision, by raising a
dead man to life: the prelates assisted at the trial; but the
acknowledged failure may serve to indicate, that the passions and
prejudices of the multitude were not enlisted on the side of the
Monothelites. In the next generation, when the son of Constantine
was deposed and slain by the disciple of Macarius, they tasted
the feast of revenge and dominion: the image or monument of the
sixth council was defaced, and the original acts were committed
to the flames. But in the second year, their patron was cast
headlong from the throne, the bishops of the East were released
from their occasional conformity, the Roman faith was more firmly
replanted by the orthodox successors of Bardanes, and the fine
problems of the incarnation were forgotten in the more popular
and visible quarrel of the worship of images.
Before the end of the seventh century, the creed of the
incarnation, which had been defined at Rome and Constantinople,
was uniformly preached in the remote islands of Britain and
Ireland; the same ideas were entertained, or rather the same
words were repeated, by all the Christians whose liturgy was
performed in the Greek or the Latin tongue. Their numbers, and
visible splendor, bestowed an imperfect claim to the appellation
of Catholics: but in the East, they were marked with the less
honorable name of Melchites, or
Royalists; of men, whose faith, instead of resting on the basis
of Scripture, reason, or tradition, had been established, and was
still maintained, by the arbitrary power of a temporal monarch.
Their adversaries might allege the words of the fathers of
Constantinople, who profess themselves the slaves of the king;
and they might relate, with malicious joy, how the decrees of
Chalcedon had been inspired and reformed by the emperor Marcian
and his virgin bride. The prevailing faction will naturally
inculcate the duty of submission, nor is it less natural that
dissenters should feel and assert the principles of freedom.
Under the rod of persecution, the Nestorians and Monophysites
degenerated into rebels and fugitives; and the most ancient and
useful allies of Rome were taught to consider the emperor not as
the chief, but as the enemy of the Christians. Language, the
leading principle which unites or separates the tribes of
mankind, soon discriminated the sectaries of the East, by a
peculiar and perpetual badge, which abolished the means of
intercourse and the hope of reconciliation. The long dominion of
the Greeks, their colonies, and, above all, their eloquence, had
propagated a language doubtless the most perfect that has been
contrived by the art of man. Yet the body of the people, both in
Syria and Egypt, still persevered in the use of their national
idioms; with this difference, however, that the Coptic was
confined to the rude and illiterate peasants of the Nile, while
the Syriac, from the mountains of Assyria to the Red Sea, was
adapted to the higher topics of poetry and argument. Armenia and
Abyssinia were infected by the speech or learning of the Greeks;
and their Barbaric tongues, which have been revived in the
studies of modern Europe, were unintelligible to the inhabitants
of the Roman empire. The Syriac and the Coptic, the Armenian and
the Æthiopic, are consecrated in the service of their
respective churches: and their theology is enriched by domestic
versions both of the Scriptures and of the most popular fathers.
After a period of thirteen hundred and sixty years, the spark of
controversy, first kindled by a sermon of Nestorius, still burns
in the bosom of the East, and the hostile communions still
maintain the faith and discipline of their founders. In the most
abject state of ignorance, poverty, and servitude, the Nestorians
and Monophysites reject the spiritual supremacy of Rome, and
cherish the toleration of their Turkish masters, which allows
them to anathematize, on the one hand, St. Cyril and the synod of
Ephesus: on the other, Pope Leo and the council of Chalcedon. The
weight which they cast into the downfall of the Eastern empire
demands our notice, and the reader may be amused with the various
prospect of, I. The Nestorians; II. The Jacobites; III. The
Maronites; IV. The Armenians; V. The Copts; and, VI. The
Abyssinians. To the three former, the Syriac is common; but of
the latter, each is discriminated by the use of a national idiom.
Yet the modern natives of Armenia and Abyssinia would be
incapable of conversing with their ancestors; and the Christians
of Egypt and Syria, who reject the religion, have adopted the
language of the Arabians. The lapse of time has seconded the
sacerdotal arts; and in the East, as well as in the West, the
Deity is addressed in an obsolete tongue, unknown to the majority
of the congregation.
Chapter XLVII: Ecclesiastical Discord. -- Part
III.
I. Both in his native and his episcopal province, the heresy
of the unfortunate Nestorius was speedily obliterated. The
Oriental bishops, who at Ephesus had resisted to his face the
arrogance of Cyril, were mollified by his tardy concessions. The
same prelates, or their successors, subscribed, not without a
murmur, the decrees of Chalcedon; the power of the Monophysites
reconciled them with the Catholics in the conformity of passion,
of interest, and, insensibly, of belief; and their last reluctant
sigh was breathed in the defence of the three chapters. Their
dissenting brethren, less moderate, or more sincere, were crushed
by the penal laws; and, as early as the reign of Justinian, it
became difficult to find a church of Nestorians within the limits
of the Roman empire. Beyond those limits they had discovered a
new world, in which they might hope for liberty, and aspire to
conquest. In Persia, notwithstanding the resistance of the Magi,
Christianity had struck a deep root, and the nations of the East
reposed under its salutary shade. The
catholic, or primate, resided in the
capital: in his synods, and in
their dioceses, his metropolitans,
bishops, and clergy, represented the pomp and order of a regular
hierarchy: they rejoiced in the increase of proselytes, who were
converted from the Zendavesta to the gospel, from the secular to
the monastic life; and their zeal was stimulated by the presence
of an artful and formidable enemy. The Persian church had been
founded by the missionaries of Syria; and their language,
discipline, and doctrine, were closely interwoven with its
original frame. The catholicswere
elected and ordained by their own suffragans; but their filial
dependence on the patriarchs of Antioch is attested by the canons
of the Oriental church. In the Persian school of Edessa, the
rising generations of the faithful imbibed their theological
idiom: they studied in the Syriac version the ten thousand
volumes of Theodore of Mopsuestia; and they revered the apostolic
faith and holy martyrdom of his disciple Nestorius, whose person
and language were equally unknown to the nations beyond the
Tigris. The first indelible lesson of Ibas, bishop of Edessa,
taught them to execrate the Egyptians,
who, in the synod of Ephesus, had impiously confounded the two
natures of Christ. The flight of the masters and scholars, who
were twice expelled from the Athens of Syria, dispersed a crowd
of missionaries inflamed by the double zeal of religion and
revenge. And the rigid unity of the Monophysites, who, under the
reigns of Zeno and Anastasius, had invaded the thrones of the
East, provoked their antagonists, in a land of freedom, to avow a
moral, rather than a physical, union of the two persons of
Christ. Since the first preaching of the gospel, the Sassanian
kings beheld with an eye of suspicion a race of aliens and
apostates, who had embraced the religion, and who might favor the
cause, of the hereditary foes of their country. The royal edicts
had often prohibited their dangerous correspondence with the
Syrian clergy: the progress of the schism was grateful to the
jealous pride of Perozes, and he listened to the eloquence of an
artful prelate, who painted Nestorius as the friend of Persia,
and urged him to secure the fidelity of his Christian subjects,
by granting a just preference to the victims and enemies of the
Roman tyrant. The Nestorians composed a large majority of the
clergy and people: they were encouraged by the smile, and armed
with the sword, of despotism; yet many of their weaker brethren
were startled at the thought of breaking loose from the communion
of the Christian world, and the blood of seven thousand seven
hundred Monophysites, or Catholics, confirmed the uniformity of
faith and discipline in the churches of Persia. Their
ecclesiastical institutions are distinguished by a liberal
principle of reason, or at least of policy: the austerity of the
cloister was relaxed and gradually forgotten; houses of charity
were endowed for the education of orphans and foundlings; the law
of celibacy, so forcibly recommended to the Greeks and Latins,
was disregarded by the Persian clergy; and the number of the
elect was multiplied by the public and reiterated nuptials of the
priests, the bishops, and even the patriarch himself. To this
standard of natural and religious freedom, myriads of fugitives
resorted from all the provinces of the Eastern empire; the narrow
bigotry of Justinian was punished by the emigration of his most
industrious subjects; they transported into Persia the arts both
of peace and war: and those who deserved the favor, were promoted
in the service, of a discerning monarch. The arms of Nushirvan,
and his fiercer grandson, were assisted with advice, and money,
and troops, by the desperate sectaries who still lurked in their
native cities of the East: their zeal was rewarded with the gift
of the Catholic churches; but when those cities and churches were
recovered by Heraclius, their open profession of treason and
heresy compelled them to seek a refuge in the realm of their
foreign ally. But the seeming tranquillity of the Nestorians was
often endangered, and sometimes overthrown. They were involved in
the common evils of Oriental despotism: their enmity to Rome
could not always atone for their attachment to the gospel: and a
colony of three hundred thousand Jacobites, the captives of
Apamea and Antioch, was permitted to erect a hostile altar in the
face of the catholic, and in the
sunshine of the court. In his last treaty, Justinian introduced
some conditions which tended to enlarge and fortify the
toleration of Christianity in Persia. The emperor, ignorant of
the rights of conscience, was incapable of pity or esteem for the
heretics who denied the authority of the holy synods: but he
flattered himself that they would gradually perceive the temporal
benefits of union with the empire and the church of Rome; and if
he failed in exciting their gratitude, he might hope to provoke
the jealousy of their sovereign. In a later age the Lutherans
have been burnt at Paris, and protected in Germany, by the
superstition and policy of the most Christian king.
The desire of gaining souls for God and subjects for the
church, has excited in every age the diligence of the Christian
priests. From the conquest of Persia they carried their spiritual
arms to the north, the east, and the south; and the simplicity of
the gospel was fashioned and painted with the colors of the
Syriac theology. In the sixth century, according to the report of
a Nestorian traveller, Christianity was successfully preached to
the Bactrians, the Huns, the Persians, the Indians, the
Persarmenians, the Medes, and the Elamites: the Barbaric
churches, from the Gulf of Persia to the Caspian Sea, were almost
infinite; and their recent faith was conspicuous in the number
and sanctity of their monks and martyrs. The pepper coast of
Malabar, and the isles of the ocean, Socotora and Ceylon, were
peopled with an increasing multitude of Christians; and the
bishops and clergy of those sequestered regions derived their
ordination from the Catholic of Babylon. In a subsequent age the
zeal of the Nestorians overleaped the limits which had confined
the ambition and curiosity both of the Greeks and Persians. The
missionaries of Balch and Samarcand pursued without fear the
footsteps of the roving Tartar, and insinuated themselves into
the camps of the valleys of Imaus and the banks of the Selinga.
They exposed a metaphysical creed to those illiterate shepherds:
to those sanguinary warriors, they recommended humanity and
repose. Yet a khan, whose power they vainly magnified, is said to
have received at their hands the rites of baptism, and even of
ordination; and the fame of Prester or
Presbyter John has long amused the
credulity of Europe. The royal convert was indulged in the use of
a portable altar; but he despatched an embassy to the patriarch,
to inquire how, in the season of Lent, he should abstain from
animal food, and how he might celebrate the Eucharist in a desert
that produced neither corn nor wine. In their progress by sea and
land, the Nestorians entered China by the port of Canton and the
northern residence of Sigan. Unlike the senators of Rome, who
assumed with a smile the characters of priests and augurs, the
mandarins, who affect in public the reason of philosophers, are
devoted in private to every mode of popular superstition. They
cherished and they confounded the gods of Palestine and of India;
but the propagation of Christianity awakened the jealousy of the
state, and, after a short vicissitude of favor and persecution,
the foreign sect expired in ignorance and oblivion. Under the
reign of the caliphs, the Nestorian church was diffused from
China to Jerusalem and Cyrus; and their numbers, with those of
the Jacobites, were computed to surpass the Greek and Latin
communions. Twenty-five metropolitans or archbishops composed
their hierarchy; but several of these were dispensed, by the
distance and danger of the way, from the duty of personal
attendance, on the easy condition that every six years they
should testify their faith and obedience to the catholic or
patriarch of Babylon, a vague appellation which has been
successively applied to the royal seats of Seleucia, Ctesiphon,
and Bagdad. These remote branches are long since withered; and
the old patriarchal trunk is now divided by the
Elijahs of Mosul, the representatives
almost on lineal descent of the genuine and primitive succession;
the Josephs of Amida, who are
reconciled to the church of Rome: and the
Simeons of Van or Ormia, whose revolt,
at the head of forty thousand families, was promoted in the
sixteenth century by the Sophis of Persia. The number of three
hundred thousand is allowed for the whole body of the Nestorians,
who, under the name of Chaldeans or Assyrians, are confounded
with the most learned or the most powerful nation of Eastern
antiquity.
According to the legend of antiquity, the gospel was preached
in India by St. Thomas. At the end of the ninth century, his
shrine, perhaps in the neighborhood of Madras, was devoutly
visited by the ambassadors of Alfred; and their return with a
cargo of pearls and spices rewarded the zeal of the English
monarch, who entertained the largest projects of trade and
discovery. When the Portuguese first opened the navigation of
India, the Christians of St. Thomas had been seated for ages on
the coast of Malabar, and the difference of their character and
color attested the mixture of a foreign race. In arms, in arts,
and possibly in virtue, they excelled the natives of Hindostan;
the husbandmen cultivated the palm-tree, the merchants were
enriched by the pepper trade, the soldiers preceded the
nairs or nobles of Malabar, and their
hereditary privileges were respected by the gratitude or the fear
of the king of Cochin and the Zamorin himself. They acknowledged
a Gentoo of sovereign, but they were governed, even in temporal
concerns, by the bishop of Angamala. He still asserted his
ancient title of metropolitan of India, but his real jurisdiction
was exercised in fourteen hundred churches, and he was intrusted
with the care of two hundred thousand souls. Their religion would
have rendered them the firmest and most cordial allies of the
Portuguese; but the inquisitors soon discerned in the Christians
of St. Thomas the unpardonable guilt of heresy and schism.
Instead of owning themselves the subjects of the Roman pontiff,
the spiritual and temporal monarch of the globe, they adhered,
like their ancestors, to the communion of the Nestorian
patriarch; and the bishops whom he ordained at Mosul, traversed
the dangers of the sea and land to reach their diocese on the
coast of Malabar. In their Syriac liturgy the names of Theodore
and Nestorius were piously commemorated: they united their
adoration of the two persons of Christ; the title of Mother of
God was offensive to their ear, and they measured with scrupulous
avarice the honors of the Virgin Mary, whom the superstition of
the Latins had almost exalted to the rank of a goddess. When her
image was first presented to the disciples of St. Thomas, they
indignantly exclaimed, "We are Christians, not idolaters!" and
their simple devotion was content with the veneration of the
cross. Their separation from the Western world had left them in
ignorance of the improvements, or corruptions, of a thousand
years; and their conformity with the faith and practice of the
fifth century would equally disappoint the prejudices of a Papist
or a Protestant. It was the first care of the ministers of Rome
to intercept all correspondence with the Nestorian patriarch, and
several of his bishops expired in the prisons of the holy office.
The flock, without a shepherd, was assaulted by the power of the
Portuguese, the arts of the Jesuits, and the zeal of Alexis de
Menezes, archbishop of Goa, in his personal visitation of the
coast of Malabar. The synod of Diamper, at which he presided,
consummated the pious work of the reunion; and rigorously imposed
the doctrine and discipline of the Roman church, without
forgetting auricular confession, the strongest engine of
ecclesiastical torture. The memory of Theodore and Nestorius was
condemned, and Malabar was reduced under the dominion of the
pope, of the primate, and of the Jesuits who invaded the see of
Angamala or Cranganor. Sixty years of servitude and hypocrisy
were patiently endured; but as soon as the Portuguese empire was
shaken by the courage and industry of the Dutch, the Nestorians
asserted, with vigor and effect, the religion of their fathers.
The Jesuits were incapable of defending the power which they had
abused; the arms of forty thousand Christians were pointed
against their falling tyrants; and the Indian archdeacon assumed
the character of bishop till a fresh supply of episcopal gifts
and Syriac missionaries could be obtained from the patriarch of
Babylon. Since the expulsion of the Portuguese, the Nestorian
creed is freely professed on the coast of Malabar. The trading
companies of Holland and England are the friends of toleration;
but if oppression be less mortifying than contempt, the
Christians of St. Thomas have reason to complain of the cold and
silent indifference of their brethren of Europe.
II. The history of the Monophysites is less copious and
interesting than that of the Nestorians. Under the reigns of Zeno
and Anastasius, their artful leaders surprised the ear of the
prince, usurped the thrones of the East, and crushed on its
native soil the school of the Syrians. The rule of the
Monophysite faith was defined with exquisite discretion by
Severus, patriarch of Antioch: he condemned, in the style of the
Henoticon, the adverse heresies of Nestorius; and Eutyches
maintained against the latter the reality of the body of Christ,
and constrained the Greeks to allow that he was a liar who spoke
truth. But the approximation of ideas could not abate the
vehemence of passion; each party was the more astonished that
their blind antagonist could dispute on so trifling a difference;
the tyrant of Syria enforced the belief of his creed, and his
reign was polluted with the blood of three hundred and fifty
monks, who were slain, not perhaps without provocation or
resistance, under the walls of Apamea. The successor of
Anastasius replanted the orthodox standard in the East; Severus
fled into Egypt; and his friend, the eloquent Xenaias, who had
escaped from the Nestorians of Persia, was suffocated in his
exile by the Melchites of Paphlagonia. Fifty-four bishops were
swept from their thrones, eight hundred ecclesiastics were cast
into prison, and notwithstanding the ambiguous favor of Theodora,
the Oriental flocks, deprived of their shepherds, must insensibly
have been either famished or poisoned. In this spiritual
distress, the expiring faction was revived, and united, and
perpetuated, by the labors of a monk; and the name of James
Baradæus has been preserved in the appellation of
Jacobites, a familiar sound, which may
startle the ear of an English reader. From the holy confessors in
their prison of Constantinople, he received the powers of bishop
of Edessa and apostle of the East, and the ordination of
fourscore thousand bishops, priests, and deacons, is derived from
the same inexhaustible source. The speed of the zealous
missionary was promoted by the fleetest dromedaries of a devout
chief of the Arabs; the doctrine and discipline of the Jacobites
were secretly established in the dominions of Justinian; and each
Jacobite was compelled to violate the laws and to hate the Roman
legislator. The successors of Severus, while they lurked in
convents or villages, while they sheltered their proscribed heads
in the caverns of hermits, or the tents of the Saracens, still
asserted, as they now assert, their indefeasible right to the
title, the rank, and the prerogatives of patriarch of Antioch:
under the milder yoke of the infidels, they reside about a league
from Merdin, in the pleasant monastery of Zapharan, which they
have embellished with cells, aqueducts, and plantations. The
secondary, though honorable, place is filled by the
maphrian, who, in his station at Mosul
itself, defies the Nestorian catholic
with whom he contests the primacy of the East. Under the
patriarch and the maphrian, one hundred and fifty archbishops and
bishops have been counted in the different ages of the Jacobite
church; but the order of the hierarchy is relaxed or dissolved,
and the greater part of their dioceses is confined to the
neighborhood of the Euphrates and the Tigris. The cities of
Aleppo and Amida, which are often visited by the patriarch,
contain some wealthy merchants and industrious mechanics, but the
multitude derive their scanty sustenance from their daily labor:
and poverty, as well as superstition, may impose their excessive
fasts: five annual lents, during which both the clergy and laity
abstain not only from flesh or eggs, but even from the taste of
wine, of oil, and of fish. Their present numbers are esteemed
from fifty to fourscore thousand souls, the remnant of a populous
church, which was gradually decreased under the impression of
twelve centuries. Yet in that long period, some strangers of
merit have been converted to the Monophysite faith, and a Jew was
the father of Abulpharagius, primate of the East, so truly
eminent both in his life and death. In his life he was an elegant
writer of the Syriac and Arabic tongues, a poet, physician, and
historian, a subtile philosopher, and a moderate divine. In his
death, his funeral was attended by his rival the Nestorian
patriarch, with a train of Greeks and Armenians, who forgot their
disputes, and mingled their tears over the grave of an enemy. The
sect which was honored by the virtues of Abulpharagius appears,
however, to sink below the level of their Nestorian brethren. The
superstition of the Jacobites is more abject, their fasts more
rigid, their intestine divisions are more numerous, and their
doctors (as far as I can measure the degrees of nonsense) are
more remote from the precincts of reason. Something may possibly
be allowed for the rigor of the Monophysite theology; much more
for the superior influence of the monastic order. In Syria, in
Egypt, in Ethiopia, the Jacobite monks have ever been
distinguished by the austerity of their penance and the absurdity
of their legends. Alive or dead, they are worshipped as the
favorites of the Deity; the crosier of bishop and patriarch is
reserved for their venerable hands; and they assume the
government of men, while they are yet reeking with the habits and
prejudices of the cloister.
III. In the style of the Oriental Christians, the Monothelites
of every age are described under the appellation of
Maronites, a name which has been
insensibly transferred from a hermit to a monastery, from a
monastery to a nation. Maron, a saint or savage of the fifth
century, displayed his religious madness in Syria; the rival
cities of Apamea and Emesa disputed his relics, a stately church
was erected on his tomb, and six hundred of his disciples united
their solitary cells on the banks of the Orontes. In the
controversies of the incarnation they nicely threaded the
orthodox line between the sects of Nestorians and Eutyches; but
the unfortunate question of one willor
operation in the two natures of Christ, was generated by their
curious leisure. Their proselyte, the emperor Heraclius, was
rejected as a Maronite from the walls of Emesa, he found a refuge
in the monastery of his brethren; and their theological lessons
were repaid with the gift a spacious and wealthy domain. The name
and doctrine of this venerable school were propagated among the
Greeks and Syrians, and their zeal is expressed by Macarius,
patriarch of Antioch, who declared before the synod of
Constantinople, that sooner than subscribe the two
wills of Christ, he would submit to be hewn
piecemeal and cast into the sea. A similar or a less cruel mode
of persecution soon converted the unresisting subjects of the
plain, while the glorious title of
Mardaites, or rebels, was bravely
maintained by the hardy natives of Mount Libanus. John Maron, one
of the most learned and popular of the monks, assumed the
character of patriarch of Antioch; his nephew, Abraham, at the
head of the Maronites, defended their civil and religious freedom
against the tyrants of the East. The son of the orthodox
Constantine pursued with pious hatred a people of soldiers, who
might have stood the bulwark of his empire against the common
foes of Christ and of Rome. An army of Greeks invaded Syria; the
monastery of St. Maron was destroyed with fire; the bravest
chieftains were betrayed and murdered, and twelve thousand of
their followers were transplanted to the distant frontiers of
Armenia and Thrace. Yet the humble nation of the Maronites had
survived the empire of Constantinople, and they still enjoy,
under their Turkish masters, a free religion and a mitigated
servitude. Their domestic governors are chosen among the ancient
nobility: the patriarch, in his monastery of Canobin, still
fancies himself on the throne of Antioch: nine bishops compose
his synod, and one hundred and fifty priests, who retain the
liberty of marriage, are intrusted with the care of one hundred
thousand souls. Their country extends from the ridge of Mount
Libanus to the shores of Tripoli; and the gradual descent
affords, in a narrow space, each variety of soil and climate,
from the Holy Cedars, erect under the weight of snow, to the
vine, the mulberry, and the olive-trees of the fruitful valley.
