READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM 2022 |
A HISTORY OF THE LATE ROMAN EMPIRE FROM ARCADIUS TO IRENE(395 TO 800 AD)BOOK IVTHE HOUSE OF JUSTINPART IITHE COLLAPSE OF JUSTINIAN’S SYSTEMCHAPTER IJUSTIN II AND TIBERIUSWE have seen that the Roman Imperium under Justinian reached the absolutism to which it had always tended, and Justinian realized that Caesaropapism at which the Christian Emperors had been continually aiming. It has been pointed out that Justinian accomplished his great achievements by means of an artificial State system, which maintained the Empire in equilibrium for the time; but it was only for the time. At his death the winds were loosed from prison; the disintegrating elements began to operate with full force; the artificial system collapsed; and the metamorphosis in the character of the Empire, which had been surely progressing for a long time past, though one is apt to overlook it amid the striking events of Justinian's busy reign, now began to work rapidly and perceptibly.Things which seemed of comparatively secondary importance under the enterprising government of Justinian, engage the whole attention of his successors. The Persian war assumes a serious aspect, and soon culminates in a struggle for life or death; the Balkan peninsula is overrun by Avars and Slaves; and consequently the Empire cannot retain any real hold on its recent conquests in Italy and Spain. Thus the chief features of the reigns of Justin, Tiberius, and Maurice are: the struggle against the Persians, with whom the Romans become less and less able to cope, the sufferings of Illyricum and Thrace at the hands of Hunnic and Slavonic barbarians, the conquests of the Lombards in Italy, and the change in the political position of the Emperor, whose power sensibly declines. The general disintegration of the Empire reaches a climax in the reign of Phocas (602-610), and the State is with difficulty rescued from destruction and revived by the energy and ability of Heraclius.In reading the history of the later years of Justinian we
are conscious of a darkness creeping over the sky; the light that had
illuminated the early part of his reign is waning. This change had become
perceptible after the great plague. But after the death of Justinian the
darkness is imminent; the Empire is stricken as it were with paralysis, and a
feeling of despondency prevails; the Emperors are like men grappling with
hopeless tasks. We are not surprised that an idea possessed men's minds that
the end of the world or some great change was at hand; it expressed the feeling
that the spiritual atmosphere was dark, and the prospect comfortless. "He
that is giddy thinks the world turns round."
I.Justin IIA struggle for the succession between the relations of Justin and those of Theodora had at one time seemed probable, but it had been forestalled by the alliance of the two families in the person of Justin, a nephew of the Emperor, and Sophia, a niece of the Empress. Justin held the position of curopalates, >which we might translate mayor of the palac, and on his uncle's death was at once recognized by the senate. The panegyric of the African poet Corippus, written in four books of Latin hexameters, de laudibus Justini Augusti minoris, giving a coloured account of the circumstances of the Emperor's accession, had probably a political intention. Justin required a trumpet.According to the narrative in the poem of Corippus, which we may assume to represent, with sufficient
accuracy, what actually happened, Justin was wakened before daybreak by the
Patrician Callinicus, who announced that Justinian was dead. At the same time
the senate entered the palace buildings, and proceeding to a beautiful room
overlooking the sea, whither Justin had already repaired, found him conversing
with his wife Sophia. Callinicus, as the spokesman of the senate, greeted
Justin as the new Augustus, virtually designated by the late Emperor as his
successor. All then repaired to the imperial chambers, and gazed on the corpse
of the deceased sovereign, who lay on a golden bier. Justin is represented as
apostrophising the dead, and complaining that his uncle left the world at a
critical moment: "Behold the Avars and the fierce Franks, and the Gepids
and the Goths (Getae, probably meaning the Slaves), and so many other nations
encompass us with wars." Sophia ordered an embroidered cloth to be
brought, on which the whole series of Justinian's labours was wrought in gold
and brilliant colours, the Emperor himself in the midst with his foot resting
on the neck of the Vandal tyrant.
In the morning Justin and his wife proceeded to the church
of St. Sophia, and made a public declaration of the orthodox faith. Returning to the palace, Justin assumed the royal
robes and ornaments, and was raised on a shield lifted by four guardsmen, after
which ceremony the Patriarch blessed him and placed the diadem on his head. The
Emperor then delivered an inaugural speech from the throne, in which he
enunciated his intention to pursue the principles of piety and justice, and
regretted that important departments of the administration had been neglected
or mismanaged in the last years of Justinian, who in his old age was careless
of such matters, and cold to the things of this life. After this oration, the
senate in due form adored the new Emperor.
Then, attended by the senators and court, Justin proceeded
to the hippodrome, and took his seat in the cathisma. When the jubilant
greetings of the people, who had taken no part in his actual elevation, had
subsided, the Emperor delivered another oration, exhorting the populace to be
peaceable and orderly, and announcing his intention to assume the consulship
and honour the following year with his name.
Suddenly the benches which lined each side of the
hippodrome were emptied, and crowds of people made their way to the space in
front of the cathisma. They presented to the Emperor bonds for loans which his
uncle