In the twelfth century, the Maronites, abjuring the Monothelite
error were reconciled to the Latin churches of Antioch and Rome,
and the same alliance has been frequently renewed by the ambition
of the popes and the distress of the Syrians. But it may
reasonably be questioned, whether their union has ever been
perfect or sincere; and the learned Maronites of the college of
Rome have vainly labored to absolve their ancestors from the
guilt of heresy and schism.
IV. Since the age of Constantine, the Armenians had signalized
their attachment to the religion and empire of the Christians. *
The disorders of their country, and their ignorance of the Greek
tongue, prevented their clergy from assisting at the synod of
Chalcedon, and they floated eighty-four years in a state of
indifference or suspense, till their vacant faith was finally
occupied by the missionaries of Julian of Halicarnassus, who in
Egypt, their common exile, had been vanquished by the arguments
or the influence of his rival Severus, the Monophysite patriarch
of Antioch. The Armenians alone are the pure disciples of
Eutyches, an unfortunate parent, who has been renounced by the
greater part of his spiritual progeny. They alone persevere in
the opinion, that the manhood of Christ was created, or existed
without creation, of a divine and incorruptible substance. Their
adversaries reproach them with the adoration of a phantom; and
they retort the accusation, by deriding or execrating the
blasphemy of the Jacobites, who impute to the Godhead the vile
infirmities of the flesh, even the natural effects of nutrition
and digestion. The religion of Armenia could not derive much
glory from the learning or the power of its inhabitants. The
royalty expired with the origin of their schism; and their
Christian kings, who arose and fell in the thirteenth century on
the confines of Cilicia, were the clients of the Latins and the
vassals of the Turkish sultan of Iconium. The helpless nation has
seldom been permitted to enjoy the tranquillity of servitude.
From the earliest period to the present hour, Armenia has been
the theatre of perpetual war: the lands between Tauris and Erivan
were dispeopled by the cruel policy of the Sophis; and myriads of
Christian families were transplanted, to perish or to propagate
in the distant provinces of Persia. Under the rod of oppression,
the zeal of the Armenians is fervent and intrepid; they have
often preferred the crown of martyrdom to the white turban of
Mahomet; they devoutly hate the error and idolatry of the Greeks;
and their transient union with the Latins is not less devoid of
truth, than the thousand bishops, whom their patriarch offered at
the feet of the Roman pontiff. The
catholic, or patriarch, of the
Armenians resides in the monastery of Ekmiasin, three leagues
from Erivan. Forty-seven archbishops, each of whom may claim the
obedience of four or five suffragans, are consecrated by his
hand; but the far greater part are only titular prelates, who
dignify with their presence and service the simplicity of his
court. As soon as they have performed the liturgy, they cultivate
the garden; and our bishops will hear with surprise, that the
austerity of their life increases in just proportion to the
elevation of their rank. In the fourscore thousand towns or
villages of his spiritual empire, the patriarch receives a small
and voluntary tax from each person above the age of fifteen; but
the annual amount of six hundred thousand crowns is insufficient
to supply the incessant demands of charity and tribute. Since the
beginning of the last century, the Armenians have obtained a
large and lucrative share of the commerce of the East: in their
return from Europe, the caravan usually halts in the neighborhood
of Erivan, the altars are enriched with the fruits of their
patient industry; and the faith of Eutyches is preached in their
recent congregations of Barbary and Poland.
V. In the rest of the Roman empire, the despotism of the
prince might eradicate or silence the sectaries of an obnoxious
creed. But the stubborn temper of the Egyptians maintained their
opposition to the synod of Chalcedon, and the policy of Justinian
condescended to expect and to seize the opportunity of discord.
The Monophysite church of Alexandria was torn by the disputes of
the corruptibles and
incorruptibles, and on the death of the
patriarch, the two factions upheld their respective candidates.
Gaian was the disciple of Julian, Theodosius had been the pupil
of Severus: the claims of the former were supported by the
consent of the monks and senators, the city and the province; the
latter depended on the priority of his ordination, the favor of
the empress Theodora, and the arms of the eunuch Narses, which
might have been used in more honorable warfare. The exile of the
popular candidate to Carthage and Sardinia inflamed the ferment
of Alexandria; and after a schism of one hundred and seventy
years, the Gaianites still revered the
memory and doctrine of their founder. The strength of numbers and
of discipline was tried in a desperate and bloody conflict; the
streets were filled with the dead bodies of citizens and
soldiers; the pious women, ascending the roofs of their houses,
showered down every sharp or ponderous utensil on the heads of
the enemy; and the final victory of Narses was owing to the
flames, with which he wasted the third capital of the Roman
world. But the lieutenant of Justinian had not conquered in the
cause of a heretic; Theodosius himself was speedily, though
gently, removed; and Paul of Tanis, an orthodox monk, was raised
to the throne of Athanasius. The powers of government were
strained in his support; he might appoint or displace the dukes
and tribunes of Egypt; the allowance of bread, which Diocletian
had granted, was suppressed, the churches were shut, and a nation
of schismatics was deprived at once of their spiritual and carnal
food. In his turn, the tyrant was excommunicated by the zeal and
revenge of the people: and none except his servile Melchites
would salute him as a man, a Christian, or a bishop. Yet such is
the blindness of ambition, that, when Paul was expelled on a
charge of murder, he solicited, with a bribe of seven hundred
pounds of gold, his restoration to the same station of hatred and
ignominy. His successor Apollinaris entered the hostile city in
military array, alike qualified for prayer or for battle. His
troops, under arms, were distributed through the streets; the
gates of the cathedral were guarded, and a chosen band was
stationed in the choir, to defend the person of their chief. He
stood erect on his throne, and, throwing aside the upper garment
of a warrior, suddenly appeared before the eyes of the multitude
in the robes of patriarch of Alexandria. Astonishment held them
mute; but no sooner had Apollinaris begun to read the tome of St.
Leo, than a volley of curses, and invectives, and stones,
assaulted the odious minister of the emperor and the synod. A
charge was instantly sounded by the successor of the apostles;
the soldiers waded to their knees in blood; and two hundred
thousand Christians are said to have fallen by the sword: an
incredible account, even if it be extended from the slaughter of
a day to the eighteen years of the reign of Apollinaris. Two
succeeding patriarchs, Eulogius and John, labored in the
conversion of heretics, with arms and arguments more worthy of
their evangelical profession. The theological knowledge of
Eulogius was displayed in many a volume, which magnified the
errors of Eutyches and Severus, and attempted to reconcile the
ambiguous language of St. Cyril with the orthodox creed of Pope
Leo and the fathers of Chalcedon. The bounteous alms of John the
eleemosynary were dictated by superstition, or benevolence, or
policy. Seven thousand five hundred poor were maintained at his
expense; on his accession he found eight thousand pounds of gold
in the treasury of the church; he collected ten thousand from the
liberality of the faithful; yet the primate could boast in his
testament, that he left behind him no more than the third part of
the smallest of the silver coins. The churches of Alexandria were
delivered to the Catholics, the religion of the Monophysites was
proscribed in Egypt, and a law was revived which excluded the
natives from the honors and emoluments of the state.
Chapter XLVII: Ecclesiastical Discord. -- Part
V.
A more important conquest still remained, of the patriarch,
the oracle and leader of the Egyptian church. Theodosius had
resisted the threats and promises of Justinian with the spirit of
an apostle or an enthusiast. "Such," replied the patriarch, "were
the offers of the tempter when he showed the kingdoms of the
earth. But my soul is far dearer to me than life or dominion. The
churches aaaain the hands of a prince who can kill the body; but
my conscience is my own; and in exile, poverty, or chains, I will
steadfastly adhere to the faith of my holy predecessors,
Athanasius, Cyril, and Dioscorus. Anathema to the tome of Leo and
the synod of Chalcedon! Anathema to all who embrace their creed!
Anathema to them now and forevermore! Naked came I out of my
mother's womb, naked shall I descend into the grave. Let those
who love God follow me and seek their salvation." After
comforting his brethren, he embarked for Constantinople, and
sustained, in six successive interviews, the almost irresistible
weight of the royal presence. His opinions were favorably
entertained in the palace and the city; the influence of Theodora
assured him a safe conduct and honorable dismission; and he ended
his days, though not on the throne, yet in the bosom, of his
native country. On the news of his death, Apollinaris indecently
feasted the nobles and the clergy; but his joy was checked by the
intelligence of a new election; and while he enjoyed the wealth
of Alexandria, his rivals reigned in the monasteries of Thebais,
and were maintained by the voluntary oblations of the people. A
perpetual succession of patriarchs aaose from the ashes of
Theodosius; and the Monophysite churches of Syria and Egypt were
united by the name of Jacobites and the communion of the faith.
But the same faith, which has been confined to a narrow sect of
the Syrians, was diffused over the mass of the Egyptian or Coptic
nation; who, almost unanimously, rejected the decrees of the
synod of Chalcedon. A thousand years were now elapsed since Egypt
had ceased to be a kingdom, since the conquerors of Asia and
Europe had trampled on the ready necks of a people, whose ancient
wisdom and power ascend beyond the records of history. The
conflict of zeal and persecution rekindled some sparks of their
national spirit. They abjured, with a foreign heresy, the manners
and language of the Greeks: every Melchite, in their eyes, was a
stranger, every Jacobite a citizen; the alliance of marriage, the
offices of humanity, were condemned as a deadly sin the natives
renounced all allegiance to the emperor; and his orders, at a
distance from Alexandria, were obeyed only under the pressure of
military force. A generous effort might have redeemed the
religion and liberty of Egypt, and her six hundred monasteries
might have poured forth their myriads of holy warriors, for whom
death should have no terrors, since life had no comfort or
delight. But experience has proved the distinction of active and
passive courage; the fanatic who endures without a groan the
torture of the rack or the stake, would tremble and fly before
the face of an armed enemy. The pusillanimous temper of the
Egyptians could only hope for a change of masters; the arms of
Chosroes depopulated the land, yet under his reign the Jacobites
enjoyed a short and precarious respite. The victory of Heraclius
renewed and aggravated the persecution, and the patriarch again
escaped from Alexandria to the desert. In his flight, Benjamin
was encouraged by a voice, which bade him expect, at the end of
ten years, the aid of a foreign nation, marked, like the
Egyptians themselves, with the ancient rite of circumcision. The
character of these deliverers, and the nature of the deliverance,
will be hereafter explained; and I shall step over the interval
of eleven centuries to observe the present misery of the
Jacobites of Egypt. The populous city of Cairo affords a
residence, or rather a shelter, for their indigent patriarch, and
a remnant of ten bishops; forty monasteries have survived the
inroads of the Arabs; and the progress of servitude and apostasy
has reduced the Coptic nation to the despicable number of
twenty-five or thirty thousand families; a race of illiterate
beggars, whose only consolation is derived from the superior
wretchedness of the Greek patriarch and his diminutive
congregation.
VI. The Coptic patriarch, a rebel to the Cæsars, or a
slave to the khalifs, still gloried in the filial obedience of
the kings of Nubia and Æthiopia. He repaid their homage by
magnifying their greatness; and it was boldly asserted that they
could bring into the field a hundred thousand horse, with an
equal number of camels; that their hand could pour out or
restrain the waters of the Nile; and the peace and plenty of
Egypt was obtained, even in this world, by the intercession of
the patriarch. In exile at Constantinople, Theodosius recommended
to his patroness the conversion of the black nations of Nubia,
from the tropic of Cancer to the confines of Abyssinia. Her
design was suspected and emulated by the more orthodox emperor.
The rival missionaries, a Melchite and a Jacobite, embarked at
the same time; but the empress, from a motive of love or fear,
was more effectually obeyed; and the Catholic priest was detained
by the president of Thebais, while the king of Nubia and his
court were hastily baptized in the faith of Dioscorus. The tardy
envoy of Justinian was received and dismissed with honor: but
when he accused the heresy and treason of the Egyptians, the
negro convert was instructed to reply that he would never abandon
his brethren, the true believers, to the persecuting ministers of
the synod of Chalcedon. During several ages, the bishops of Nubia
were named and consecrated by the Jacobite patriarch of
Alexandria: as late as the twelfth century, Christianity
prevailed; and some rites, some ruins, are still visible in the
savage towns of Sennaar and Dongola. But the Nubians at length
executed their threats of returning to the worship of idols; the
climate required the indulgence of polygamy, and they have
finally preferred the triumph of the Koran to the abasement of
the Cross. A metaphysical religion may appear too refined for the
capacity of the negro race: yet a black or a parrot might be
taught to repeat the words of the
Chalcedonian or Monophysite creed.
Christianity was more deeply rooted in the Abyssinian empire;
and, although the correspondence has been sometimes interrupted
above seventy or a hundred years, the mother-church of Alexandria
retains her colony in a state of perpetual pupilage. Seven
bishops once composed the Æthiopic synod: had their number
amounted to ten, they might have elected an independent primate;
and one of their kings was ambitious of promoting his brother to
the ecclesiastical throne. But the event was foreseen, the
increase was denied: the episcopal office has been gradually
confined to the abuna, the head and
author of the Abyssinian priesthood; the patriarch supplies each
vacancy with an Egyptian monk; and the character of a stranger
appears more venerable in the eyes of the people, less dangerous
in those of the monarch. In the sixth century, when the schism of
Egypt was confirmed, the rival chiefs, with their patrons,
Justinian and Theodora, strove to outstrip each other in the
conquest of a remote and independent province. The industry of
the empress was again victorious, and the pious Theodora has
established in that sequestered church the faith and discipline
of the Jacobites. Encompassed on all sides by the enemies of
their religion, the Æthiopians slept near a thousand years,
forgetful of the world, by whom they were forgotten. They were
awakened by the Portuguese, who, turning the southern promontory
of Africa, appeared in India and the Red Sea, as if they had
descended through the air from a distant planet. In the first
moments of their interview, the subjects of Rome and Alexandria
observed the resemblance, rather than the difference, of their
faith; and each nation expected the most important benefits from
an alliance with their Christian brethren. In their lonely
situation, the Æthiopians had almost relapsed into the
savage life. Their vessels, which had traded to Ceylon, scarcely
presumed to navigate the rivers of Africa; the ruins of Axume
were deserted, the nation was scattered in villages, and the
emperor, a pompous name, was content, both in peace and war, with
the immovable residence of a camp. Conscious of their own
indigence, the Abyssinians had formed the rational project of
importing the arts and ingenuity of Europe; and their ambassadors
at Rome and Lisbon were instructed to solicit a colony of smiths,
carpenters, tilers, masons, printers, surgeons, and physicians,
for the use of their country. But the public danger soon called
for the instant and effectual aid of arms and soldiers, to defend
an unwarlike people from the Barbarians who ravaged the inland
country and the Turks and Arabs who advanced from the sea-coast
in more formidable array. Æthiopia was saved by four
hundred and fifty Portuguese, who displayed in the field the
native valor of Europeans, and the artificial power of the musket
and cannon. In a moment of terror, the emperor had promised to
reconcile himself and his subjects to the Catholic faith; a Latin
patriarch represented the supremacy of the pope: the empire,
enlarged in a tenfold proportion, was supposed to contain more
gold than the mines of America; and the wildest hopes of avarice
and zeal were built on the willing submission of the Christians
of Africa.
But the vows which pain had extorted were forsworn on the
return of health. The Abyssinians still adhered with unshaken
constancy to the Monophysite faith; their languid belief was
inflamed by the exercise of dispute; they branded the Latins with
the names of Arians and Nestorians, and imputed the adoration of
four gods to those who separated the
two natures of Christ. Fremona, a place of worship, or rather of
exile, was assigned to the Jesuit missionaries. Their skill in
the liberal and mechanic arts, their theological learning, and
the decency of their manners, inspired a barren esteem; but they
were not endowed with the gift of miracles, and they vainly
solicited a reënforcement of European troops. The patience
and dexterity of forty years at length obtained a more favorable
audience, and two emperors of Abyssinia were persuaded that Rome
could insure the temporal and everlasting happiness of her
votaries. The first of these royal converts lost his crown and
his life; and the rebel army was sanctified by the
abuna, who hurled an anathema at the
apostate, and absolved his subjects from their oath of fidelity.
The fate of Zadenghel was revenged by the courage and fortune of
Susneus, who ascended the throne under the name of Segued, and
more vigorously prosecuted the pious enterprise of his kinsman.
After the amusement of some unequal combats between the Jesuits
and his illiterate priests, the emperor declared himself a
proselyte to the synod of Chalcedon, presuming that his clergy
and people would embrace without delay the religion of their
prince. The liberty of choice was succeeded by a law, which
imposed, under pain of death, the belief of the two natures of
Christ: the Abyssinians were enjoined to work and to play on the
Sabbath; and Segued, in the face of Europe and Africa, renounced
his connection with the Alexandrian church. A Jesuit, Alphonso
Mendez, the Catholic patriarch of Æthiopia, accepted, in
the name of Urban VIII., the homage and abjuration of the
penitent. "I confess," said the emperor on his knees, "I confess
that the pope is the vicar of Christ, the successor of St. Peter,
and the sovereign of the world. To him I swear true obedience,
and at his feet I offer my person and kingdom." A similar oath
was repeated by his son, his brother, the clergy, the nobles, and
even the ladies of the court: the Latin patriarch was invested
with honors and wealth; and his missionaries erected their
churches or citadels in the most convenient stations of the
empire. The Jesuits themselves deplore the fatal indiscretion of
their chief, who forgot the mildness of the gospel and the policy
of his order, to introduce with hasty violence the liturgy of
Rome and the inquisition of Portugal. He condemned the ancient
practice of circumcision, which health, rather than superstition,
had first invented in the climate of Æthiopia. A new
baptism, a new ordination, was inflicted on the natives; and they
trembled with horror when the most holy of the dead were torn
from their graves, when the most illustrious of the living were
excommunicated by a foreign priest. In the defense of their
religion and liberty, the Abyssinians rose in arms, with
desperate but unsuccessful zeal. Five rebellions were
extinguished in the blood of the insurgents: two abunas were
slain in battle, whole legions were slaughtered in the field, or
suffocated in their caverns; and neither merit, nor rank, nor
sex, could save from an ignominious death the enemies of Rome.
But the victorious monarch was finally subdued by the constancy
of the nation, of his mother, of his son, and of his most
faithful friends. Segued listened to the voice of pity, of
reason, perhaps of fear: and his edict of liberty of conscience
instantly revealed the tyranny and weakness of the Jesuits. On
the death of his father, Basilides expelled the Latin patriarch,
and restored to the wishes of the nation the faith and the
discipline of Egypt. The Monophysite churches resounded with a
song of triumph, "that the sheep of Æthiopia were now
delivered from the hyænas of the West;" and the gates of
that solitary realm were forever shut against the arts, the
science, and the fanaticism of Europe.
Chapter XLVIII: Succession And Characters Of The Greek
Emperors.
Part I.
Plan Of The Two Last Volumes. -- Succession And Characters Of
The Greek Emperors Of Constantinople, From The Time Of Heraclius
To The Latin Conquest.
I have now deduced from Trajan to Constantine, from
Constantine to Heraclius, the regular series of the Roman
emperors; and faithfully exposed the prosperous and adverse
fortunes of their reigns. Five centuries of the decline and fall
of the empire have already elapsed; but a period of more than
eight hundred years still separates me from the term of my
labors, the taking of Constantinople by the Turks. Should I
persevere in the same course, should I observe the same measure,
a prolix and slender thread would be spun through many a volume,
nor would the patient reader find an adequate reward of
instruction or amusement. At every step, as we sink deeper in the
decline and fall of the Eastern empire, the annals of each
succeeding reign would impose a more ungrateful and melancholy
task. These annals must continue to repeat a tedious and uniform
tale of weakness and misery; the natural connection of causes and
events would be broken by frequent and hasty transitions, and a
minute accumulation of circumstances must destroy the light and
effect of those general pictures which compose the use and
ornament of a remote history. From the time of Heraclius, the
Byzantine theatre is contracted and darkened: the line of empire,
which had been defined by the laws of Justinian and the arms of
Belisarius, recedes on all sides from our view; the Roman name,
the proper subject of our inquiries, is reduced to a narrow
corner of Europe, to the lonely suburbs of Constantinople; and
the fate of the Greek empire has been compared to that of the
Rhine, which loses itself in the sands, before its waters can
mingle with the ocean. The scale of dominion is diminished to our
view by the distance of time and place; nor is the loss of
external splendor compensated by the nobler gifts of virtue and
genius. In the last moments of her decay, Constantinople was
doubtless more opulent and populous than Athens at her most
flourishing æra, when a scanty sum of six thousand talents,
or twelve hundred thousand pounds sterling was possessed by
twenty-one thousand male citizens of an adult age. But each of
these citizens was a freeman, who dared to assert the liberty of
his thoughts, words, and actions, whose person and property were
guarded by equal law; and who exercised his independent vote in
the government of the republic. Their numbers seem to be
multiplied by the strong and various discriminations of
character; under the shield of freedom, on the wings of emulation
and vanity, each Athenian aspired to the level of the national
dignity; from this commanding eminence, some chosen spirits
soared beyond the reach of a vulgar eye; and the chances of
superior merit in a great and populous kingdom, as they are
proved by experience, would excuse the computation of imaginary
millions. The territories of Athens, Sparta, and their allies, do
not exceed a moderate province of France or England; but after
the trophies of Salamis and Platea, they expand in our fancy to
the gigantic size of Asia, which had been trampled under the feet
of the victorious Greeks. But the subjects of the Byzantine
empire, who assume and dishonor the names both of Greeks and
Romans, present a dead uniformity of abject vices, which are
neither softened by the weakness of humanity, nor animated by the
vigor of memorable crimes. The freemen of antiquity might repeat
with generous enthusiasm the sentence of Homer, "that on the
first day of his servitude, the captive is deprived of one half
of his manly virtue." But the poet had only seen the effects of
civil or domestic slavery, nor could he foretell that the second
moiety of manhood must be annihilated by the spiritual despotism
which shackles not only the actions, but even the thoughts, of
the prostrate votary. By this double yoke, the Greeks were
oppressed under the successors of Heraclius; the tyrant, a law of
eternal justice, was degraded by the vices of his subjects; and
on the throne, in the camp, in the schools, we search, perhaps
with fruitless diligence, the names and characters that may
deserve to be rescued from oblivion. Nor are the defects of the
subject compensated by the skill and variety of the painters. Of
a space of eight hundred years, the four first centuries are
overspread with a cloud interrupted by some faint and broken rays
of historic light: in the lives of the emperors, from Maurice to
Alexius, Basil the Macedonian has alone been the theme of a
separate work; and the absence, or loss, or imperfection of
contemporary evidence, must be poorly supplied by the doubtful
authority of more recent compilers. The four last centuries are
exempt from the reproach of penury; and with the Comnenian
family, the historic muse of Constantinople again revives, but
her apparel is gaudy, her motions are without elegance or grace.
A succession of priests, or courtiers, treads in each other's
footsteps in the same path of servitude and superstition: their
views are narrow, their judgment is feeble or corrupt; and we
close the volume of copious barrenness, still ignorant of the
causes of events, the characters of the actors, and the manners
of the times which they celebrate or deplore. The observation
which has been applied to a man, may be extended to a whole
people, that the energy of the sword is communicated to the pen;
and it will be found by experience, that the tone of history will
rise or fall with the spirit of the age.
From these considerations, I should have abandoned without
regret the Greek slaves and their servile historians, had I not
reflected that the fate of the Byzantine monarchy is
passively connected with the most
splendid and important revolutions which have changed the state
of the world. The space of the lost provinces was immediately
replenished with new colonies and rising kingdoms: the active
virtues of peace and war deserted from the vanquished to the
victorious nations; and it is in their origin and conquests, in
their religion and government, that we must explore the causes
and effects of the decline and fall of the Eastern empire. Nor
will this scope of narrative, the riches and variety of these
materials, be incompatible with the unity of design and
composition. As, in his daily prayers, the Mussulman of Fez or
Delhi still turns his face towards the temple of Mecca, the
historian's eye shall be always fixed on the city of
Constantinople. The excursive line may embrace the wilds of
Arabia and Tartary, but the circle will be ultimately reduced to
the decreasing limit of the Roman monarchy.
On this principle I shall now establish the plan of the last
two volumes of the present work. The first chapter will contain,
in a regular series, the emperors who reigned at Constantinople
during a period of six hundred years, from the days of Heraclius
to the Latin conquest; a rapid abstract, which may be supported
by a general appeal to the order and
text of the original historians. In this introduction, I shall
confine myself to the revolutions of the throne, the succession
of families, the personal characters of the Greek princes, the
mode of their life and death, the maxims and influence of their
domestic government, and the tendency of their reign to
accelerate or suspend the downfall of the Eastern empire. Such a
chronological review will serve to illustrate the various
argument of the subsequent chapters; and each circumstance of the
eventful story of the Barbarians will adapt itself in a proper
place to the Byzantine annals. The internal state of the empire,
and the dangerous heresy of the Paulicians, which shook the East
and enlightened the West, will be the subject of two separate
chapters; but these inquiries must be postponed till our further
progress shall have opened the view of the world in the ninth and
tenth centuries of the Christian area. After this foundation of
Byzantine history, the following nations will pass before our
eyes, and each will occupy the space to which it may be entitled
by greatness or merit, or the degree of connection with the Roman
world and the present age. I. The Franks; a general appellation
which includes all the Barbarians of France, Italy, and Germany,
who were united by the sword and sceptre of Charlemagne. The
persecution of images and their votaries separated Rome and Italy
from the Byzantine throne, and prepared the restoration of the
Roman empire in the West. II. The Arabs or Saracens. Three ample
chapters will be devoted to this curious and interesting object.
In the first, after a picture of the country and its inhabitants,
I shall investigate the character of Mahomet; the character,
religion, and success of the prophet. In the second, I shall lead
the Arabs to the conquest of Syria, Egypt, and Africa, the
provinces of the Roman empire; nor can I check their victorious
career till they have overthrown the monarchies of Persia and
Spain. In the third, I shall inquire how Constantinople and
Europe were saved by the luxury and arts, the division and decay,
of the empire of the caliphs. A single chapter will include, III.
The Bulgarians, IV. Hungarians, and, V. Russians, who assaulted
by sea or by land the provinces and the capital; but the last of
these, so important in their present greatness, will excite some
curiosity in their origin and infancy. VI. The Normans; or rather
the private adventurers of that warlike people, who founded a
powerful kingdom in Apulia and Sicily, shook the throne of
Constantinople, displayed the trophies of chivalry, and almost
realized the wonders of romance. VII. The Latins; the subjects of
the pope, the nations of the West, who enlisted under the banner
of the cross for the recovery or relief of the holy sepulchre.
The Greek emperors were terrified and preserved by the myriads of
pilgrims who marched to Jerusalem with Godfrey of Bouillon and
the peers of Christendom. The second and third crusades trod in
the footsteps of the first: Asia and Europe were mingled in a
sacred war of two hundred years; and the Christian powers were
bravely resisted, and finally expelled by Saladin and the
Mamelukes of Egypt. In these memorable crusades, a fleet and army
of French and Venetians were diverted from Syria to the Thracian
Bosphorus: they assaulted the capital, they subverted the Greek
monarchy: and a dynasty of Latin princes was seated near
threescore years on the throne of Constantine. VIII. The Greeks
themselves, during this period of captivity and exile, must be
considered as a foreign nation; the enemies, and again the
sovereigns of Constantinople. Misfortune had rekindled a spark of
national virtue; and the Imperial series may be continued with
some dignity from their restoration to the Turkish conquest. IX.
The Moguls and Tartars. By the arms of Zingis and his
descendants, the globe was shaken from China to Poland and
Greece: the sultans were overthrown: the caliphs fell, and the
Cæsars trembled on their throne. The victories of Timour
suspended above fifty years the final ruin of the Byzantine
empire. X. I have already noticed the first appearance of the
Turks; and the names of the fathers, of
Seljuk and
Othman, discriminate the two successive
dynasties of the nation, which emerged in the eleventh century
from the Scythian wilderness. The former established a splendid
and potent kingdom from the banks of the Oxus to Antioch and
Nice; and the first crusade was provoked by the violation of
Jerusalem and the danger of Constantinople. From an humble
origin, the Ottomans arose, the scourge
and terror of Christendom. Constantinople was besieged and taken
by Mahomet II., and his triumph annihilates the remnant, the
image, the title, of the Roman empire in the East. The schism of
the Greeks will be connected with their last calamities, and the
restoration of learning in the Western world. I shall return from
the captivity of the new, to the ruins of ancient Rome; and the
venerable name, the interesting theme, will shed a ray of glory
on the conclusion of my labors.
The emperor Heraclius had punished a tyrant and ascended his
throne; and the memory of his reign is perpetuated by the
transient conquest, and irreparable loss, of the Eastern
provinces. After the death of Eudocia, his first wife, he
disobeyed the patriarch, and violated the laws, by his second
marriage with his niece Martina; and the superstition of the
Greeks beheld the judgment of Heaven in the diseases of the
father and the deformity of his offspring. But the opinion of an
illegitimate birth is sufficient to distract the choice, and
loosen the obedience, of the people: the ambition of Martina was
quickened by maternal love, and perhaps by the envy of a
step-mother; and the aged husband was too feeble to withstand the
arts of conjugal allurements. Constantine, his eldest son,
enjoyed in a mature age the title of Augustus; but the weakness
of his constitution required a colleague and a guardian, and he
yielded with secret reluctance to the partition of the empire.
The senate was summoned to the palace to ratify or attest the
association of Heracleonas, the son of Martina: the imposition of
the diadem was consecrated by the prayer and blessing of the
patriarch; the senators and patricians adored the majesty of the
great emperor and the partners of his reign; and as soon as the
doors were thrown open, they were hailed by the tumultuary but
important voice of the soldiers. After an interval of five
months, the pompous ceremonies which formed the essence of the
Byzantine state were celebrated in the cathedral and the
hippodrome; the concord of the royal brothers was affectedly
displayed by the younger leaning on the arm of the elder; and the
name of Martina was mingled in the reluctant or venal
acclamations of the people. Heraclius survived this association
about two years: his last testimony declared his two sons the
equal heirs of the Eastern empire, and commanded them to honor
his widow Martina as their mother and their sovereign.
When Martina first appeared on the throne with the name and
attributes of royalty, she was checked by a firm, though
respectful, opposition; and the dying embers of freedom were
kindled by the breath of superstitious prejudice. "We reverence,"
exclaimed the voice of a citizen, "we reverence the mother of our
princes; but to those princes alone our obedience is due; and
Constantine, the elder emperor, is of an age to sustain, in his
own hands, the weight of the sceptre. Your sex is excluded by
nature from the toils of government. How could you combat, how
could you answer, the Barbarians, who, with hostile or friendly
intentions, may approach the royal city? May Heaven avert from
the Roman republic this national disgrace, which would provoke
the patience of the slaves of Persia!" Martina descended from the
throne with indignation, and sought a refuge in the female
apartment of the palace. The reign of Constantine the Third
lasted only one hundred and three days: he expired in the
thirtieth year of his age, and, although his life had been a long
malady, a belief was entertained that poison had been the means,
and his cruel step-mother the author, of his untimely fate.
Martina reaped indeed the harvest of his death, and assumed the
government in the name of the surviving emperor; but the
incestuous widow of Heraclius was universally abhorred; the
jealousy of the people was awakened, and the two orphans whom
Constantine had left became the objects of the public care. It
was in vain that the son of Martina, who was no more than fifteen
years of age, was taught to declare himself the guardian of his
nephews, one of whom he had presented at the baptismal font: it
was in vain that he swore on the wood of the true cross, to
defend them against all their enemies. On his death-bed, the late
emperor had despatched a trusty servant to arm the troops and
provinces of the East in the defence of his helpless children:
the eloquence and liberality of Valentin had been successful, and
from his camp of Chalcedon, he boldly demanded the punishment of
the assassins, and the restoration of the lawful heir. The
license of the soldiers, who devoured the grapes and drank the
wine of their Asiatic vineyards, provoked the citizens of
Constantinople against the domestic authors of their calamities,
and the dome of St. Sophia reëchoed, not with prayers and
hymns, but with the clamors and imprecations of an enraged
multitude. At their imperious command, Heracleonas appeared in
the pulpit with the eldest of the royal orphans; Constans alone
was saluted as emperor of the Romans, and a crown of gold, which
had been taken from the tomb of Heraclius, was placed on his
head, with the solemn benediction of the patriarch. But in the
tumult of joy and indignation, the church was pillaged, the
sanctuary was polluted by a promiscuous crowd of Jews and
Barbarians; and the Monothelite Pyrrhus, a creature of the
empress, after dropping a protestation on the altar, escaped by a
prudent flight from the zeal of the Catholics. A more serious and
bloody task was reserved for the senate, who derived a temporary
strength from the consent of the soldiers and people. The spirit
of Roman freedom revived the ancient and awful examples of the
judgment of tyrants, and the Imperial culprits were deposed and
condemned as the authors of the death of Constantine. But the
severity of the conscript fathers was stained by the
indiscriminate punishment of the innocent and the guilty: Martina
and Heracleonas were sentenced to the amputation, the former of
her tongue, the latter of his nose; and after this cruel
execution, they consumed the remainder of their days in exile and
oblivion. The Greeks who were capable of reflection might find
some consolation for their servitude, by observing the abuse of
power when it was lodged for a moment in the hands of an
aristocracy.
We shall imagine ourselves transported five hundred years
backwards to the age of the Antonines, if we listen to the
oration which Constans II. pronounced in the twelfth year of his
age before the Byzantine senate. After returning his thanks for
the just punishment of the assassins, who had intercepted the
fairest hopes of his father's reign, "By the divine Providence,"
said the young emperor, "and by your righteous decree, Martina
and her incestuous progeny have been cast headlong from the
throne. Your majesty and wisdom have prevented the Roman state
from degenerating into lawless tyranny. I therefore exhort and
beseech you to stand forth as the counsellors and judges of the
common safety." The senators were gratified by the respectful
address and liberal donative of their sovereign; but these
servile Greeks were unworthy and regardless of freedom; and in
his mind, the lesson of an hour was quickly erased by the
prejudices of the age and the habits of despotism. He retained
only a jealous fear lest the senate or people should one day
invade the right of primogeniture, and seat his brother
Theodosius on an equal throne. By the imposition of holy orders,
the grandson of Heraclius was disqualified for the purple; but
this ceremony, which seemed to profane the sacraments of the
church, was insufficient to appease the suspicions of the tyrant,
and the death of the deacon Theodosius could alone expiate the
crime of his royal birth. * His murder was avenged by the
imprecations of the people, and the assassin, in the fullness of
power, was driven from his capital into voluntary and perpetual
exile. Constans embarked for Greece and, as if he meant to retort
the abhorrence which he deserved he is said, from the Imperial
galley, to have spit against the walls of his native city. After
passing the winter at Athens, he sailed to Tarentum in Italy,
visited Rome, * and concluded a long pilgrimage of disgrace and
sacrilegious rapine, by fixing his residence at Syracuse. But if
Constans could fly from his people, he could not fly from
himself. The remorse of his conscience created a phantom who
pursued him by land and sea, by day and by night; and the
visionary Theodosius, presenting to his lips a cup of blood,
said, or seemed to say, "Drink, brother, drink;" a sure emblem of
the aggravation of his guilt, since he had received from the
hands of the deacon the mystic cup of the blood of Christ. Odious
to himself and to mankind, Constans perished by domestic, perhaps
by episcopal, treason, in the capital of Sicily. A servant who
waited in the bath, after pouring warm water on his head, struck
him violently with the vase. He fell, stunned by the blow, and
suffocated by the water; and his attendants, who wondered at the
tedious delay, beheld with indifference the corpse of their
lifeless emperor. The troops of Sicily invested with the purple
an obscure youth, whose inimitable beauty eluded, and it might
easily elude, the declining art of the painters and sculptors of
the age.
Constans had left in the Byzantine palace three sons, the
eldest of whom had been clothed in his infancy with the purple.
When the father summoned them to attend his person in Sicily,
these precious hostages were detained by the Greeks, and a firm
refusal informed him that they were the children of the state.
The news of his murder was conveyed with almost supernatural
speed from Syracuse to Constantinople; and Constantine, the
eldest of his sons, inherited his throne without being the heir
of the public hatred. His subjects contributed, with zeal and
alacrity, to chastise the guilt and presumption of a province
which had usurped the rights of the senate and people; the young
emperor sailed from the Hellespont with a powerful fleet; and the
legions of Rome and Carthage were assembled under his standard in
the harbor of Syracuse. The defeat of the Sicilian tyrant was
easy, his punishment just, and his beauteous head was exposed in
the hippodrome: but I cannot applaud the clemency of a prince,
who, among a crowd of victims, condemned the son of a patrician,
for deploring with some bitterness the execution of a virtuous
father. The youth was castrated: he survived the operation, and
the memory of this indecent cruelty is preserved by the elevation
of Germanus to the rank of a patriarch and saint. After pouring
this bloody libation on his father's tomb, Constantine returned
to his capital; and the growth of his young beard during the
Sicilian voyage was announced, by the familiar surname of
Pogonatus, to the Grecian world. But his reign, like that of his
predecessor, was stained with fraternal discord. On his two
brothers, Heraclius and Tiberius, he had bestowed the title of
Augustus; an empty title, for they continued to languish, without
trust or power, in the solitude of the palace. At their secret
instigation, the troops of the Anatolian
theme or province approached the city
on the Asiatic side, demanded for the royal brothers the
partition or exercise of sovereignty, and supported their
seditious claim by a theological argument. They were Christians,
(they cried,) and orthodox Catholics; the sincere votaries of the
holy and undivided Trinity. Since there are three equal persons
in heaven, it is reasonable there should be three equal persons
upon earth. The emperor invited these learned divines to a
friendly conference, in which they might propose their arguments
to the senate: they obeyed the summons, but the prospect of their
bodies hanging on the gibbet in the suburb of Galata reconciled
their companions to the unity of the reign of Constantine. He
pardoned his brothers, and their names were still pronounced in
the public acclamations: but on the repetition or suspicion of a
similar offence, the obnoxious princes were deprived of their
titles and noses, * in the presence of the Catholic bishops who
were assembled at Constantinople in the sixth general synod. In
the close of his life, Pogonatus was anxious only to establish
the right of primogeniture: the heir of his two sons, Justinian
and Heraclius, was offered on the shrine of St. Peter, as a
symbol of their spiritual adoption by the pope; but the elder was
alone exalted to the rank of Augustus, and the assurance of the
empire.
After the decease of his father, the inheritance of the Roman
world devolved to Justinian II.; and the name of a triumphant
lawgiver was dishonored by the vices of a boy, who imitated his
namesake only in the expensive luxury of building. His passions
were strong; his understanding was feeble; and he was intoxicated
with a foolish pride, that his birth had given him the command of
millions, of whom the smallest community would not have chosen
him for their local magistrate. His favorite ministers were two
beings the least susceptible of human sympathy, a eunuch and a
monk: to the one he abandoned the palace, to the other the
finances; the former corrected the emperor's mother with a
scourge, the latter suspended the insolvent tributaries, with
their heads downwards, over a slow and smoky fire. Since the days
of Commodus and Caracalla, the cruelty of the Roman princes had
most commonly been the effect of their fear; but Justinian, who
possessed some vigor of character, enjoyed the sufferings, and
braved the revenge, of his subjects, about ten years, till the
measure was full, of his crimes and of their patience. In a dark
dungeon, Leontius, a general of reputation, had groaned above
three years, with some of the noblest and most deserving of the
patricians: he was suddenly drawn forth to assume the government
of Greece; and this promotion of an injured man was a mark of the
contempt rather than of the confidence of his prince. As he was
followed to the port by the kind offices of his friends, Leontius
observed, with a sigh, that he was a victim adorned for
sacrifice, and that inevitable death would pursue his footsteps.
They ventured to reply, that glory and empire might be the
recompense of a generous resolution; that every order of men
abhorred the reign of a monster; and that the hands of two
hundred thousand patriots expected only the voice of a leader.
The night was chosen for their deliverance; and in the first
effort of the conspirators, the præfect was slain, and the
prisons were forced open: the emissaries of Leontius proclaimed
in every street, "Christians, to St. Sophia!" and the seasonable
text of the patriarch, "This is the day of the Lord!" was the
prelude of an inflammatory sermon. From the church the people
adjourned to the hippodrome: Justinian, in whose cause not a
sword had been drawn, was dragged before these tumultuary judges,
and their clamors demanded the instant death of the tyrant. But
Leontius, who was already clothed with the purple, cast an eye of
pity on the prostrate son of his own benefactor and of so many
emperors. The life of Justinian was spared; the amputation of his
nose, perhaps of his tongue, was imperfectly performed: the happy
flexibility of the Greek language could impose the name of
Rhinotmetus; and the mutilated tyrant was banished to
Chersonæ in Crim-Tartary, a lonely settlement, where corn,
wine, and oil, were imported as foreign luxuries.
On the edge of the Scythian wilderness, Justinian still
cherished the pride of his birth, and the hope of his
restoration. After three years' exile, he received the pleasing
intelligence that his injury was avenged by a second revolution,
and that Leontius in his turn had been dethroned and mutilated by
the rebel Apsimar, who assumed the more respectable name of
Tiberius. But the claim of lineal succession was still formidable
to a plebeian usurper; and his jealousy was stimulated by the
complaints and charges of the Chersonites, who beheld the vices
of the tyrant in the spirit of the exile. With a band of
followers, attached to his person by common hope or common
despair, Justinian fled from the inhospitable shore to the horde
of the Chozars, who pitched their tents between the Tanais and
Borysthenes. The khan entertained with pity and respect the royal
suppliant: Phanagoria, once an opulent city, on the Asiatic side
of the lake Motis, was assigned for his residence; and every
Roman prejudice was stifled in his marriage with the sister of
the Barbarian, who seems, however, from the name of Theodora, to
have received the sacrament of baptism. But the faithless Chozar
was soon tempted by the gold of Constantinople: and had not the
design been revealed by the conjugal love of Theodora, her
husband must have been assassinated or betrayed into the power of
his enemies. After strangling, with his own hands, the two
emissaries of the khan, Justinian sent back his wife to her
brother, and embarked on the Euxine in search of new and more
faithful allies. His vessel was assaulted by a violent tempest;
and one of his pious companions advised him to deserve the mercy
of God by a vow of general forgiveness, if he should be restored
to the throne. "Of forgiveness?" replied the intrepid tyrant:
"may I perish this instant -- may the Almighty whelm me in the
waves -- if I consent to spare a single head of my enemies!" He
survived this impious menace, sailed into the mouth of the
Danube, trusted his person in the royal village of the
Bulgarians, and purchased the aid of Terbelis, a pagan conqueror,
by the promise of his daughter and a fair partition of the
treasures of the empire. The Bulgarian kingdom extended to the
confines of Thrace; and the two princes besieged Constantinople
at the head of fifteen thousand horse. Apsimar was dismayed by
the sudden and hostile apparition of his rival whose head had
been promised by the Chozar, and of whose evasion he was yet
ignorant. After an absence of ten years, the crimes of Justinian
were faintly remembered, and the birth and misfortunes of their
hereditary sovereign excited the pity of the multitude, ever
discontented with the ruling powers; and by the active diligence
of his adherents, he was introduced into the city and palace of
Constantine.
Chapter XLVIII: Succession And Characters Of The
Greek Emperors. -- Part II.
In rewarding his allies, and recalling his wife, Justinian
displayed some sense of honor and gratitude; * and Terbelis
retired, after sweeping away a heap of gold coin, which he
measured with his Scythian whip. But never was vow more
religiously performed than the sacred oath of revenge which he
had sworn amidst the storms of the Euxine. The two usurpers (for
I must reserve the name of tyrant for the conqueror) were dragged
into the hippodrome, the one from his prison, the other from his
palace. Before their execution, Leontius and Apsimar were cast
prostrate in chains beneath the throne of the emperor; and
Justinian, planting a foot on each of their necks, contemplated
above an hour the chariot-race, while the inconstant people
shouted, in the words of the Psalmist, "Thou shalt trample on the
asp and basilisk, and on the lion and dragon shalt thou set thy
foot!" The universal defection which he had once experienced
might provoke him to repeat the wish of Caligula, that the Roman
people had but one head. Yet I shall presume to observe, that
such a wish is unworthy of an ingenious tyrant, since his revenge
and cruelty would have been extinguished by a single blow,
instead of the slow variety of tortures which Justinian inflicted
on the victims of his anger. His pleasures were inexhaustible:
neither private virtue nor public service could expiate the guilt
of active, or even passive, obedience to an established
government; and, during the six years of his new reign, he
considered the axe, the cord, and the rack, as the only
instruments of royalty. But his most implacable hatred was
pointed against the Chersonites, who had insulted his exile and
violated the laws of hospitality. Their remote situation afforded
some means of defence, or at least of escape; and a grievous tax
was imposed on Constantinople, to supply the preparations of a
fleet and army. "All are guilty, and all must perish," was the
mandate of Justinian; and the bloody execution was intrusted to
his favorite Stephen, who was recommended by the epithet of the
savage. Yet even the savage Stephen imperfectly accomplished the
intentions of his sovereign. The slowness of his attack allowed
the greater part of the inhabitants to withdraw into the country;
and the minister of vengeance contented himself with reducing the
youth of both sexes to a state of servitude, with roasting alive
seven of the principal citizens, with drowning twenty in the sea,
and with reserving forty-two in chains to receive their doom from
the mouth of the emperor. In their return, the fleet was driven
on the rocky shores of Anatolia; and Justinian applauded the
obedience of the Euxine, which had involved so many thousands of
his subjects and enemies in a common shipwreck: but the tyrant
was still insatiate of blood; and a second expedition was
commanded to extirpate the remains of the proscribed colony. In
the short interval, the Chersonites had returned to their city,
and were prepared to die in arms; the khan of the Chozars had
renounced the cause of his odious brother; the exiles of every
province were assembled in Tauris; and Bardanes, under the name
of Philippicus, was invested with the purple. The Imperial
troops, unwilling and unable to perpetrate the revenge of
Justinian, escaped his displeasure by abjuring his allegiance:
the fleet, under their new sovereign, steered back a more
auspicious course to the harbors of Sinope and Constantinople;
and every tongue was prompt to pronounce, every hand to execute,
the death of the tyrant. Destitute of friends, he was deserted by
his Barbarian guards; and the stroke of the assassin was praised
as an act of patriotism and Roman virtue. His son Tiberius had
taken refuge in a church; his aged grandmother guarded the door;
and the innocent youth, suspending round his neck the most
formidable relics, embraced with one hand the altar, with the
other the wood of the true cross. But the popular fury that dares
to trample on superstition, is deaf to the cries of humanity; and
the race of Heraclius was extinguished after a reign of one
hundred years
Between the fall of the Heraclian and the rise of the Isaurian
dynasty, a short interval of six years is divided into three
reigns. Bardanes, or Philippicus, was hailed at Constantinople as
a hero who had delivered his country from a tyrant; and he might
taste some moments of happiness in the first transports of
sincere and universal joy. Justinian had left behind him an ample
treasure, the fruit of cruelty and rapine: but this useful fund
was soon and idly dissipated by his successor. On the festival of
his birthday, Philippicus entertained the multitude with the
games of the hippodrome; from thence he paraded through the
streets with a thousand banners and a thousand trumpets;
refreshed himself in the baths of Zeuxippus, and returning to the
palace, entertained his nobles with a sumptuous banquet. At the
meridian hour he withdrew to his chamber, intoxicated with
flattery and wine, and forgetful that his example had made every
subject ambitious, and that every ambitious subject was his
secret enemy. Some bold conspirators introduced themselves in the
disorder of the feast; and the slumbering monarch was surprised,
bound, blinded, and deposed, before he was sensible of his
danger. Yet the traitors were deprived of their reward; and the
free voice of the senate and people promoted Artemius from the
office of secretary to that of emperor: he assumed the title of
Anastasius the Second, and displayed in a short and troubled
reign the virtues both of peace and war. But after the extinction
of the Imperial line, the rule of obedience was violated, and
every change diffused the seeds of new revolutions. In a mutiny
of the fleet, an obscure and reluctant officer of the revenue was
forcibly invested with the purple: after some months of a naval
war, Anastasius resigned the sceptre; and the conqueror,
Theodosius the Third, submitted in his turn to the superior
ascendant of Leo, the general and emperor of the Oriental troops.
His two predecessors were permitted to embrace the ecclesiastical
profession: the restless impatience of Anastasius tempted him to
risk and to lose his life in a treasonable enterprise; but the
last days of Theodosius were honorable and secure. The single
sublime word, "health," which he inscribed on his tomb, expresses
the confidence of philosophy or religion; and the fame of his
miracles was long preserved among the people of Ephesus. This
convenient shelter of the church might sometimes impose a lesson
of clemency; but it may be questioned whether it is for the
public interest to diminish the perils of unsuccessful
ambition.
I have dwelt on the fall of a tyrant; I shall briefly
represent the founder of a new dynasty, who is known to posterity
by the invectives of his enemies, and whose public and private
life is involved in the ecclesiastical story of the Iconoclasts.
Yet in spite of the clamors of superstition, a favorable
prejudice for the character of Leo the Isaurian may be reasonably
drawn from the obscurity of his birth, and the duration of his
reign. -- I. In an age of manly spirit, the prospect of an
Imperial reward would have kindled every energy of the mind, and
produced a crowd of competitors as deserving as they were
desirous to reign. Even in the corruption and debility of the
modern Greeks, the elevation of a plebeian from the last to the
first rank of society, supposes some qualifications above the
level of the multitude. He would probably be ignorant and
disdainful of speculative science; and, in the pursuit of
fortune, he might absolve himself from the obligations of
benevolence and justice; but to his character we may ascribe the
useful virtues of prudence and fortitude, the knowledge of
mankind, and the important art of gaining their confidence and
directing their passions. It is agreed that Leo was a native of
Isauria, and that Conon was his primitive name. The writers,
whose awkward satire is praise, describe him as an itinerant
pedler, who drove an ass with some paltry merchandise to the
country fairs; and foolishly relate that he met on the road some
Jewish fortune-tellers, who promised him the Roman empire, on
condition that he should abolish the worship of idols. A more
probable account relates the migration of his father from Asia
Minor to Thrace, where he exercised the lucrative trade of a
grazier; and he must have acquired considerable wealth, since the
first introduction of his son was procured by a supply of five
hundred sheep to the Imperial camp. His first service was in the
guards of Justinian, where he soon attracted the notice, and by
degrees the jealousy, of the tyrant. His valor and dexterity were
conspicuous in the Colchian war: from Anastasius he received the
command of the Anatolian legions, and by the suffrage of the
soldiers he was raised to the empire with the general applause of
the Roman world. -- II. In this dangerous elevation, Leo the
Third supported himself against the envy of his equals, the
discontent of a powerful faction, and the assaults of his foreign
and domestic enemies. The Catholics, who accuse his religious
innovations, are obliged to confess that they were undertaken
with temper and conducted with firmness. Their silence respects
the wisdom of his administration and the purity of his manners.
After a reign of twenty-four years, he peaceably expired in the
palace of Constantinople; and the purple which he had acquired
was transmitted by the right of inheritance to the third
generation. *
In a long reign of thirty-four years, the son and successor of
Leo, Constantine the Fifth, surnamed Copronymus, attacked with
less temperate zeal the images or idols of the church. Their
votaries have exhausted the bitterness of religious gall, in
their portrait of this spotted panther, this antichrist, this
flying dragon of the serpent's seed, who surpassed the vices of
Elagabalus and Nero. His reign was a long butchery of whatever
was most noble, or holy, or innocent, in his empire. In person,
the emperor assisted at the execution of his victims, surveyed
their agonies, listened to their groans, and indulged, without
satiating, his appetite for blood: a plate of noses was accepted
as a grateful offering, and his domestics were often scourged or
mutilated by the royal hand. His surname was derived from his
pollution of his baptismal font. The infant might be excused; but
the manly pleasures of Copronymus degraded him below the level of
a brute; his lust confounded the eternal distinctions of sex and
species, and he seemed to extract some unnatural delight from the
objects most offensive to human sense. In his religion the
Iconoclast was a Heretic, a Jew, a Mahometan, a Pagan, and an
Atheist; and his belief of an invisible power could be discovered
only in his magic rites, human victims, and nocturnal sacrifices
to Venus and the dæmons of antiquity. His life was stained
with the most opposite vices, and the ulcers which covered his
body, anticipated before his death the sentiment of
hell-tortures. Of these accusations, which I have so patiently
copied, a part is refuted by its own absurdity; and in the
private anecdotes of the life of the princes, the lie is more
easy as the detection is more difficult. Without adopting the
pernicious maxim, that where much is alleged, something must be
true, I can however discern, that Constantine the Fifth was
dissolute and cruel. Calumny is more prone to exaggerate than to
invent; and her licentious tongue is checked in some measure by
the experience of the age and country to which she appeals. Of
the bishops and monks, the generals and magistrates, who are said
to have suffered under his reign, the numbers are recorded, the
names were conspicuous, the execution was public, the mutilation
visible and permanent. * The Catholics hated the person and
government of Copronymus; but even their hatred is a proof of
their oppression. They dissembled the provocations which might
excuse or justify his rigor, but even these provocations must
gradually inflame his resentment and harden his temper in the use
or the abuse of despotism. Yet the character of the fifth
Constantine was not devoid of merit, nor did his government
always deserve the curses or the contempt of the Greeks. From the
confession of his enemies, I am informed of the restoration of an
ancient aqueduct, of the redemption of two thousand five hundred
captives, of the uncommon plenty of the times, and of the new
colonies with which he repeopled Constantinople and the Thracian
cities. They reluctantly praise his activity and courage; he was
on horseback in the field at the head of his legions; and,
although the fortune of his arms was various, he triumphed by sea
and land, on the Euphrates and the Danube, in civil and Barbarian
war. Heretical praise must be cast into the scale to
counterbalance the weight of orthodox invective. The Iconoclasts
revered the virtues of the prince: forty years after his death
they still prayed before the tomb of the saint. A miraculous
vision was propagated by fanaticism or fraud: and the Christian
hero appeared on a milk-white steed, brandishing his lance
against the Pagans of Bulgaria: "An absurd fable," says the
Catholic historian, "since Copronymus is chained with the
dæmons in the abyss of hell."
Leo the Fourth, the son of the fifth and the father of the
sixth Constantine, was of a feeble constitution both of mind *
and body, and the principal care of his reign was the settlement
of the succession. The association of the young Constantine was
urged by the officious zeal of his subjects; and the emperor,
conscious of his decay, complied, after a prudent hesitation,
with their unanimous wishes. The royal infant, at the age of five
years, was crowned with his mother Irene; and the national
consent was ratified by every circumstance of pomp and solemnity,
that could dazzle the eyes or bind the conscience of the Greeks.
An oath of fidelity was administered in the palace, the church,
and the hippodrome, to the several orders of the state, who
adjured the holy names of the Son, and mother of God. "Be
witness, O Christ! that we will watch over the safety of
Constantine the son of Leo, expose our lives in his service, and
bear true allegiance to his person and posterity." They pledged
their faith on the wood of the true cross, and the act of their
engagement was deposited on the altar of St. Sophia. The first to
swear, and the first to violate their oath, were the five sons of
Copronymus by a second marriage; and the story of these princes
is singular and tragic. The right of primogeniture excluded them
from the throne; the injustice of their elder brother defrauded
them of a legacy of about two millions sterling; some vain titles
were not deemed a sufficient compensation for wealth and power;
and they repeatedly conspired against their nephew, before and
after the death of his father. Their first attempt was pardoned;
for the second offence they were condemned to the ecclesiastical
state; and for the third treason, Nicephorus, the eldest and most
guilty, was deprived of his eyes, and his four brothers,
Christopher, Nicetas, Anthemeus, and Eudoxas, were punished, as a
milder sentence, by the amputation of their tongues. After five
years' confinement, they escaped to the church of St. Sophia, and
displayed a pathetic spectacle to the people. "Countrymen and
Christians," cried Nicephorus for himself and his mute brethren,
"behold the sons of your emperor, if you can still recognize our
features in this miserable state. A life, an imperfect life, is
all that the malice of our enemies has spared. It is now
threatened, and we now throw ourselves on your compassion." The
rising murmur might have produced a revolution, had it not been
checked by the presence of a minister, who soothed the unhappy
princes with flattery and hope, and gently drew them from the
sanctuary to the palace. They were speedily embarked for Greece,
and Athens was allotted for the place of their exile. In this
calm retreat, and in their helpless condition, Nicephorus and his
brothers were tormented by the thirst of power, and tempted by a
Sclavonian chief, who offered to break their prison, and to lead
them in arms, and in the purple, to the gates of Constantinople.
But the Athenian people, ever zealous in the cause of Irene,
prevented her justice or cruelty; and the five sons of Copronymus
were plunged in eternal darkness and oblivion.
For himself, that emperor had chosen a Barbarian wife, the
daughter of the khan of the Chozars; but in the marriage of his
heir, he preferred an Athenian virgin, an orphan, seventeen years
old, whose sole fortune must have consisted in her personal
accomplishments. The nuptials of Leo and Irene were celebrated
with royal pomp; she soon acquired the love and confidence of a
feeble husband, and in his testament he declared the empress
guardian of the Roman world, and of their son Constantine the
Sixth, who was no more than ten years of age. During his
childhood, Irene most ably and assiduously discharged, in her
public administration, the duties of a faithful mother; and her
zeal in the restoration of images has deserved the name and
honors of a saint, which she still occupies in the Greek
calendar. But the emperor attained the maturity of youth; the
maternal yoke became more grievous; and he listened to the
favorites of his own age, who shared his pleasures, and were
ambitious of sharing his power. Their reasons convinced him of
his right, their praises of his ability, to reign; and he
consented to reward the services of Irene by a perpetual
banishment to the Isle of Sicily. But her vigilance and
penetration easily disconcerted their rash projects: a similar,
or more severe, punishment was retaliated on themselves and their
advisers; and Irene inflicted on the ungrateful prince the
chastisement of a boy. After this contest, the mother and the son
were at the head of two domestic factions; and instead of mild
influence and voluntary obedience, she held in chains a captive
and an enemy. The empress was overthrown by the abuse of victory;
the oath of fidelity, which she exacted to herself alone, was
pronounced with reluctant murmurs; and the bold refusal of the
Armenian guards encouraged a free and general declaration, that
Constantine the Sixth was the lawful emperor of the Romans. In
this character he ascended his hereditary throne, and dismissed
Irene to a life of solitude and repose. But her haughty spirit
condescended to the arts of dissimulation: she flattered the
bishops and eunuchs, revived the filial tenderness of the prince,
regained his confidence, and betrayed his credulity. The
character of Constantine was not destitute of sense or spirit;
but his education had been studiously neglected; and the
ambitious mother exposed to the public censure the vices which
she had nourished, and the actions which she had secretly
advised: his divorce and second marriage offended the prejudices
of the clergy, and by his imprudent rigor he forfeited the
attachment of the Armenian guards. A powerful conspiracy was
formed for the restoration of Irene; and the secret, though
widely diffused, was faithfully kept above eight months, till the
emperor, suspicious of his danger, escaped from Constantinople,
with the design of appealing to the provinces and armies. By this
hasty flight, the empress was left on the brink of the precipice;
yet before she implored the mercy of her son, Irene addressed a
private epistle to the friends whom she had placed about his
person, with a menace, that unless they
accomplished, she would reveal, their
treason. Their fear rendered them intrepid; they seized the
emperor on the Asiatic shore, and he was transported to the
porphyry apartment of the palace, where he had first seen the
light. In the mind of Irene, ambition had stifled every sentiment
of humanity and nature; and it was decreed in her bloody council,
that Constantine should be rendered incapable of the throne: her
emissaries assaulted the sleeping prince, and stabbed their
daggers with such violence and precipitation into his eyes as if
they meant to execute a mortal sentence. An ambiguous passage of
Theophanes persuaded the annalist of the church that death was
the immediate consequence of this barbarous execution. The
Catholics have been deceived or subdued by the authority of
Baronius; and Protestant zeal has reëchoed the words of a
cardinal, desirous, as it should seem, to favor the patroness of
images. * Yet the blind son of Irene survived many years,
oppressed by the court and forgotten by the world; the Isaurian
dynasty was silently extinguished; and the memory of Constantine
was recalled only by the nuptials of his daughter Euphrosyne with
the emperor Michael the Second.
The most bigoted orthodoxy has justly execrated the unnatural
mother, who may not easily be paralleled in the history of
crimes. To her bloody deed superstition has attributed a
subsequent darkness of seventeen days; during which many vessels
in midday were driven from their course, as if the sun, a globe
of fire so vast and so remote, could sympathize with the atoms of
a revolving planet. On earth, the crime of Irene was left five
years unpunished; her reign was crowned with external splendor;
and if she could silence the voice of conscience, she neither
heard nor regarded the reproaches of mankind. The Roman world
bowed to the government of a female; and as she moved through the
streets of Constantinople, the reins of four milk-white steeds
were held by as many patricians, who marched on foot before the
golden chariot of their queen. But these patricians were for the
most part eunuchs; and their black ingratitude justified, on this
occasion, the popular hatred and contempt. Raised, enriched,
intrusted with the first dignities of the empire, they basely
conspired against their benefactress; the great treasurer
Nicephorus was secretly invested with the purple; her successor
was introduced into the palace, and crowned at St. Sophia by the
venal patriarch. In their first interview, she recapitulated with
dignity the revolutions of her life, gently accused the perfidy
of Nicephorus, insinuated that he owed his life to her
unsuspicious clemency, and for the throne and treasures which she
resigned, solicited a decent and honorable retreat. His avarice
refused this modest compensation; and, in her exile of the Isle
of Lesbos, the empress earned a scanty subsistence by the labors
of her distaff.
Many tyrants have reigned undoubtedly more criminal than
Nicephorus, but none perhaps have more deeply incurred the
universal abhorrence of their people. His character was stained
with the three odious vices of hypocrisy, ingratitude, and
avarice: his want of virtue was not redeemed by any superior
talents, nor his want of talents by any pleasing qualifications.
Unskilful and unfortunate in war, Nicephorus was vanquished by
the Saracens, and slain by the Bulgarians; and the advantage of
his death overbalanced, in the public opinion, the destruction of
a Roman army. * His son and heir Stauracius escaped from the
field with a mortal wound; yet six months of an expiring life
were sufficient to refute his indecent, though popular
declaration, that he would in all things avoid the example of his
father. On the near prospect of his decease, Michael, the great
master of the palace, and the husband of his sister Procopia, was
named by every person of the palace and city, except by his
envious brother. Tenacious of a sceptre now falling from his
hand, he conspired against the life of his successor, and
cherished the idea of changing to a democracy the Roman empire.
But these rash projects served only to inflame the zeal of the
people and to remove the scruples of the candidate: Michael the
First accepted the purple, and before he sunk into the grave the
son of Nicephorus implored the clemency of his new sovereign. Had
Michael in an age of peace ascended an hereditary throne, he
might have reigned and died the father of his people: but his
mild virtues were adapted to the shade of private life, nor was
he capable of controlling the ambition of his equals, or of
resisting the arms of the victorious Bulgarians. While his want
of ability and success exposed him to the contempt of the
soldiers, the masculine spirit of his wife Procopia awakened
their indignation. Even the Greeks of the ninth century were
provoked by the insolence of a female, who, in the front of the
standards, presumed to direct their discipline and animate their
valor; and their licentious clamors advised the new Semiramis to
reverence the majesty of a Roman camp. After an unsuccessful
campaign, the emperor left, in their winter-quarters of Thrace, a
disaffected army under the command of his enemies; and their
artful eloquence persuaded the soldiers to break the dominion of
the eunuchs, to degrade the husband of Procopia, and to assert
the right of a military election. They marched towards the
capital: yet the clergy, the senate, and the people of
Constantinople, adhered to the cause of Michael; and the troops
and treasures of Asia might have protracted the mischiefs of
civil war. But his humanity (by the ambitious it will be termed
his weakness) protested that not a drop of Christian blood should
be shed in his quarrel, and his messengers presented the
conquerors with the keys of the city and the palace. They were
disarmed by his innocence and submission; his life and his eyes
were spared; and the Imperial monk enjoyed the comforts of
solitude and religion above thirty-two years after he had been
stripped of the purple and separated from his wife.
A rebel, in the time of Nicephorus, the famous and unfortunate
Bardanes, had once the curiosity to consult an Asiatic prophet,
who, after prognosticating his fall, announced the fortunes of
his three principal officers, Leo the Armenian, Michael the
Phrygian, and Thomas the Cappadocian, the successive reigns of
the two former, the fruitless and fatal enterprise of the third.
This prediction was verified, or rather was produced, by the
event. Ten years afterwards, when the Thracian camp rejected the
husband of Procopia, the crown was presented to the same Leo, the
first in military rank and the secret author of the mutiny. As he
affected to hesitate, "With this sword," said his companion
Michael, "I will open the gates of Constantinople to your
Imperial sway; or instantly plunge it into your bosom, if you
obstinately resist the just desires of your fellow-soldiers." The
compliance of the Armenian was rewarded with the empire, and he
reigned seven years and a half under the name of Leo the Fifth.
Educated in a camp, and ignorant both of laws and letters, he
introduced into his civil government the rigor and even cruelty
of military discipline; but if his severity was sometimes
dangerous to the innocent, it was always formidable to the
guilty. His religious inconstancy was taxed by the epithet of
Chameleon, but the Catholics have acknowledged by the voice of a
saint and confessors, that the life of the Iconoclast was useful
to the republic. The zeal of his companion Michael was repaid
with riches, honors, and military command; and his subordinate
talents were beneficially employed in the public service. Yet the
Phrygian was dissatisfied at receiving as a favor a scanty
portion of the Imperial prize which he had bestowed on his equal;
and his discontent, which sometimes evaporated in hasty
discourse, at length assumed a more threatening and hostile
aspect against a prince whom he represented as a cruel tyrant.
That tyrant, however, repeatedly detected, warned, and dismissed
the old companion of his arms, till fear and resentment prevailed
over gratitude; and Michael, after a scrutiny into his actions
and designs, was convicted of treason, and sentenced to be burnt
alive in the furnace of the private baths. The devout humanity of
the empress Theophano was fatal to her husband and family. A
solemn day, the twenty-fifth of December, had been fixed for the
execution: she urged, that the anniversary of the Savior's birth
would be profaned by this inhuman spectacle, and Leo consented
with reluctance to a decent respite. But on the vigil of the
feast his sleepless anxiety prompted him to visit at the dead of
night the chamber in which his enemy was confined: he beheld him
released from his chain, and stretched on his jailer's bed in a
profound slumber. Leo was alarmed at these signs of security and
intelligence; but though he retired with silent steps, his
entrance and departure were noticed by a slave who lay concealed
in a corner of the prison. Under the pretence of requesting the
spiritual aid of a confessor, Michael informed the conspirators,
that their lives depended on his discretion, and that a few hours
were left to assure their own safety, by the deliverance of their
friend and country. On the great festivals, a chosen band of
priests and chanters was admitted into the palace by a private
gate to sing matins in the chapel; and Leo, who regulated with
the same strictness the discipline of the choir and of the camp,
was seldom absent from these early devotions. In the
ecclesiastical habit, but with their swords under their robes,
the conspirators mingled with the procession, lurked in the
angles of the chapel, and expected, as the signal of murder, the
intonation of the first psalm by the emperor himself. The
imperfect light, and the uniformity of dress, might have favored
his escape, whilst their assault was pointed against a harmless
priest; but they soon discovered their mistake, and encompassed
on all sides the royal victim. Without a weapon and without a
friend, he grasped a weighty cross, and stood at bay against the
hunters of his life; but as he asked for mercy, "This is the
hour, not of mercy, but of vengeance," was the inexorable reply.
The stroke of a well-aimed sword separated from his body the
right arm and the cross, and Leo the Armenian was slain at the
foot of the altar.
A memorable reverse of fortune was displayed in Michael the
Second, who from a defect in his speech was surnamed the
Stammerer. He was snatched from the fiery furnace to the
sovereignty of an empire; and as in the tumult a smith could not
readily be found, the fetters remained on his legs several hours
after he was seated on the throne of the Cæsars. The royal
blood which had been the price of his elevation, was unprofitably
spent: in the purple he retained the ignoble vices of his origin;
and Michael lost his provinces with as supine indifference as if
they had been the inheritance of his fathers. His title was
disputed by Thomas, the last of the military triumvirate, who
transported into Europe fourscore thousand Barbarians from the
banks of the Tigris and the shores of the Caspian. He formed the
siege of Constantinople; but the capital was defended with
spiritual and carnal weapons; a Bulgarian king assaulted the camp
of the Orientals, and Thomas had the misfortune, or the weakness,
to fall alive into the power of the conqueror. The hands and feet
of the rebel were amputated; he was placed on an ass, and, amidst
the insults of the people, was led through the streets, which he
sprinkled with his blood. The depravation of manners, as savage
as they were corrupt, is marked by the presence of the emperor
himself. Deaf to the lamentation of a fellow-soldier, he
incessantly pressed the discovery of more accomplices, till his
curiosity was checked by the question of an honest or guilty
minister: "Would you give credit to an enemy against the most
faithful of your friends?" After the death of his first wife, the
emperor, at the request of the senate, drew from her monastery
Euphrosyne, the daughter of Constantine the Sixth. Her august
birth might justify a stipulation in the marriage-contract, that
her children should equally share the empire with their elder
brother. But the nuptials of Michael and Euphrosyne were barren;
and she was content with the title of mother of Theophilus, his
son and successor.
The character of Theophilus is a rare example in which
religious zeal has allowed, and perhaps magnified, the virtues of
a heretic and a persecutor. His valor was often felt by the
enemies, and his justice by the subjects, of the monarchy; but
the valor of Theophilus was rash and fruitless, and his justice
arbitrary and cruel. He displayed the banner of the cross against
the Saracens; but his five expeditions were concluded by a signal
overthrow: Amorium, the native city of his ancestors, was
levelled with the ground and from his military toils he derived
only the surname of the Unfortunate. The wisdom of a sovereign is
comprised in the institution of laws and the choice of
magistrates, and while he seems without action, his civil
government revolves round his centre with the silence and order
of the planetary system. But the justice of Theophilus was
fashioned on the model of the Oriental despots, who, in personal
and irregular acts of authority, consult the reason or passion of
the moment, without measuring the sentence by the law, or the
penalty by the offense. A poor woman threw herself at the
emperor's feet to complain of a powerful neighbor, the brother of
the empress, who had raised his palace-wall to such an
inconvenient height, that her humble dwelling was excluded from
light and air! On the proof of the fact, instead of granting,
like an ordinary judge, sufficient or ample damages to the
plaintiff, the sovereign adjudged to her use and benefit the
palace and the ground. Nor was Theophilus content with this
extravagant satisfaction: his zeal converted a civil trespass
into a criminal act; and the unfortunate patrician was stripped
and scourged in the public place of Constantinople. For some
venial offenses, some defect of equity or vigilance, the
principal ministers, a præfect, a quæstor, a captain
of the guards, were banished or mutilated, or scalded with
boiling pitch, or burnt alive in the hippodrome; and as these
dreadful examples might be the effects of error or caprice, they
must have alienated from his service the best and wisest of the
citizens. But the pride of the monarch was flattered in the
exercise of power, or, as he thought, of virtue; and the people,
safe in their obscurity, applauded the danger and debasement of
their superiors. This extraordinary rigor was justified, in some
measure, by its salutary consequences; since, after a scrutiny of
seventeen days, not a complaint or abuse could be found in the
court or city; and it might be alleged that the Greeks could be
ruled only with a rod of iron, and that the public interest is
the motive and law of the supreme judge. Yet in the crime, or the
suspicion, of treason, that judge is of all others the most
credulous and partial. Theophilus might inflict a tardy vengeance
on the assassins of Leo and the saviors of his father; but he
enjoyed the fruits of their crime; and his jealous tyranny
sacrificed a brother and a prince to the future safety of his
life. A Persian of the race of the Sassanides died in poverty and
exile at Constantinople, leaving an only son, the issue of a
plebeian marriage. At the age of twelve years, the royal birth of
Theophobus was revealed, and his merit was not unworthy of his
birth. He was educated in the Byzantine palace, a Christian and a
soldier; advanced with rapid steps in the career of fortune and
glory; received the hand of the emperor's sister; and was
promoted to the command of thirty thousand Persians, who, like
his father, had fled from the Mahometan conquerors. These troops,
doubly infected with mercenary and fanatic vices, were desirous
of revolting against their benefactor, and erecting the standard
of their native king but the loyal Theophobus rejected their
offers, disconcerted their schemes, and escaped from their hands
to the camp or palace of his royal brother. A generous confidence
might have secured a faithful and able guardian for his wife and
his infant son, to whom Theophilus, in the flower of his age, was
compelled to leave the inheritance of the empire. But his
jealousy was exasperated by envy and disease; he feared the
dangerous virtues which might either support or oppress their
infancy and weakness; and the dying emperor demanded the head of
the Persian prince. With savage delight he recognized the
familiar features of his brother: "Thou art no longer
Theophobus," he said; and, sinking on his couch, he added, with a
faltering voice, "Soon, too soon, I shall be no more
Theophilus!"
Chapter XLVIII: Succession And Characters Of The
Greek Emperors. -- Part III.
The Russians, who have borrowed from the Greeks the greatest
part of their civil and ecclesiastical policy, preserved, till
the last century, a singular institution in the marriage of the
Czar. They collected, not the virgins of every rank and of every
province, a vain and romantic idea, but the daughters of the
principal nobles, who awaited in the palace the choice of their
sovereign. It is affirmed, that a similar method was adopted in
the nuptials of Theophilus. With a golden apple in his hand, he
slowly walked between two lines of contending beauties: his eye
was detained by the charms of Icasia, and in the awkwardness of a
first declaration, the prince could only observe, that, in this
world, women had been the cause of much evil; "And surely, sir,"
she pertly replied, "they have likewise been the occasion of much
good." This affectation of unseasonable wit displeased the
Imperial lover: he turned aside in disgust; Icasia concealed her
mortification in a convent; and the modest silence of Theodora
was rewarded with the golden apple. She deserved the love, but
did not escape the severity, of her lord. From the palace garden
he beheld a vessel deeply laden, and steering into the port: on
the discovery that the precious cargo of Syrian luxury was the
property of his wife, he condemned the ship to the flames, with a
sharp reproach, that her avarice had degraded the character of an
empress into that of a merchant. Yet his last choice intrusted
her with the guardianship of the empire and her son Michael, who
was left an orphan in the fifth year of his age. The restoration
of images, and the final extirpation of the Iconoclasts, has
endeared her name to the devotion of the Greeks; but in the
fervor of religious zeal, Theodora entertained a grateful regard
for the memory and salvation of her husband. After thirteen years
of a prudent and frugal administration, she perceived the decline
of her influence; but the second Irene imitated only the virtues
of her predecessor. Instead of conspiring against the life or
government of her son, she retired, without a struggle, though
not without a murmur, to the solitude of private life, deploring
the ingratitude, the vices, and the inevitable ruin, of the
worthless youth.
Among the successors of Nero and Elagabalus, we have not
hitherto found the imitation of their vices, the character of a
Roman prince who considered pleasure as the object of life, and
virtue as the enemy of pleasure. Whatever might have been the
maternal care of Theodora in the education of Michael the Third,
her unfortunate son was a king before he was a man. If the
ambitious mother labored to check the progress of reason, she
could not cool the ebullition of passion; and her selfish policy
was justly repaid by the contempt and ingratitude of the
headstrong youth. At the age of eighteen, he rejected her
authority, without feeling his own incapacity to govern the
empire and himself. With Theodora, all gravity and wisdom retired
from the court; their place was supplied by the alternate
dominion of vice and folly; and it was impossible, without
forfeiting the public esteem, to acquire or preserve the favor of
the emperor. The millions of gold and silver which had been
accumulated for the service of the state, were lavished on the
vilest of men, who flattered his passions and shared his
pleasures; and in a reign of thirteen years, the richest of
sovereigns was compelled to strip the palace and the churches of
their precious furniture. Like Nero, he delighted in the
amusements of the theatre, and sighed to be surpassed in the
accomplishments in which he should have blushed to excel. Yet the
studies of Nero in music and poetry betrayed some symptoms of a
liberal taste; the more ignoble arts of the son of Theophilus
were confined to the chariot-race of the hippodrome. The four
factions which had agitated the peace, still amused the idleness,
of the capital: for himself, the emperor assumed the blue livery;
the three rival colors were distributed to his favorites, and in
the vile though eager contention he forgot the dignity of his
person and the safety of his dominions. He silenced the messenger
of an invasion, who presumed to divert his attention in the most
critical moment of the race; and by his command, the importunate
beacons were extinguished, that too frequently spread the alarm
from Tarsus to Constantinople. The most skilful charioteers
obtained the first place in his confidence and esteem; their
merit was profusely rewarded the emperor feasted in their houses,
and presented their children at the baptismal font; and while he
applauded his own popularity, he affected to blame the cold and
stately reserve of his predecessors. The unnatural lusts which
had degraded even the manhood of Nero, were banished from the
world; yet the strength of Michael was consumed by the indulgence
of love and intemperance. * In his midnight revels, when his
passions were inflamed by wine, he was provoked to issue the most
sanguinary commands; and if any feelings of humanity were left,
he was reduced, with the return of sense, to approve the salutary
disobedience of his servants. But the most extraordinary feature
in the character of Michael, is the profane mockery of the
religion of his country. The superstition of the Greeks might
indeed excite the smile of a philosopher; but his smile would
have been rational and temperate, and he must have condemned the
ignorant folly of a youth who insulted the objects of public
veneration. A buffoon of the court was invested in the robes of
the patriarch: his twelve metropolitans, among whom the emperor
was ranked, assumed their ecclesiastical garments: they used or
abused the sacred vessels of the altar; and in their bacchanalian
feasts, the holy communion was administered in a nauseous
compound of vinegar and mustard. Nor were these impious
spectacles concealed from the eyes of the city. On the day of a
solemn festival, the emperor, with his bishops or buffoons, rode
on asses through the streets, encountered the true patriarch at
the head of his clergy; and by their licentious shouts and
obscene gestures, disordered the gravity of the Christian
procession. The devotion of Michael appeared only in some offence
to reason or piety: he received his theatrical crowns from the
statue of the Virgin; and an Imperial tomb was violated for the
sake of burning the bones of Constantine the Iconoclast. By this
extravagant conduct, the son of Theophilus became as contemptible
as he was odious: every citizen was impatient for the deliverance
of his country; and even the favorites of the moment were
apprehensive that a caprice might snatch away what a caprice had
bestowed. In the thirtieth year of his age, and in the hour of
intoxication and sleep, Michael the Third was murdered in his
chamber by the founder of a new dynasty, whom the emperor had
raised to an equality of rank and power.
The genealogy of Basil the Macedonian (if it be not the
spurious offspring of pride and flattery) exhibits a genuine
picture of the revolution of the most illustrious families. The
Arsacides, the rivals of Rome, possessed the sceptre of the East
near four hundred years: a younger branch of these Parthian kings
continued to reign in Armenia; and their royal descendants
survived the partition and servitude of that ancient monarchy.
Two of these, Artabanus and Chlienes, escaped or retired to the
court of Leo the First: his bounty seated them in a safe and
hospitable exile, in the province of Macedonia: Adrianople was
their final settlement. During several generations they
maintained the dignity of their birth; and their Roman patriotism
rejected the tempting offers of the Persian and Arabian powers,
who recalled them to their native country. But their splendor was
insensibly clouded by time and poverty; and the father of Basil
was reduced to a small farm, which he cultivated with his own
hands: yet he scorned to disgrace the blood of the Arsacides by a
plebeian alliance: his wife, a widow of Adrianople, was pleased
to count among her ancestors the great Constantine; and their
royal infant was connected by some dark affinity of lineage or
country with the Macedonian Alexander. No sooner was he born,
than the cradle of Basil, his family, and his city, were swept
away by an inundation of the Bulgarians: he was educated a slave
in a foreign land; and in this severe discipline, he acquired the
hardiness of body and flexibility of mind which promoted his
future elevation. In the age of youth or manhood he shared the
deliverance of the Roman captives, who generously broke their
fetters, marched through Bulgaria to the shores of the Euxine,
defeated two armies of Barbarians, embarked in the ships which
had been stationed for their reception, and returned to
Constantinople, from whence they were distributed to their
respective homes. But the freedom of Basil was naked and
destitute: his farm was ruined by the calamities of war: after
his father's death, his manual labor, or service, could no longer
support a family of orphans and he resolved to seek a more
conspicuous theatre, in which every virtue and every vice may
lead to the paths of greatness. The first night of his arrival at
Constantinople, without friends or money, the weary pilgrim slept
on the steps of the church of St. Diomede: he was fed by the
casual hospitality of a monk; and was introduced to the service
of a cousin and namesake of the emperor Theophilus; who, though
himself of a diminutive person, was always followed by a train of
tall and handsome domestics. Basil attended his patron to the
government of Peloponnesus; eclipsed, by his personal merit the
birth and dignity of Theophilus, and formed a useful connection
with a wealthy and charitable matron of Patras. Her spiritual or
carnal love embraced the young adventurer, whom she adopted as
her son. Danielis presented him with thirty slaves; and the
produce of her bounty was expended in the support of his
brothers, and the purchase of some large estates in Macedonia.
His gratitude or ambition still attached him to the service of
Theophilus; and a lucky accident recommended him to the notice of
the court. A famous wrestler, in the train of the Bulgarian
ambassadors, had defied, at the royal banquet, the boldest and
most robust of the Greeks. The strength of Basil was praised; he
accepted the challenge; and the Barbarian champion was overthrown
at the first onset. A beautiful but vicious horse was condemned
to be hamstrung: it was subdued by the dexterity and courage of
the servant of Theophilus; and his conqueror was promoted to an
honorable rank in the Imperial stables. But it was impossible to
obtain the confidence of Michael, without complying with his
vices; and his new favorite, the great chamberlain of the palace,
was raised and supported by a disgraceful marriage with a royal
concubine, and the dishonor of his sister, who succeeded to her
place. The public administration had been abandoned to the
Cæsar Bardas, the brother and enemy of Theodora; but the
arts of female influence persuaded Michael to hate and to fear
his uncle: he was drawn from Constantinople, under the pretence
of a Cretan expedition, and stabbed in the tent of audience, by
the sword of the chamberlain, and in the presence of the emperor.
About a month after this execution, Basil was invested with the
title of Augustus and the government of the empire. He supported
this unequal association till his influence was fortified by
popular esteem. His life was endangered by the caprice of the
emperor; and his dignity was profaned by a second colleague, who
had rowed in the galleys. Yet the murder of his benefactor must
be condemned as an act of ingratitude and treason; and the
churches which he dedicated to the name of St. Michael were a
poor and puerile expiation of his guilt.
The different ages of Basil the First may be compared with
those of Augustus. The situation of the Greek did not allow him
in his earliest youth to lead an army against his country; or to
proscribe the nobles of her sons; but his aspiring genius stooped
to the arts of a slave; he dissembled his ambition and even his
virtues, and grasped, with the bloody hand of an assassin, the
empire which he ruled with the wisdom and tenderness of a parent.
A private citizen may feel his interest repugnant to his duty;
but it must be from a deficiency of sense or courage, that an
absolute monarch can separate his happiness from his glory, or
his glory from the public welfare. The life or panegyric of Basil
has indeed been composed and published under the long reign of
his descendants; but even their stability on the throne may be
justly ascribed to the superior merit of their ancestor. In his
character, his grandson Constantine has attempted to delineate a
perfect image of royalty: but that feeble prince, unless he had
copied a real model, could not easily have soared so high above
the level of his own conduct or conceptions. But the most solid
praise of Basil is drawn from the comparison of a ruined and a
flourishing monarchy, that which he wrested from the dissolute
Michael, and that which he bequeathed to the Mecedonian dynasty.
The evils which had been sanctified by time and example, were
corrected by his master-hand; and he revived, if not the national
spirit, at least the order and majesty of the Roman empire. His
application was indefatigable, his temper cool, his understanding
vigorous and decisive; and in his practice he observed that rare
and salutary moderation, which pursues each virtue, at an equal
distance between the opposite vices. His military service had
been confined to the palace: nor was the emperor endowed with the
spirit or the talents of a warrior. Yet under his reign the Roman
arms were again formidable to the Barbarians. As soon as he had
formed a new army by discipline and exercise, he appeared in
person on the banks of the Euphrates, curbed the pride of the
Saracens, and suppressed the dangerous though just revolt of the
Manichæans. His indignation against a rebel who had long
eluded his pursuit, provoked him to wish and to pray, that, by
the grace of God, he might drive three arrows into the head of
Chrysochir. That odious head, which had been obtained by treason
rather than by valor, was suspended from a tree, and thrice
exposed to the dexterity of the Imperial archer; a base revenge
against the dead, more worthy of the times than of the character
of Basil. But his principal merit was in the civil administration
of the finances and of the laws. To replenish and exhausted
treasury, it was proposed to resume the lavish and ill-placed
gifts of his predecessor: his prudence abated one moiety of the
restitution; and a sum of twelve hundred thousand pounds was
instantly procured to answer the most pressing demands, and to
allow some space for the mature operations of economy. Among the
various schemes for the improvement of the revenue, a new mode
was suggested of capitation, or tribute, which would have too
much depended on the arbitrary discretion of the assessors. A
sufficient list of honest and able agents was instantly produced
by the minister; but on the more careful scrutiny of Basil
himself, only two could be found, who might be safely intrusted
with such dangerous powers; but they justified his esteem by
declining his confidence. But the serious and successful
diligence of the emperor established by degrees the equitable
balance of property and payment, of receipt and expenditure; a
peculiar fund was appropriated to each service; and a public
method secured the interest of the prince and the property of the
people. After reforming the luxury, he assigned two patrimonial
estates to supply the decent plenty, of the Imperial table: the
contributions of the subject were reserved for his defence; and
the residue was employed in the embellishment of the capital and
provinces. A taste for building, however costly, may deserve some
praise and much excuse: from thence industry is fed, art is
encouraged, and some object is attained of public emolument or
pleasure: the use of a road, an aqueduct, or a hospital, is
obvious and solid; and the hundred churches that arose by the
command of Basil were consecrated to the devotion of the age. In
the character of a judge he was assiduous and impartial; desirous
to save, but not afraid to strike: the oppressors of the people
were severely chastised; but his personal foes, whom it might be
unsafe to pardon, were condemned, after the loss of their eyes,
to a life of solitude and repentance. The change of language and
manners demanded a revision of the obsolete jurisprudence of
Justinian: the voluminous body of his Institutes, Pandects, Code,
and Novels, was digested under forty titles, in the Greek idiom;
and the Basilics, which were improved and completed by his son
and grandson, must be referred to the original genius of the
founder of their race. This glorious reign was terminated by an
accident in the chase. A furious stag entangled his horns in the
belt of Basil, and raised him from his horse: he was rescued by
an attendant, who cut the belt and slew the animal; but the fall,
or the fever, exhausted the strength of the aged monarch, and he
expired in the palace amidst the tears of his family and people.
If he struck off the head of the faithful servant for presuming
to draw his sword against his sovereign, the pride of despotism,
which had lain dormant in his life, revived in the last moments
of despair, when he no longer wanted or valued the opinion of
mankind.
Of the four sons of the emperor, Constantine died before his
father, whose grief and credulity were amused by a flattering
impostor and a vain apparition. Stephen, the youngest, was
content with the honors of a patriarch and a saint; both Leo and
Alexander were alike invested with the purple, but the powers of
government were solely exercised by the elder brother. The name
of Leo the Sixth has been dignified with the title of
philosopher; and the union of the
prince and the sage, of the active and speculative virtues, would
indeed constitute the perfection of human nature. But the claims
of Leo are far short of this ideal excellence. Did he reduce his
passions and appetites under the dominion of reason? His life was
spent in the pomp of the palace, in the society of his wives and
concubines; and even the clemency which he showed, and the peace
which he strove to preserve, must be imputed to the softness and
indolence of his character. Did he subdue his prejudices, and
those of his subjects? His mind was tinged with the most puerile
superstition; the influence of the clergy, and the errors of the
people, were consecrated by his laws; and the oracles of Leo,
which reveal, in prophetic style, the fates of the empire, are
founded on the arts of astrology and divination. If we still
inquire the reason of his sage appellation, it can only be
replied, that the son of Basil was less ignorant than the greater
part of his contemporaries in church and state; that his
education had been directed by the learned Photius; and that
several books of profane and ecclesiastical science were composed
by the pen, or in the name, of the Imperial
philosopher. But the reputation of his
philosophy and religion was overthrown by a domestic vice, the
repetition of his nuptials. The primitive ideas of the merit and
holiness of celibacy were preached by the monks and entertained
by the Greeks. Marriage was allowed as a necessary means for the
propagation of mankind; after the death of either party, the
survivor might satisfy, by a second
union, the weakness or the strength of the flesh: but a
third marriage was censured as a state
of legal fornication; and a fourthwas a
sin or scandal as yet unknown to the Christians of the East. In
the beginning of his reign, Leo himself had abolished the state
of concubines, and condemned, without annulling, third marriages:
but his patriotism and love soon compelled him to violate his own
laws, and to incur the penance, which in a similar case he had
imposed on his subjects. In his three first alliances, his
nuptial bed was unfruitful; the emperor required a female
companion, and the empire a legitimate heir. The beautiful Zoe
was introduced into the palace as a concubine; and after a trial
of her fecundity, and the birth of Constantine, her lover
declared his intention of legitimating the mother and the child,
by the celebration of his fourth nuptials. But the patriarch
Nicholas refused his blessing: the Imperial baptism of the young
prince was obtained by a promise of separation; and the
contumacious husband of Zoe was excluded from the communion of
the faithful. Neither the fear of exile, nor the desertion of his
brethren, nor the authority of the Latin church, nor the danger
of failure or doubt in the succession to the empire, could bend
the spirit of the inflexible monk. After the death of Leo, he was
recalled from exile to the civil and ecclesiastical
administration; and the edict of union which was promulgated in
the name of Constantine, condemned the future scandal of fourth
marriages, and left a tacit imputation on his own birth.
In the Greek language, purple and
porphyry are the same word: and as the
colors of nature are invariable, we may learn, that a dark deep
red was the Tyrian dye which stained the purple of the ancients.
An apartment of the Byzantine palace was lined with porphyry: it
was reserved for the use of the pregnant empresses; and the royal
birth of their children was expressed by the appellation of
porphyrogenite, or born in the purple.
Several of the Roman princes had been blessed with an heir; but
this peculiar surname was first applied to Constantine the
Seventh. His life and titular reign were of equal duration; but
of fifty-four years, six had elapsed before his father's death;
and the son of Leo was ever the voluntary or reluctant subject of
those who oppressed his weakness or abused his confidence. His
uncle Alexander, who had long been invested with the title of
Augustus, was the first colleague and governor of the young
prince: but in a rapid career of vice and folly, the brother of
Leo already emulated the reputation of Michael; and when he was
extinguished by a timely death, he entertained a project of
castrating his nephew, and leaving the empire to a worthless
favorite. The succeeding years of the minority of Constantine
were occupied by his mother Zoe, and a succession or council of
seven regents, who pursued their interest, gratified their
passions, abandoned the republic, supplanted each other, and
finally vanished in the presence of a soldier. From an obscure
origin, Romanus Lecapenus had raised himself to the command of
the naval armies; and in the anarchy of the times, had deserved,
or at least had obtained, the national esteem. With a victorious
and affectionate fleet, he sailed from the mouth of the Danube
into the harbor of Constantinople, and was hailed as the
deliverer of the people, and the guardian of the prince. His
supreme office was at first defined by the new appellation of
father of the emperor; but Romanus soon disdained the subordinate
powers of a minister, and assumed with the titles of Cæsar
and Augustus, the full independence of royalty, which he held
near five-and-twenty years. His three sons, Christopher, Stephen,
and Constantine were successively adorned with the same honors,
and the lawful emperor was degraded from the first to the fifth
rank in this college of princes. Yet, in the preservation of his
life and crown, he might still applaud his own fortune and the
clemency of the usurper. The examples of ancient and modern
history would have excused the ambition of Romanus: the powers
and the laws of the empire were in his hand; the spurious birth
of Constantine would have justified his exclusion; and the grave
or the monastery was open to receive the son of the concubine.
But Lecapenus does not appear to have possessed either the
virtues or the vices of a tyrant. The spirit and activity of his
private life dissolved away in the sunshine of the throne; and in
his licentious pleasures, he forgot the safety both of the
republic and of his family. Of a mild and religious character, he
respected the sanctity of oaths, the innocence of the youth, the
memory of his parents, and the attachment of the people. The
studious temper and retirement of Constantine disarmed the
jealousy of power: his books and music, his pen and his pencil,
were a constant source of amusement; and if he could improve a
scanty allowance by the sale of his pictures, if their price was
not enhanced by the name of the artist, he was endowed with a
personal talent, which few princes could employ in the hour of
adversity.
The fall of Romanus was occasioned by his own vices and those
of his children. After the decease of Christopher, his eldest
son, the two surviving brothers quarrelled with each other, and
conspired against their father. At the hour of noon, when all
strangers were regularly excluded from the palace, they entered
his apartment with an armed force, and conveyed him, in the habit
of a monk, to a small island in the Propontis, which was peopled
by a religious community. The rumor of this domestic revolution
excited a tumult in the city; but Porphyrogenitus alone, the true
and lawful emperor, was the object of the public care; and the
sons of Lecapenus were taught, by tardy experience, that they had
achieved a guilty and perilous enterprise for the benefit of
their rival. Their sister Helena, the wife of Constantine,
revealed, or supposed, their treacherous design of assassinating
her husband at the royal banquet. His loyal adherents were
alarmed, and the two usurpers were prevented, seized, degraded
from the purple, and embarked for the same island and monastery
where their father had been so lately confined. Old Romanus met
them on the beach with a sarcastic smile, and, after a just
reproach of their folly and ingratitude, presented his Imperial
colleagues with an equal share of his water and vegetable diet.
In the fortieth year of his reign, Constantine the Seventh
obtained the possession of the Eastern world, which he ruled or
seemed to rule, near fifteen years. But he was devoid of that
energy of character which could emerge into a life of action and
glory; and the studies, which had amused and dignified his
leisure, were incompatible with the serious duties of a
sovereign. The emperor neglected the practice to instruct his son
Romanus in the theory of government; while he indulged the habits
of intemperance and sloth, he dropped the reins of the
administration into the hands of Helena his wife; and, in the
shifting scene of her favor and caprice, each minister was
regretted in the promotion of a more worthless successor. Yet the
birth and misfortunes of Constantine had endeared him to the
Greeks; they excused his failings; they respected his learning,
his innocence, and charity, his love of justice; and the ceremony
of his funeral was mourned with the unfeigned tears of his
subjects. The body, according to ancient custom, lay in state in
the vestibule of the palace; and the civil and military officers,
the patricians, the senate, and the clergy approached in due
order to adore and kiss the inanimate corpse of their sovereign.
Before the procession moved towards the Imperial sepulchre, a
herald proclaimed this awful admonition: "Arise, O king of the
world, and obey the summons of the King of kings!"
The death of Constantine was imputed to poison; and his son
Romanus, who derived that name from his maternal grandfather,
ascended the throne of Constantinople. A prince who, at the age
of twenty, could be suspected of anticipating his inheritance,
must have been already lost in the public esteem; yet Romanus was
rather weak than wicked; and the largest share of the guilt was
transferred to his wife, Theophano, a woman of base origin
masculine spirit, and flagitious manners. The sense of personal
glory and public happiness, the true pleasures of royalty, were
unknown to the son of Constantine; and, while the two brothers,
Nicephorus and Leo, triumphed over the Saracens, the hours which
the emperor owed to his people were consumed in strenuous
idleness. In the morning he visited the circus; at noon he
feasted the senators; the greater part of the afternoon he spent
in the sphristerium, or tennis-court,
the only theatre of his victories; from thence he passed over to
the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus, hunted and killed four wild
boars of the largest size, and returned to the palace, proudly
content with the labors of the day. In strength and beauty he was
conspicuous above his equals: tall and straight as a young
cypress, his complexion was fair and florid, his eyes sparkling,
his shoulders broad, his nose long and aquiline. Yet even these
perfections were insufficient to fix the love of Theophano; and,
after a reign of four * years, she mingled for her husband the
same deadly draught which she had composed for his father.
By his marriage with this impious woman, Romanus the younger
left two sons, Basil the Second and Constantine the Ninth, and
two daughters, Theophano and Anne. The eldest sister was given to
Otho the Second, emperor of the West; the younger became the wife
of Wolodomir, great duke and apostle of Russia, and by the
marriage of her granddaughter with Henry the First, king of
France, the blood of the Macedonians, and perhaps of the
Arsacides, still flows in the veins of the Bourbon line. After
the death of her husband, the empress aspired to reign in the
name of her sons, the elder of whom was five, and the younger
only two, years of age; but she soon felt the instability of a
throne which was supported by a female who could not be esteemed,
and two infants who could not be feared. Theophano looked around
for a protector, and threw herself into the arms of the bravest
soldier; her heart was capacious; but the deformity of the new
favorite rendered it more than probable that interest was the
motive and excuse of her love. Nicephorus Phocus united, in the
popular opinion, the double merit of a hero and a saint. In the
former character, his qualifications were genuine and splendid:
the descendant of a race illustrious by their military exploits,
he had displayed in every station and in every province the
courage of a soldier and the conduct of a chief; and Nicephorus
was crowned with recent laurels, from the important conquest of
the Isle of Crete. His religion was of a more ambiguous cast; and
his hair-cloth, his fasts, his pious idiom, and his wish to
retire from the business of the world, were a convenient mask for
his dark and dangerous ambition. Yet he imposed on a holy
patriarch, by whose influence, and by a decree of the senate, he
was intrusted, during the minority of the young princes, with the
absolute and independent command of the Oriental armies. As soon
as he had secured the leaders and the troops, he boldly marched
to Constantinople, trampled on his enemies, avowed his
correspondence with the empress, and without degrading her sons,
assumed, with the title of Augustus, the preeminence of rank and
the plenitude of power. But his marriage with Theophano was
refused by the same patriarch who had placed the crown on his
head: by his second nuptials he incurred a year of canonical
penance; * a bar of spiritual affinity was opposed to their
celebration; and some evasion and perjury were required to
silence the scruples of the clergy and people. The popularity of
the emperor was lost in the purple: in a reign of six years he
provoked the hatred of strangers and subjects: and the hypocrisy
and avarice of the first Nicephorus were revived in his
successor. Hypocrisy I shall never justify or palliate; but I
will dare to observe, that the odious vice of avarice is of all
others most hastily arraigned, and most unmercifully condemned.
In a private citizen, our judgment seldom expects an accurate
scrutiny into his fortune and expense; and in a steward of the
public treasure, frugality is always a virtue, and the increase
of taxes too often an indispensable duty. In the use of his
patrimony, the generous temper of Nicephorus had been proved; and
the revenue was strictly applied to the service of the state:
each spring the emperor marched in person against the Saracens;
and every Roman might compute the employment of his taxes in
triumphs, conquests, and the security of the Eastern barrier.
Chapter XLVIII: Succession And Characters Of The
Greek Emperors. -- Part IV.
Among the warriors who promoted his elevation, and served
under his standard, a noble and valiant Armenian had deserved and
obtained the most eminent rewards. The stature of John Zimisces
was below the ordinary standard: but this diminutive body was
endowed with strength, beauty, and the soul of a hero. By the
jealousy of the emperor's brother, he was degraded from the
office of general of the East, to that of director of the posts,
and his murmurs were chastised with disgrace and exile. But
Zimisces was ranked among the numerous lovers of the empress: on
her intercession, he was permitted to reside at Chalcedon, in the
neighborhood of the capital: her bounty was repaid in his
clandestine and amorous visits to the palace; and Theophano
consented, with alacrity, to the death of an ugly and penurious
husband. Some bold and trusty conspirators were concealed in her
most private chambers: in the darkness of a winter night,
Zimisces, with his principal companions, embarked in a small
boat, traversed the Bosphorus, landed at the palace stairs, and
silently ascended a ladder of ropes, which was cast down by the
female attendants. Neither his own suspicions, nor the warnings
of his friends, nor the tardy aid of his brother Leo, nor the
fortress which he had erected in the palace, could protect
Nicephorus from a domestic foe, at whose voice every door was
open to the assassins. As he slept on a bear-skin on the ground,
he was roused by their noisy intrusion, and thirty daggers
glittered before his eyes. It is doubtful whether Zimisces
imbrued his hands in the blood of his sovereign; but he enjoyed
the inhuman spectacle of revenge. * The murder was protracted by
insult and cruelty: and as soon as the head of Nicephorus was
shown from the window, the tumult was hushed, and the Armenian
was emperor of the East. On the day of his coronation, he was
stopped on the threshold of St. Sophia, by the intrepid
patriarch; who charged his conscience with the deed of treason
and blood; and required, as a sign of repentance, that he should
separate himself from his more criminal associate. This sally of
apostolic zeal was not offensive to the prince, since he could
neither love nor trust a woman who had repeatedly violated the
most sacred obligations; and Theophano, instead of sharing his
imperial fortune, was dismissed with ignominy from his bed and
palace. In their last interview, she displayed a frantic and
impotent rage; accused the ingratitude of her lover; assaulted,
with words and blows, her son Basil, as he stood silent and
submissive in the presence of a superior colleague; and avowed
her own prostitution in proclaiming the illegitimacy of his
birth. The public indignation was appeased by her exile, and the
punishment of the meaner accomplices: the death of an unpopular
prince was forgiven; and the guilt of Zimisces was forgotten in
the splendor of his virtues. Perhaps his profusion was less
useful to the state than the avarice of Nicephorus; but his
gentle and generous behavior delighted all who approached his
person; and it was only in the paths of victory that he trod in
the footsteps of his predecessor. The greatest part of his reign
was employed in the camp and the field: his personal valor and
activity were signalized on the Danube and the Tigris, the
ancient boundaries of the Roman world; and by his double triumph
over the Russians and the Saracens, he deserved the titles of
savior of the empire, and conqueror of the East. In his last
return from Syria, he observed that the most fruitful lands of
his new provinces were possessed by the eunuchs. "And is it for
them," he exclaimed, with honest indignation, "that we have
fought and conquered? Is it for them that we shed our blood, and
exhaust the treasures of our people?" The complaint was
reëchoed to the palace, and the death of Zimisces is
strongly marked with the suspicion of poison.
Under this usurpation, or regency, of twelve years, the two
lawful emperors, Basil and Constantine, had silently grown to the
age of manhood. Their tender years had been incapable of
dominion: the respectful modesty of their attendance and
salutation was due to the age and merit of their guardians; the
childless ambition of those guardians had no temptation to
violate their right of succession: their patrimony was ably and
faithfully administered; and the premature death of Zimisces was
a loss, rather than a benefit, to the sons of Romanus. Their want
of experience detained them twelve years longer the obscure and
voluntary pupils of a minister, who extended his reign by
persuading them to indulge the pleasures of youth, and to disdain
the labors of government. In this silken web, the weakness of
Constantine was forever entangled; but his elder brother felt the
impulse of genius and the desire of action; he frowned, and the
minister was no more. Basil was the acknowledged sovereign of
Constantinople and the provinces of Europe; but Asia was
oppressed by two veteran generals, Phocas and Sclerus, who,
alternately friends and enemies, subjects and rebels, maintained
their independence, and labored to emulate the example of
successful usurpation. Against these domestic enemies the son of
Romanus first drew his sword, and they trembled in the presence
of a lawful and high-spirited prince. The first, in the front of
battle, was thrown from his horse, by the stroke of poison, or an
arrow; the second, who had been twice loaded with chains, * and
twice invested with the purple, was desirous of ending in peace
the small remainder of his days. As the aged suppliant approached
the throne, with dim eyes and faltering steps, leaning on his two
attendants, the emperor exclaimed, in the insolence of youth and
power, "And is this the man who has so long been the object of
our terror?" After he had confirmed his own authority, and the
peace of the empire, the trophies of Nicephorus and Zimisces
would not suffer their royal pupil to sleep in the palace. His
long and frequent expeditions against the Saracens were rather
glorious than useful to the empire; but the final destruction of
the kingdom of Bulgaria appears, since the time of Belisarius,
the most important triumph of the Roman arms. Yet, instead of
applauding their victorious prince, his subjects detested the
rapacious and rigid avarice of Basil; and in the imperfect
narrative of his exploits, we can only discern the courage,
patience, and ferociousness of a soldier. A vicious education,
which could not subdue his spirit, had clouded his mind; he was
ignorant of every science; and the remembrance of his learned and
feeble grandsire might encourage his real or affected contempt of
laws and lawyers, of artists and arts. Of such a character, in
such an age, superstition took a firm and lasting possession;
after the first license of his youth, Basil the Second devoted
his life, in the palace and the camp, to the penance of a hermit,
wore the monastic habit under his robes and armor, observed a vow
of continence, and imposed on his appetites a perpetual
abstinence from wine and flesh. In the sixty-eighth year of his
age, his martial spirit urged him to embark in person ferso the
clergy and the curse of the people. After his decease, his
brother Constantine enjoyed, about three years, the power,
ersrather the pleasures, of royalty; and his only care was the
settlement of the succession. He had enjoyed sixty-six years the
title of Augustus; and the reign of the two brothers is the
longest, and most obscure, of the Byzantine history.
A lineal succession of five emperors, in a period of one
hundred and sixty years, had attached the loyalty of the Greeks
to the Macedonian dynasty, which had been thrice respected by the
usurpers of their power. After the death of Constantine the
Ninth, the last male of the royal race, a new and broken scene
presents itself, and the accumulated years of twelve emperors do
not equal the space of his single reign. His elder brother had
preferred his private chastity to the public interest, and
Constantine himself had only three daughters; Eudocia, who took
the veil, and Zoe and Theodora, who were preserved till a mature
age in a state of ignorance and virginity. When their marriage
was discussed in the council of their dying father, the cold
erspious Theodora refused to give an heir to the empire, but her
sister Zoe presented herself a willing victim at the altar.
Romanus Argyrus, a patrician of a graceful person and fair
reputation, was chosen fersher husband, and, on his declining
thatat blindness or death was the second alternative. The motive
of his reluctance was conjugal affection but his faithful wife
sacrificed her own happiness to his safety and greatness; and her
entrance into a monastery removed the only bar to the Imperial
nuptials. After the decease of Constantine, the sceptre devolved
to Romanus the Third; but his labors at the indulgence of
pleasure. Her favorite chamberlain was a handsome Paphlagonian of
the name of Michael, whose first trade had been that of a
money-changer; and Romanus, either from gratitude ersequity,
connived at their criminal intercourse, ersaccepted a slight
assurance of their innocence. But Zoe soon justified the Roman
maxim, that every adulteress is capable of poisoning her husband;
and the death of Romanus was instantly followed by the scandalous
marriage and elevation of Michael the Fourth. The expectations of
Zoe were, however, disappointed: instead of a vigorous and
grateful lover, she had placed in her bed a miserable wretch,
whose health and reason were impaired by epileptic fits, and
whose conscience was tormented by despair and remorse. The most
skilful physicians of the mind and body were summoned to his aid;
and his hopes were amused by frequent pilgrimages to the baths,
and to the tombs of the most popular saints; the monks applauded
his penance, and, except restitution, (but to whom should he have
restored?) Michael sought every method of expiating his guilt.
While he groaned and prayed in sackcloth and ashes, his brother,
the eunuch John, smiled at his remorse, and enjoyed the harvest
of a crime of which himself was the secret and most guilty
author. His administration was only the art of satiating his
avarice, and Zoe became a captive in the palace of her fathers,
and in the hands of her slaves. When he perceived the
irretrievable decline of his brother's health, he introduced his
nephew, another Michael, who derived his surname of Calaphates
from his father's occupation in the careening of vessels: at the
command of the eunuch, Zoe adopted for her son the son of a
mechanic; and this fictitious heir was invested with the title
and purple of the Cæsars, in the presence of the senate and
clergy. So feeble was the character of Zoe, that she was
oppressed by the liberty and power which she recovered by the
death of the Paphlagonian; and at the end of four days, she
placed the crown on the head of Michael the Fifth, who had
protested, with tears and oaths, that he should ever reign the
first and most obedient of her subjects. The only act of his
short reign was his base ingratitude to his benefactors, the
eunuch and the empress. The disgrace of the former was pleasing
to the public: but the murmurs, and at length the clamors, of
Constantinople deplored the exile of Zoe, the daughter of so many
emperors; her vices were forgotten, and Michael was taught, that
there is a period in which the patience of the tamest slaves
rises into fury and revenge. The citizens of every degree
assembled in a formidable tumult which lasted three days; they
besieged the palace, forced the gates, recalled their
mothers, Zoe from her prison, Theodora
from her monastery, and condemned the son of Calaphates to the
loss of his eyes or of his life. For the first time the Greeks
beheld with surprise the two royal sisters seated on the same
throne, presiding in the senate, and giving audience to the
ambassadors of the nations. But the singular union subsisted no
more than two months; the two sovereigns, their tempers,
interests, and adherents, were secretly hostile to each other;
and as Theodora was still averse to marriage, the indefatigable
Zoe, at the age of sixty, consented, for the public good, to
sustain the embraces of a third husband, and the censures of the
Greek church. His name and number were Constantine the Tenth, and
the epithet of Monomachus, the single
combatant, must have been expressive of his valor and victory in
some public or private quarrel. But his health was broken by the
tortures of the gout, and his dissolute reign was spent in the
alternative of sickness and pleasure. A fair and noble widow had
accompanied Constantine in his exile to the Isle of Lesbos, and
Sclerena gloried in the appellation of his mistress. After his
marriage and elevation, she was invested with the title and pomp
of Augusta, and occupied a contiguous
apartment in the palace. The lawful consort (such was the
delicacy or corruption of Zoe) consented to this strange and
scandalous partition; and the emperor appeared in public between
his wife and his concubine. He survived them both; but the last
measures of Constantine to change the order of succession were
prevented by the more vigilant friends of Theodora; and after his
decease, she resumed, with the general consent, the possession of
her inheritance. In her name, and by the influence of four
eunuchs, the Eastern world was peaceably governed about nineteen
months; and as they wished to prolong their dominion, they
persuaded the aged princess to nominate for her successor Michael
the Sixth. The surname of Stratioticus
declares his military profession; but the crazy and decrepit
veteran could only see with the eyes, and execute with the hands,
of his ministers. Whilst he ascended the throne, Theodora sunk
into the grave; the last of the Macedonian or Basilian dynasty. I
have hastily reviewed, and gladly dismiss, this shameful and
destructive period of twenty-eight years, in which the Greeks,
degraded below the common level of servitude, were transferred
like a herd of cattle by the choice or caprice of two impotent
females.
From this night of slavery, a ray of freedom, or at least of
spirit, begins to emerge: the Greeks either preserved or revived
the use of surnames, which perpetuate the fame of hereditary
virtue: and we now discern the rise, succession, and alliances of
the last dynasties of Constantinople and Trebizond. The
Comneni, who upheld for a while the
fate of the sinking empire, assumed the honor of a Roman origin:
but the family had been long since transported from Italy to
Asia. Their patrimonial estate was situate in the district of
Castamona, in the neighborhood of the Euxine; and one of their
chiefs, who had already entered the paths of ambition, revisited
with affection, perhaps with regret, the modest though honorable
dwelling of his fathers. The first of their line was the
illustrious Manuel, who in the reign of the second Basil,
contributed by war and treaty to appease the troubles of the
East: he left, in a tender age, two sons, Isaac and John, whom,
with the consciousness of desert, he bequeathed to the gratitude
and favor of his sovereign. The noble youths were carefully
trained in the learning of the monastery, the arts of the palace,
and the exercises of the camp: and from the domestic service of
the guards, they were rapidly promoted to the command of
provinces and armies. Their fraternal union doubled the force and
reputation of the Comneni, and their ancient nobility was
illustrated by the marriage of the two brothers, with a captive
princess of Bulgaria, and the daughter of a patrician, who had
obtained the name of Charon from the
number of enemies whom he had sent to the infernal shades. The
soldiers had served with reluctant loyalty a series of effeminate
masters; the elevation of Michael the Sixth was a personal insult
to the more deserving generals; and their discontent was inflamed
by the parsimony of the emperor and the insolence of the eunuchs.
They secretly assembled in the sanctuary of St. Sophia, and the
votes of the military synod would have been unanimous in favor of
the old and valiant Catacalon, if the patriotism or modesty of
the veteran had not suggested the importance of birth as well as
merit in the choice of a sovereign. Isaac Comnenus was approved
by general consent, and the associates separated without delay to
meet in the plains of Phrygia at the head of their respective
squadrons and detachments. The cause of Michael was defended in a
single battle by the mercenaries of the Imperial guard, who were
aliens to the public interest, and animated only by a principle
of honor and gratitude. After their defeat, the fears of the
emperor solicited a treaty, which was almost accepted by the
moderation of the Comnenian. But the former was betrayed by his
ambassadors, and the latter was prevented by his friends. The
solitary Michael submitted to the voice of the people; the
patriarch annulled their oath of allegiance; and as he shaved the
head of the royal monk, congratulated his beneficial exchange of
temporal royalty for the kingdom of heaven; an exchange, however,
which the priest, on his own account, would probably have
declined. By the hands of the same patriarch, Isaac Comnenus was
solemnly crowned; the sword which he inscribed on his coins might
be an offensive symbol, if it implied his title by conquest; but
this sword would have been drawn against the foreign and domestic
enemies of the state. The decline of his health and vigor
suspended the operation of active virtue; and the prospect of
approaching death determined him to interpose some moments
between life and eternity. But instead of leaving the empire as
the marriage portion of his daughter, his reason and inclination
concurred in the preference of his brother John, a soldier, a
patriot, and the father of five sons, the future pillars of an
hereditary succession. His first modest reluctance might be the
natural dictates of discretion and tenderness, but his obstinate
and successful perseverance, however it may dazzle with the show
of virtue, must be censured as a criminal desertion of his duty,
and a rare offence against his family and country. The purple
which he had refused was accepted by Constantine Ducas, a friend
of the Comnenian house, and whose noble birth was adorned with
the experience and reputation of civil policy. In the monastic
habit, Isaac recovered his health, and survived two years his
voluntary abdication. At the command of his abbot, he observed
the rule of St. Basil, and executed the most servile offices of
the convent: but his latent vanity was gratified by the frequent
and respectful visits of the reigning monarch, who revered in his
person the character of a benefactor and a saint.
If Constantine the Eleventh were indeed the subject most
worthy of empire, we must pity the debasement of the age and
nation in which he was chosen. In the labor of puerile
declamations he sought, without obtaining, the crown of
eloquence, more precious, in his opinion, than that of Rome; and
in the subordinate functions of a judge, he forgot the duties of
a sovereign and a warrior. Far from imitating the patriotic
indifference of the authors of his greatness, Ducas was anxious
only to secure, at the expense of the republic, the power and
prosperity of his children. His three sons, Michael the Seventh,
Andronicus the First, and Constantine the Twelfth, were invested,
in a tender age, with the equal title of Augustus; and the
succession was speedily opened by their father's death. His
widow, Eudocia, was intrusted with the administration; but
experience had taught the jealousy of the dying monarch to
protect his sons from the danger of her second nuptials; and her
solemn engagement, attested by the principal senators, was
deposited in the hands of the patriarch. Before the end of seven
months, the wants of Eudocia, or those of the state, called aloud
for the male virtues of a soldier; and her heart had already
chosen Romanus Diogenes, whom she raised from the scaffold to the
throne. The discovery of a treasonable attempt had exposed him to
the severity of the laws: his beauty and valor absolved him in
the eyes of the empress; and Romanus, from a mild exile, was
recalled on the second day to the command of the Oriental armies.
Her royal choice was yet unknown to the public; and the promise
which would have betrayed her falsehood and levity, was stolen by
a dexterous emissary from the ambition of the patriarch. Xiphilin
at first alleged the sanctity of oaths, and the sacred nature of
a trust; but a whisper, that his brother was the future emperor,
relaxed his scruples, and forced him to confess that the public
safety was the supreme law. He resigned the important paper; and
when his hopes were confounded by the nomination of Romanus, he
could no longer regain his security, retract his declarations,
nor oppose the second nuptials of the empress. Yet a murmur was
heard in the palace; and the Barbarian guards had raised their
battle-axes in the cause of the house of Lucas, till the young
princes were soothed by the tears of their mother and the solemn
assurances of the fidelity of their guardian, who filled the
Imperial station with dignity and honor. Hereafter I shall relate
his valiant, but unsuccessful, efforts to resist the progress of
the Turks. His defeat and captivity inflicted a deadly wound on
the Byzantine monarchy of the East; and after he was released
from the chains of the sultan, he vainly sought his wife and his
subjects. His wife had been thrust into a monastery, and the
subjects of Romanus had embraced the rigid maxim of the civil
law, that a prisoner in the hands of the enemy is deprived, as by
the stroke of death, of all the public and private rights of a
citizen. In the general consternation, the Cæsar John
asserted the indefeasible right of his three nephews:
Constantinople listened to his voice: and the Turkish captive was
proclaimed in the capital, and received on the frontier, as an
enemy of the republic. Romanus was not more fortunate in domestic
than in foreign war: the loss of two battles compelled him to
yield, on the assurance of fair and honorable treatment; but his
enemies were devoid of faith or humanity; and, after the cruel
extinction of his sight, his wounds were left to bleed and
corrupt, till in a few days he was relieved from a state of
misery. Under the triple reign of the house of Ducas, the two
younger brothers were reduced to the vain honors of the purple;
but the eldest, the pusillanimous Michael, was incapable of
sustaining the Roman sceptre; and his surname of
Parapinaces denotes the reproach which
he shared with an avaricious favorite, who enhanced the price,
and diminished the measure, of wheat. In the school of Psellus,
and after the example of his mother, the son of Eudocia made some
proficiency in philosophy and rhetoric; but his character was
degraded, rather than ennobled, by the virtues of a monk and the
learning of a sophist. Strong in the contempt of their sovereign
and their own esteem, two generals, at the head of the European
and Asiatic legions, assumed the purple at Adrianople and Nice.
Their revolt was in the same months; they bore the same name of
Nicephorus; but the two candidates were distinguished by the
surnames of Bryennius and Botaniates; the former in the maturity
of wisdom and courage, the latter conspicuous only by the memory
of his past exploits. While Botaniates advanced with cautious and
dilatory steps, his active competitor stood in arms before the
gates of Constantinople. The name of Bryennius was illustrious;
his cause was popular; but his licentious troops could not be
restrained from burning and pillaging a suburb; and the people,
who would have hailed the rebel, rejected and repulsed the
incendiary of his country. This change of the public opinion was
favorable to Botaniates, who at length, with an army of Turks,
approached the shores of Chalcedon. A formal invitation, in the
name of the patriarch, the synod, and the senate, was circulated
through the streets of Constantinople; and the general assembly,
in the dome of St. Sophia, debated, with order and calmness, on
the choice of their sovereign. The guards of Michael would have
dispersed this unarmed multitude; but the feeble emperor,
applauding his own moderation and clemency, resigned the ensigns
of royalty, and was rewarded with the monastic habit, and the
title of Archbishop of Ephesus. He left a son, a Constantine,
born and educated in the purple; and a daughter of the house of
Ducas illustrated the blood, and confirmed the succession, of the
Comnenian dynasty.
John Comnenus, the brother of the emperor Isaac, survived in
peace and dignity his generous refusal of the sceptre. By his
wife Anne, a woman of masculine spirit and a policy, he left
eight children: the three daughters multiplied the Comnenian
alliance with the noblest of the Greeks: of the five sons, Manuel
was stopped by a premature death; Isaac and Alexius restored the
Imperial greatness of their house, which was enjoyed without toil
or danger by the two younger brethren, Adrian and Nicephorus.
Alexius, the third and most illustrious of the brothers was
endowed by nature with the choicest gifts both of mind and body:
they were cultivated by a liberal education, and exercised in the
school of obedience and adversity. The youth was dismissed from
the perils of the Turkish war, by the paternal care of the
emperor Romanus: but the mother of the Comneni, with her aspiring
face, was accused of treason, and banished, by the sons of Ducas,
to an island in the Propontis. The two brothers soon emerged into
favor and action, fought by each other's side against the rebels
and Barbarians, and adhered to the emperor Michael, till he was
deserted by the world and by himself. In his first interview with
Botaniates, "Prince," said Alexius with a noble frankness, "my
duty rendered me your enemy; the decrees of God and of the people
have made me your subject. Judge of my future loyalty by my past
opposition." The successor of Michael entertained him with esteem
and confidence: his valor was employed against three rebels, who
disturbed the peace of the empire, or at least of the emperors.
Ursel, Bryennius, and Basilacius, were formidable by their
numerous forces and military fame: they were successively
vanquished in the field, and led in chains to the foot of the
throne; and whatever treatment they might receive from a timid
and cruel court, they applauded the clemency, as well as the
courage, of their conqueror. But the loyalty of the Comneni was
soon tainted by fear and suspicion; nor is it easy to settle
between a subject and a despot, the debt of gratitude, which the
former is tempted to claim by a revolt, and the latter to
discharge by an executioner. The refusal of Alexius to march
against a fourth rebel, the husband of his sister, destroyed the
merit or memory of his past services: the favorites of Botaniates
provoked the ambition which they apprehended and accused; and the
retreat of the two brothers might be justified by the defence of
their life and liberty. The women of the family were deposited in
a sanctuary, respected by tyrants: the men, mounted on horseback,
sallied from the city, and erected the standard of civil war. The
soldiers who had been gradually assembled in the capital and the
neighborhood, were devoted to the cause of a victorious and
injured leader: the ties of common interest and domestic alliance
secured the attachment of the house of Ducas; and the generous
dispute of the Comneni was terminated by the decisive resolution
of Isaac, who was the first to invest his younger brother with
the name and ensigns of royalty. They returned to Constantinople,
to threaten rather than besiege that impregnable fortress; but
the fidelity of the guards was corrupted; a gate was surprised,
and the fleet was occupied by the active courage of George
Palæologus, who fought against his father, without
foreseeing that he labored for his posterity. Alexius ascended
the throne; and his aged competitor disappeared in a monastery.
An army of various nations was gratified with the pillage of the
city; but the public disorders were expiated by the tears and
fasts of the Comneni, who submitted to every penance compatible
with the possession of the empire.
The life of the emperor Alexius has been delineated by a
favorite daughter, who was inspired by a tender regard for his
person and a laudable zeal to perpetuate his virtues. Conscious
of the just suspicions of her readers, the princess Anna Comnena
repeatedly protests, that, besides her personal knowledge, she
had searched the discourses and writings of the most respectable
veterans: and after an interval of thirty years, forgotten by,
and forgetful of, the world, her mournful solitude was
inaccessible to hope and fear; and that truth, the naked perfect
truth, was more dear and sacred than the memory of her parent.
Yet, instead of the simplicity of style and narrative which wins
our belief, an elaborate affectation of rhetoric and science
betrays in every page the vanity of a female author. The genuine
character of Alexius is lost in a vague constellation of virtues;
and the perpetual strain of panegyric and apology awakens our
jealousy, to question the veracity of the historian and the merit
of the hero. We cannot, however, refuse her judicious and
important remark, that the disorders of the times were the
misfortune and the glory of Alexius; and that every calamity
which can afflict a declining empire was accumulated on his reign
by the justice of Heaven and the vices of his predecessors. In
the East, the victorious Turks had spread, from Persia to the
Hellespont, the reign of the Koran and the Crescent: the West was
invaded by the adventurous valor of the Normans; and, in the
moments of peace, the Danube poured forth new swarms, who had
gained, in the science of war, what they had lost in the
ferociousness of manners. The sea was not less hostile than the
land; and while the frontiers were assaulted by an open enemy,
the palace was distracted with secret treason and conspiracy. On
a sudden, the banner of the Cross was displayed by the Latins;
Europe was precipitated on Asia; and Constantinople had almost
been swept away by this impetuous deluge. In the tempest, Alexius
steered the Imperial vessel with dexterity and courage. At the
head of his armies, he was bold in action, skilful in stratagem,
patient of fatigue, ready to improve his advantages, and rising
from his defeats with inexhaustible vigor. The discipline of the
camp was revived, and a new generation of men and soldiers was
created by the example and precepts of their leader. In his
intercourse with the Latins, Alexius was patient and artful: his
discerning eye pervaded the new system of an unknown world and I
shall hereafter describe the superior policy with which he
balanced the interests and passions of the champions of the first
crusade. In a long reign of thirty-seven years, he subdued and
pardoned the envy of his equals: the laws of public and private
order were restored: the arts of wealth and science were
cultivated: the limits of the empire were enlarged in Europe and
Asia; and the Comnenian sceptre was transmitted to his children
of the third and fourth generation. Yet the difficulties of the
times betrayed some defects in his character; and have exposed
his memory to some just or ungenerous reproach. The reader may
possibly smile at the lavish praise which his daughter so often
bestows on a flying hero: the weakness or prudence of his
situation might be mistaken for a want of personal courage; and
his political arts are branded by the Latins with the names of
deceit and dissimulation. The increase of the male and female
branches of his family adorned the throne, and secured the
succession; but their princely luxury and pride offended the
patricians, exhausted the revenue, and insulted the misery of the
people. Anna is a faithful witness that his happiness was
destroyed, and his health was broken, by the cares of a public
life; the patience of Constantinople was fatigued by the length
and severity of his reign; and before Alexius expired, he had
lost the love and reverence of his subjects. The clergy could not
forgive his application of the sacred riches to the defence of
the state; but they applauded his theological learning and ardent
zeal for the orthodox faith, which he defended with his tongue,
his pen, and his sword. His character was degraded by the
superstition of the Greeks; and the same inconsistent principle
of human nature enjoined the emperor to found a hospital for the
poor and infirm, and to direct the execution of a heretic, who
was burned alive in the square of St. Sophia. Even the sincerity
of his moral and religious virtues was suspected by the persons
who had passed their lives in his familiar confidence. In his
last hours, when he was pressed by his wife Irene to alter the
succession, he raised his head, and breathed a pious ejaculation
on the vanity of this world. The indignant reply of the empress
may be inscribed as an epitaph on his tomb, "You die, as you have
lived -- a Hypocrite!"
It was the wish of Irene to supplant the eldest of her
surviving sons, in favor of her daughter the princess Anne whose
philosophy would not have refused the weight of a diadem. But the
order of male succession was asserted by the friends of their
country; the lawful heir drew the royal signet from the finger of
his insensible or conscious father and the empire obeyed the
master of the palace. Anna Comnena was stimulated by ambition and
revenge to conspire against the life of her brother, and when the
design was prevented by the fears or scruples of her husband, she
passionately exclaimed that nature had mistaken the two sexes,
and had endowed Bryennius with the soul of a woman. The two sons
of Alexius, John and Isaac, maintained the fraternal concord, the
hereditary virtue of their race, and the younger brother was
content with the title of
Sebastocrator, which approached the
dignity, without sharing the power, of the emperor. In the same
person the claims of primogeniture and merit were fortunately
united; his swarthy complexion, harsh features, and diminutive
stature, had suggested the ironical surname of Calo-Johannes, or
John the Handsome, which his grateful subjects more seriously
applied to the beauties of his mind. After the discovery of her
treason, the life and fortune of Anne were justly forfeited to
the laws. Her life was spared by the clemency of the emperor; but
he visited the pomp and treasures of her palace, and bestowed the
rich confiscation on the most deserving of his friends. That
respectable friend Axuch, a slave of Turkish extraction, presumed
to decline the gift, and to intercede for the criminal: his
generous master applauded and imitated the virtue of his
favorite, and the reproach or complaint of an injured brother was
the only chastisement of the guilty princess. After this example
of clemency, the remainder of his reign was never disturbed by
conspiracy or rebellion: feared by his nobles, beloved by his
people, John was never reduced to the painful necessity of
punishing, or even of pardoning, his personal enemies. During his
government of twenty-five years, the penalty of death was
abolished in the Roman empire, a law of mercy most delightful to
the humane theorist, but of which the practice, in a large and
vicious community, is seldom consistent with the public safety.
Severe to himself, indulgent to others, chaste, frugal,
abstemious, the philosophic Marcus would not have disdained the
artless virtues of his successor, derived from his heart, and not
borrowed from the schools. He despised and moderated the stately
magnificence of the Byzantine court, so oppressive to the people,
so contemptible to the eye of reason. Under such a prince,
innocence had nothing to fear, and merit had every thing to hope;
and, without assuming the tyrannic office of a censor, he
introduced a gradual though visible reformation in the public and
private manners of Constantinople. The only defect of this
accomplished character was the frailty of noble minds, the love
of arms and military glory. Yet the frequent expeditions of John
the Handsome may be justified, at least in their principle, by
the necessity of repelling the Turks from the Hellespont and the
Bosphorus. The sultan of Iconium was confined to his capital, the
Barbarians were driven to the mountains, and the maritime
provinces of Asia enjoyed the transient blessings of their
deliverance. From Constantinople to Antioch and Aleppo, he
repeatedly marched at the head of a victorious army, and in the
sieges and battles of this holy war, his Latin allies were
astonished by the superior spirit and prowess of a Greek. As he
began to indulge the ambitious hope of restoring the ancient
limits of the empire, as he revolved in his mind, the Euphrates
and Tigris, the dominion of Syria, and the conquest of Jerusalem,
the thread of his life and of the public felicity was broken by a
singular accident. He hunted the wild boar in the valley of
Anazarbus, and had fixed his javelin in the body of the furious
animal; but in the struggle a poisoned arrow dropped from his
quiver, and a slight wound in his hand, which produced a
mortification, was fatal to the best and greatest of the
Comnenian princes.
Chapter XLVIII: Succession And Characters Of The
Greek Emperors. -- Part VI.
A premature death had swept away the two eldest sons of John
the Handsome; of the two survivors, Isaac and Manuel, his
judgment or affection preferred the younger; and the choice of
their dying prince was ratified by the soldiers, who had
applauded the valor of his favorite in the Turkish war The
faithful Axuch hastened to the capital, secured the person of
Isaac in honorable confinement, and purchased, with a gift of two
hundred pounds of silver, the leading ecclesiastics of St.
Sophia, who possessed a decisive voice in the consecration of an
emperor. With his veteran and affectionate troops, Manuel soon
visited Constantinople; his brother acquiesced in the title of
Sebastocrator; his subjects admired the lofty stature and martial
graces of their new sovereign, and listened with credulity to the
flattering promise, that he blended the wisdom of age with the
activity and vigor of youth. By the experience of his government,
they were taught, that he emulated the spirit, and shared the
talents, of his father whose social virtues were buried in the
grave. A reign of thirty seven years is filled by a perpetual
though various warfare against the Turks, the Christians, and the
hordes of the wilderness beyond the Danube. The arms of Manuel
were exercised on Mount Taurus, in the plains of Hungary, on the
coast of Italy and Egypt, and on the seas of Sicily and Greece:
the influence of his negotiations extended from Jerusalem to Rome
and Russia; and the Byzantine monarchy, for a while, became an
object of respect or terror to the powers of Asia and Europe.
Educated in the silk and purple of the East, Manuel possessed the
iron temper of a soldier, which cannot easily be paralleled,
except in the lives of Richard the First of England, and of
Charles the Twelfth of Sweden. Such was his strength and exercise
in arms, that Raymond, surnamed the Hercules of Antioch, was
incapable of wielding the lance and buckler of the Greek emperor.
In a famous tournament, he entered the lists on a fiery courser,
and overturned in his first career two of the stoutest of the
Italian knights. The first in the charge, the last in the
retreat, his friends and his enemies alike trembled, the former
for his safety, and the latter for their own. After posting an
ambuscade in a wood, he rode forwards in search of some perilous
adventure, accompanied only by his brother and the faithful
Axuch, who refused to desert their sovereign. Eighteen horsemen,
after a short combat, fled before them: but the numbers of the
enemy increased; the march of the reënforcement was tardy
and fearful, and Manuel, without receiving a wound, cut his way
through a squadron of five hundred Turks. In a battle against the
Hungarians, impatient of the slowness of his troops, he snatched
a standard from the head of the column, and was the first, almost
alone, who passed a bridge that separated him from the enemy. In
the same country, after transporting his army beyond the Save, he
sent back the boats, with an order under pain of death, to their
commander, that he should leave him to conquer or die on that
hostile land. In the siege of Corfu, towing after him a captive
galley, the emperor stood aloft on the poop, opposing against the
volleys of darts and stones, a large buckler and a flowing sail;
nor could he have escaped inevitable death, had not the Sicilian
admiral enjoined his archers to respect the person of a hero. In
one day, he is said to have slain above forty of the Barbarians
with his own hand; he returned to the camp, dragging along four
Turkish prisoners, whom he had tied to the rings of his saddle:
he was ever the foremost to provoke or to accept a single combat;
and the gigantic champions, who
encountered his arm, were transpierced by the lance, or cut
asunder by the sword, of the invincible Manuel. The story of his
exploits, which appear as a model or a copy of the romances of
chivalry, may induce a reasonable suspicion of the veracity of
the Greeks: I will not, to vindicate their credit, endanger my
own: yet I may observe, that, in the long series of their annals,
Manuel is the only prince who has been the subject of similar
exaggeration. With the valor of a soldier, he did no unite the
skill or prudence of a general; his victories were not productive
of any permanent or useful conquest; and his Turkish laurels were
blasted in his last unfortunate campaign, in which he lost his
army in the mountains of Pisidia, and owed his deliverance to the
generosity of the sultan. But the most singular feature in the
character of Manuel, is the contrast and vicissitude of labor and
sloth, of hardiness and effeminacy. In war he seemed ignorant of
peace, in peace he appeared incapable of war. In the field he
slept in the sun or in the snow, tired in the longest marches the
strength of his men and horses, and shared with a smile the
abstinence or diet of the camp. No sooner did he return to
Constantinople, than he resigned himself to the arts and
pleasures of a life of luxury: the expense of his dress, his
table, and his palace, surpassed the measure of his predecessors,
and whole summer days were idly wasted in the delicious isles of
the Propontis, in the incestuous love of his niece Theodora. The
double cost of a warlike and dissolute prince exhausted the
revenue, and multiplied the taxes; and Manuel, in the distress of
his last Turkish campaign, endured a bitter reproach from the
mouth of a desperate soldier. As he quenched his thirst, he
complained that the water of a fountain was mingled with
Christian blood. "It is not the first time," exclaimed a voice
from the crowd, "that you have drank, O emperor, the blood of
your Christian subjects." Manuel Comnenus was twice married, to
the virtuous Bertha or Irene of Germany, and to the beauteous
Maria, a French or Latin princess of Antioch. The only daughter
of his first wife was destined for Bela, a Hungarian prince, who
was educated at Constantinople under the name of Alexius; and the
consummation of their nuptials might have transferred the Roman
sceptre to a race of free and warlike Barbarians. But as soon as
Maria of Antioch had given a son and heir to the empire, the
presumptive rights of Bela were abolished, and he was deprived of
his promised bride; but the Hungarian prince resumed his name and
the kingdom of his fathers, and displayed such virtues as might
excite the regret and envy of the Greeks. The son of Maria was
named Alexius; and at the age of ten years he ascended the
Byzantine throne, after his father's decease had closed the
glories of the Comnenian line.
The fraternal concord of the two sons of the great Alexius had
been sometimes clouded by an opposition of interest and passion.
By ambition, Isaac the Sebastocrator was excited to flight and
rebellion, from whence he was reclaimed by the firmness and
clemency of John the Handsome. The errors of Isaac, the father of
the emperors of Trebizond, were short and venial; but John, the
elder of his sons, renounced forever his religion. Provoked by a
real or imaginary insult of his uncle, he escaped from the Roman
to the Turkish camp: his apostasy was rewarded with the sultan's
daughter, the title of Chelebi, or noble, and the inheritance of
a princely estate; and in the fifteenth century, Mahomet the
Second boasted of his Imperial descent from the Comnenian family.
Andronicus, the younger brother of John, son of Isaac, and
grandson of Alexius Comnenus, is one of the most conspicuous
characters of the age; and his genuine adventures might form the
subject of a very singular romance. To justify the choice of
three ladies of royal birth, it is incumbent on me to observe,
that their fortunate lover was cast in the best proportions of
strength and beauty; and that the want of the softer graces was
supplied by a manly countenance, a lofty stature, athletic
muscles, and the air and deportment of a soldier. The
preservation, in his old age, of health and vigor, was the reward
of temperance and exercise. A piece of bread and a draught of
water was often his sole and evening repast; and if he tasted of
a wild boar or a stag, which he had roasted with his own hands,
it was the well-earned fruit of a laborious chase. Dexterous in
arms, he was ignorant of fear; his persuasive eloquence could
bend to every situation and character of life, his style, though
not his practice, was fashioned by the example of St. Paul; and,
in every deed of mischief, he had a heart to resolve, a head to
contrive, and a hand to execute. In his youth, after the death of
the emperor John, he followed the retreat of the Roman army; but,
in the march through Asia Minor, design or accident tempted him
to wander in the mountains: the hunter was encompassed by the
Turkish huntsmen, and he remained some time a reluctant or
willing captive in the power of the sultan. His virtues and vices
recommended him to the favor of his cousin: he shared the perils
and the pleasures of Manuel; and while the emperor lived in
public incest with his niece Theodora, the affections of her
sister Eudocia were seduced and enjoyed by Andronicus. Above the
decencies of her sex and rank, she gloried in the name of his
concubine; and both the palace and the camp could witness that
she slept, or watched, in the arms of her lover. She accompanied
him to his military command of Cilicia, the first scene of his
valor and imprudence. He pressed, with active ardor, the siege of
Mopsuestia: the day was employed in the boldest attacks; but the
night was wasted in song and dance; and a band of Greek comedians
formed the choicest part of his retinue. Andronicus was surprised
by the sally of a vigilant foe; but, while his troops fled in
disorder, his invincible lance transpierced the thickest ranks of
the Armenians. On his return to the Imperial camp in Macedonia,
he was received by Manuel with public smiles and a private
reproof; but the duchies of Naissus, Braniseba, and Castoria,
were the reward or consolation of the unsuccessful general.
Eudocia still attended his motions: at midnight, their tent was
suddenly attacked by her angry brothers, impatient to expiate her
infamy in his blood: his daring spirit refused her advice, and
the disguise of a female habit; and, boldly starting from his
couch, he drew his sword, and cut his way through the numerous
assassins. It was here that he first betrayed his ingratitude and
treachery: he engaged in a treasonable correspondence with the
king of Hungary and the German emperor; approached the royal tent
at a suspicious hour with a drawn sword, and under the mask of a
Latin soldier, avowed an intention of revenge against a mortal
foe; and imprudently praised the fleetness of his horse as an
instrument of flight and safety. The monarch dissembled his
suspicions; but, after the close of the campaign, Andronicus was
arrested and strictly confined in a tower of the palace of
Constantinople.
In this prison he was left about twelve years; a most painful
restraint, from which the thirst of action and pleasure
perpetually urged him to escape. Alone and pensive, he perceived
some broken bricks in a corner of the chamber, and gradually
widened the passage, till he had explored a dark and forgotten
recess. Into this hole he conveyed himself, and the remains of
his provisions, replacing the bricks in their former position,
and erasing with care the footsteps of his retreat. At the hour
of the customary visit, his guards were amazed by the silence and
solitude of the prison, and reported, with shame and fear, his
incomprehensible flight. The gates of the palace and city were
instantly shut: the strictest orders were despatched into the
provinces, for the recovery of the fugitive; and his wife, on the
suspicion of a pious act, was basely imprisoned in the same
tower. At the dead of night she beheld a spectre; she recognized
her husband: they shared their provisions; and a son was the
fruit of these stolen interviews, which alleviated the
tediousness of their confinement. In the custody of a woman, the
vigilance of the keepers was insensibly relaxed; and the captive
had accomplished his real escape, when he was discovered, brought
back to Constantinople, and loaded with a double chain. At length
he found the moment, and the means, of his deliverance. A boy,
his domestic servant, intoxicated the guards, and obtained in wax
the impression of the keys. By the diligence of his friends, a
similar key, with a bundle of ropes, was introduced into the
prison, in the bottom of a hogshead. Andronicus employed, with
industry and courage, the instruments of his safety, unlocked the
doors, descended from the tower, concealed himself all day among
the bushes, and scaled in the night the garden-wall of the
palace. A boat was stationed for his reception: he visited his
own house, embraced his children, cast away his chain, mounted a
fleet horse, and directed his rapid course towards the banks of
the Danube. At Anchialus in Thrace, an intrepid friend supplied
him with horses and money: he passed the river, traversed with
speed the desert of Moldavia and the Carpathian hills, and had
almost reached the town of Halicz, in the Polish Russia, when he
was intercepted by a party of Walachians, who resolved to convey
their important captive to Constantinople. His presence of mind
again extricated him from danger. Under the pretence of sickness,
he dismounted in the night, and was allowed to step aside from
the troop: he planted in the ground his long staff, clothed it
with his cap and upper garment; and, stealing into the wood, left
a phantom to amuse, for some time, the eyes of the Walachians.
From Halicz he was honorably conducted to Kiow, the residence of
the great duke: the subtle Greek soon obtained the esteem and
confidence of Ieroslaus; his character could assume the manners
of every climate; and the Barbarians applauded his strength and
courage in the chase of the elks and bears of the forest. In this
northern region he deserved the forgiveness of Manuel, who
solicited the Russian prince to join his arms in the invasion of
Hungary. The influence of Andronicus achieved this important
service: his private treaty was signed with a promise of fidelity
on one side, and of oblivion on the other; and he marched, at the
head of the Russian cavalry, from the Borysthenes to the Danube.
In his resentment Manuel had ever sympathized with the martial
and dissolute character of his cousin; and his free pardon was
sealed in the assault of Zemlin, in which he was second, and
second only, to the valor of the emperor.
No sooner was the exile restored to freedom and his country,
than his ambition revived, at first to his own, and at length to
the public, misfortune. A daughter of Manuel was a feeble bar to
the succession of the more deserving males of the Comnenian
blood; her future marriage with the prince of Hungary was
repugnant to the hopes or prejudices of the princes and nobles.
But when an oath of allegiance was required to the presumptive
heir, Andronicus alone asserted the honor of the Roman name,
declined the unlawful engagement, and boldly protested against
the adoption of a stranger. His patriotism was offensive to the
emperor, but he spoke the sentiments of the people, and was
removed from the royal presence by an honorable banishment, a
second command of the Cilician frontier, with the absolute
disposal of the revenues of Cyprus. In this station the Armenians
again exercised his courage and exposed his negligence; and the
same rebel, who baffled all his operations, was unhorsed, and
almost slain by the vigor of his lance. But Andronicus soon
discovered a more easy and pleasing conquest, the beautiful
Philippa, sister of the empress Maria, and daughter of Raymond of
Poitou, the Latin prince of Antioch. For her sake he deserted his
station, and wasted the summer in balls and tournaments: to his
love she sacrificed her innocence, her reputation, and the offer
of an advantageous marriage. But the resentment of Manuel for
this domestic affront interrupted his pleasures: Andronicus left
the indiscreet princess to weep and to repent; and, with a band
of desperate adventurers, undertook the pilgrimage of Jerusalem.
His birth, his martial renown, and professions of zeal, announced
him as the champion of the Cross: he soon captivated both the
clergy and the king; and the Greek prince was invested with the
lordship of Berytus, on the coast of Phnicia. In his neighborhood
resided a young and handsome queen, of his own nation and family,
great-granddaughter of the emperor Alexis, and widow of Baldwin
the Third, king of Jerusalem. She visited and loved her kinsman.
Theodora was the third victim of his amorous seduction; and her
shame was more public and scandalous than that of her
predecessors. The emperor still thirsted for revenge; and his
subjects and allies of the Syrian frontier were repeatedly
pressed to seize the person, and put out the eyes, of the
fugitive. In Palestine he was no longer safe; but the tender
Theodora revealed his danger, and accompanied his flight. The
queen of Jerusalem was exposed to the East, his obsequious
concubine; and two illegitimate children were the living
monuments of her weakness. Damascus was his first refuge; and, in
the characters of the great Noureddin and his servant Saladin,
the superstitious Greek might learn to revere the virtues of the
Mussulmans. As the friend of Noureddin he visited, most probably,
Bagdad, and the courts of Persia; and, after a long circuit round
the Caspian Sea and the mountains of Georgia, he finally settled
among the Turks of Asia Minor, the hereditary enemies of his
country. The sultan of Colonia afforded a hospitable retreat to
Andronicus, his mistress, and his band of outlaws: the debt of
gratitude was paid by frequent inroads in the Roman province of
Trebizond; and he seldom returned without an ample harvest of
spoil and of Christian captives. In the story of his adventures,
he was fond of comparing himself to David, who escaped, by a long
exile, the snares of the wicked. But the royal prophet (he
presumed to add) was content to lurk on the borders of
Judæa, to slay an Amalekite, and to threaten, in his
miserable state, the life of the avaricious Nabal. The excursions
of the Comnenian prince had a wider range; and he had spread over
the Eastern world the glory of his name and religion. By a
sentence of the Greek church, the licentious rover had been
separated from the faithful; but even this excommunication may
prove, that he never abjured the profession of Chistianity.
His vigilance had eluded or repelled the open and secret
persecution of the emperor; but he was at length insnared by the
captivity of his female companion. The governor of Trebizond
succeeded in his attempt to surprise the person of Theodora: the
queen of Jerusalem and her two children were sent to
Constantinople, and their loss imbittered the tedious solitude of
banishment. The fugitive implored and obtained a final pardon,
with leave to throw himself at the feet of his sovereign, who was
satisfied with the submission of this haughty spirit. Prostrate
on the ground, he deplored with tears and groans the guilt of his
past rebellion; nor would he presume to arise, unless some
faithful subject would drag him to the foot of the throne, by an
iron chain with which he had secretly encircled his neck. This
extraordinary penance excited the wonder and pity of the
assembly; his sins were forgiven by the church and state; but the
just suspicion of Manuel fixed his residence at a distance from
the court, at Oenoe, a town of Pontus, surrounded with rich
vineyards, and situate on the coast of the Euxine. The death of
Manuel, and the disorders of the minority, soon opened the
fairest field to his ambition. The emperor was a boy of twelve or
fourteen years of age, without vigor, or wisdom, or experience:
his mother, the empress Mary, abandoned her person and government
to a favorite of the Comnenian name; and his sister, another
Mary, whose husband, an Italian, was decorated with the title of
Cæsar, excited a conspiracy, and at length an insurrection,
against her odious step-mother. The provinces were forgotten, the
capital was in flames, and a century of peace and order was
overthrown in the vice and weakness of a few months. A civil war
was kindled in Constantinople; the two factions fought a bloody
battle in the square of the palace, and the rebels sustained a
regular siege in the cathedral of St. Sophia. The patriarch
labored with honest zeal to heal the wounds of the republic, the
most respectable patriots called aloud for a guardian and
avenger, and every tongue repeated the praise of the talents and
even the virtues of Andronicus. In his retirement, he affected to
revolve the solemn duties of his oath: "If the safety or honor of
the Imperial family be threatened, I will reveal and oppose the
mischief to the utmost of my power." His correspondence with the
patriarch and patricians was seasoned with apt quotations from
the Psalms of David and the epistles of St. Paul; and he
patiently waited till he was called to her deliverance by the
voice of his country. In his march from Oenoe to Constantinople,
his slender train insensibly swelled to a crowd and an army: his
professions of religion and loyalty were mistaken for the
language of his heart; and the simplicity of a foreign dress,
which showed to advantage his majestic stature, displayed a
lively image of his poverty and exile. All opposition sunk before
him; he reached the straits of the Thracian Bosphorus; the
Byzantine navy sailed from the harbor to receive and transport
the savior of the empire: the torrent was loud and irresistible,
and the insects who had basked in the sunshine of royal favor
disappeared at the blast of the storm. It was the first care of
Andronicus to occupy the palace, to salute the emperor, to
confine his mother, to punish her minister, and to restore the
public order and tranquillity. He then visited the sepulchre of
Manuel: the spectators were ordered to stand aloof, but as he
bowed in the attitude of prayer, they heard, or thought they
heard, a murmur of triumph or revenge: "I no longer fear thee, my
old enemy, who hast driven me a vagabond to every climate of the
earth. Thou art safety deposited under a seven-fold dome, from
whence thou canst never arise till the signal of the last
trumpet. It is now my turn, and speedily will I trample on thy
ashes and thy posterity." From his subsequent tyranny we may
impute such feelings to the man and the moment; but it is not
extremely probable that he gave an articulate sound to his secret
thoughts. In the first months of his administration, his designs
were veiled by a fair semblance of hypocrisy, which could delude
only the eyes of the multitude; the coronation of Alexius was
performed with due solemnity, and his perfidious guardian,
holding in his hands the body and blood of Christ, most fervently
declared that he lived, and was ready to die, for the service of
his beloved pupil. But his numerous adherents were instructed to
maintain, that the sinking empire must perish in the hands of a
child, that the Romans could only be saved by a veteran prince,
bold in arms, skilful in policy, and taught to reign by the long
experience of fortune and mankind; and that it was the duty of
every citizen to force the reluctant modesty of Andronicus to
undertake the burden of the public care. The young emperor was
himself constrained to join his voice to the general acclamation,
and to solicit the association of a colleague, who instantly
degraded him from the supreme rank, secluded his person, and
verified the rash declaration of the patriarch, that Alexius
might be considered as dead, so soon as he was committed to the
custody of his guardian. But his death was preceded by the
imprisonment and execution of his mother. After blackening her
reputation, and inflaming against her the passions of the
multitude, the tyrant accused and tried the empress for a
treasonable correspondence with the king of Hungary. His own son,
a youth of honor and humanity, avowed his abhorrence of this
flagitious act, and three of the judges had the merit of
preferring their conscience to their safety: but the obsequious
tribunal, without requiring any reproof, or hearing any defence,
condemned the widow of Manuel; and her unfortunate son subscribed
the sentence of her death. Maria was strangled, her corpse was
buried in the sea, and her memory was wounded by the insult most
offensive to female vanity, a false and ugly representation of
her beauteous form. The fate of her son was not long deferred: he
was strangled with a bowstring; and the tyrant, insensible to
pity or remorse, after surveying the body of the innocent youth,
struck it rudely with his foot: "Thy father," he cried, "was a
knave, thy mother a
whore, and thyself a
fool!"
The Roman sceptre, the reward of his crimes, was held by
Andronicus about three years and a half as the guardian or
sovereign of the empire. His government exhibited a singular
contrast of vice and virtue. When he listened to his passions, he
was the scourge; when he consulted his reason, the father, of his
people. In the exercise of private justice, he was equitable and
rigorous: a shameful and pernicious venality was abolished, and
the offices were filled with the most deserving candidates, by a
prince who had sense to choose, and severity to punish. He
prohibited the inhuman practice of pillaging the goods and
persons of shipwrecked mariners; the provinces, so long the
objects of oppression or neglect, revived in prosperity and
plenty; and millions applauded the distant blessings of his
reign, while he was cursed by the witnesses of his daily
cruelties. The ancient proverb, That bloodthirsty is the man who
returns from banishment to power, had been applied, with too much
truth, to 'Marius and Tiberius; and was now verified for the
third time in the life of Andronicus. His memory was stored with
a black list of the enemies and rivals, who had traduced his
merit, opposed his greatness, or insulted his misfortunes; and
the only comfort of his exile was the sacred hope and promise of
revenge. The necessary extinction of the young emperor and his
mother imposed the fatal obligation of extirpating the friends,
who hated, and might punish, the assassin; and the repetition of
murder rendered him less willing, and less able, to forgive. * A
horrid narrative of the victims whom he sacrificed by poison or
the sword, by the sea or the flames, would be less expressive of
his cruelty than the appellation of the halcyon days, which was
applied to a rare and bloodless week of repose: the tyrant strove
to transfer, on the laws and the judges, some portion of his
guilt; but the mask was fallen, and his subjects could no longer
mistake the true author of their calamities. The noblest of the
Greeks, more especially those who, by descent or alliance, might
dispute the Comnenian inheritance, escaped from the monster's
den: Nice and Prusa, Sicily or Cyprus, were their places of
refuge; and as their flight was already criminal, they aggravated
their offence by an open revolt, and the Imperial title. Yet
Andronicus resisted the daggers and swords of his most formidable
enemies: Nice and Prusa were reduced and chastised: the Sicilians
were content with the sack of Thessalonica; and the distance of
Cyprus was not more propitious to the rebel than to the tyrant.
His throne was subverted by a rival without merit, and a people
without arms. Isaac Angelus, a descendant in the female line from
the great Alexius, was marked as a victim by the prudence or
superstition of the emperor. In a moment of despair, Angelus
defended his life and liberty, slew the executioner, and fled to
the church of St. Sophia. The sanctuary was insensibly filled
with a curious and mournful crowd, who, in his fate,
prognosticated their own. But their lamentations were soon turned
to curses, and their curses to threats: they dared to ask, "Why
do we fear? why do we obey? We are many, and he is one: our
patience is the only bond of our slavery." With the dawn of day
the city burst into a general sedition, the prisons were thrown
open, the coldest and most servile were roused to the defence of
their country, and Isaac, the second of the name, was raised from
the sanctuary to the throne. Unconscious of his danger, the
tyrant was absent; withdrawn from the toils of state, in the
delicious islands of the Propontis. He had contracted an indecent
marriage with Alice, or Agnes, daughter of Lewis the Seventh, of
France, and relict of the unfortunate Alexius; and his society,
more suitable to his temper than to his age, was composed of a
young wife and a favorite concubine. On the first alarm, he
rushed to Constantinople, impatient for the blood of the guilty;
but he was astonished by the silence of the palace, the tumult of
the city, and the general desertion of mankind. Andronicus
proclaimed a free pardon to his subjects; they neither desired,
nor would grant, forgiveness; he offered to resign the crown to
his son Manuel; but the virtues of the son could not expiate his
father's crimes. The sea was still open for his retreat; but the
news of the revolution had flown along the coast; when fear had
ceased, obedience was no more: the Imperial galley was pursued
and taken by an armed brigantine; and the tyrant was dragged to
the presence of Isaac Angelus, loaded with fetters, and a long
chain round his neck. His eloquence, and the tears of his female
companions, pleaded in vain for his life; but, instead of the
decencies of a legal execution, the new monarch abandoned the
criminal to the numerous sufferers, whom he had deprived of a
father, a husband, or a friend. His teeth and hair, an eye and a
hand, were torn from him, as a poor compensation for their loss:
and a short respite was allowed, that he might feel the
bitterness of death. Astride on a camel, without any danger of a
rescue, he was carried through the city, and the basest of the
populace rejoiced to trample on the fallen majesty of their
prince. After a thousand blows and outrages, Andronicus was hung
by the feet, between two pillars, that supported the statues of a
wolf and an a sow; and every hand that could reach the public
enemy, inflicted on his body some mark of ingenious or brutal
cruelty, till two friendly or furious Italians, plunging their
swords into his body, released him from all human punishment. In
this long and painful agony, "Lord, have mercy upon me!" and "Why
will you bruise a broken reed?" were the only words that escaped
from his mouth. Our hatred for the tyrant is lost in pity for the
man; nor can we blame his pusillanimous resignation, since a
Greek Christian was no longer master of his life.
I have been tempted to expatiate on the extraordinary
character and adventures of Andronicus; but I shall here
terminate the series of the Greek emperors since the time of
Heraclius. The branches that sprang from the Comnenian trunk had
insensibly withered; and the male line was continued only in the
posterity of Andronicus himself, who, in the public confusion,
usurped the sovereignty of Trebizond, so obscure in history, and
so famous in romance. A private citizen of Philadelphia,
Constantine Angelus, had emerged to wealth and honors, by his
marriage with a daughter of the emperor Alexius. His son
Andronicus is conspicuous only by his cowardice. His grandson
Isaac punished and succeeded the tyrant; but he was dethroned by
his own vices, and the ambition of his brother; and their discord
introduced the Latins to the conquest of Constantinople, the
first great period in the fall of the Eastern empire.
If we compute the number and duration of the reigns, it will
be found, that a period of six hundred years is filled by sixty
emperors, including in the Augustan list some female sovereigns;
and deducting some usurpers who were never acknowledged in the
capital, and some princes who did not live to possess their
inheritance. The average proportion will allow ten years for each
emperor, far below the chronological rule of Sir Isaac Newton,
who, from the experience of more recent and regular monarchies,
has defined about eighteen or twenty years as the term of an
ordinary reign. The Byzantine empire was most tranquil and
prosperous when it could acquiesce in hereditary succession; five
dynasties, the Heraclian, Isaurian, Amorian, Basilian, and
Comnenian families, enjoyed and transmitted the royal patrimony
during their respective series of five, four, three, six, and
four generations; several princes number the years of their reign
with those of their infancy; and Constantine the Seventh and his
two grandsons occupy the space of an entire century. But in the
intervals of the Byzantine dynasties, the succession is rapid and
broken, and the name of a successful candidate is speedily erased
by a more fortunate competitor. Many were the paths that led to
the summit of royalty: the fabric of rebellion was overthrown by
the stroke of conspiracy, or undermined by the silent arts of
intrigue: the favorites of the soldiers or people, of the senate
or clergy, of the women and eunuchs, were alternately clothed
with the purple: the means of their elevation were base, and
their end was often contemptible or tragic. A being of the nature
of man, endowed with the same faculties, but with a longer
measure of existence, would cast down a smile of pity and
contempt on the crimes and follies of human ambition, so eager,
in a narrow span, to grasp at a precarious and short-lived
enjoyment. It is thus that the experience of history exalts and
enlarges the horizon of our intellectual view. In a composition
of some days, in a perusal of some hours, six hundred years have
rolled away, and the duration of a life or reign is contracted to
a fleeting moment: the grave is ever beside the throne: the
success of a criminal is almost instantly followed by the loss of
his prize and our immortal reason survives and disdains the sixty
phantoms of kings who have passed before our eyes, and faintly
dwell on our remembrance. The observation that, in every age and
climate, ambition has prevailed with the same commanding energy,
may abate the surprise of a philosopher: but while he condemns
the vanity, he may search the motive, of this universal desire to
obtain and hold the sceptre of dominion. To the greater part of
the Byzantine series, we cannot reasonably ascribe the love of
fame and of mankind. The virtue alone of John Comnenus was
beneficent and pure: the most illustrious of the princes, who
precede or follow that respectable name, have trod with some
dexterity and vigor the crooked and bloody paths of a selfish
policy: in scrutinizing the imperfect characters of Leo the
Isaurian, Basil the First, and Alexius Comnenus, of Theophilus,
the second Basil, and Manuel Comnenus, our esteem and censure are
almost equally balanced; and the remainder of the Imperial crowd
could only desire and expect to be forgotten by posterity. Was
personal happiness the aim and object of their ambition? I shall
not descant on the vulgar topics of the misery of kings; but I
may surely observe, that their condition, of all others, is the
most pregnant with fear, and the least susceptible of hope. For
these opposite passions, a larger scope was allowed in the
revolutions of antiquity, than in the smooth and solid temper of
the modern world, which cannot easily repeat either the triumph
of Alexander or the fall of Darius. But the peculiar infelicity
of the Byzantine princes exposed them to domestic perils, without
affording any lively promise of foreign conquest. From the
pinnacle of greatness, Andronicus was precipitated by a death
more cruel and shameful than that of the malefactor; but the most
glorious of his predecessors had much more to dread from their
subjects than to hope from their enemies. The army was licentious
without spirit, the nation turbulent without freedom: the
Barbarians of the East and West pressed on the monarchy, and the
loss of the provinces was terminated by the final servitude of
the capital.
The entire series of Roman emperors, from the first of the
Cæsars to the last of the Constantines, extends above
fifteen hundred years: and the term of dominion, unbroken by
foreign conquest, surpasses the measure of the ancient
monarchies; the Assyrians or Medes, the successors of Cyrus, or
those of Alexander.
End Of Vol. IV.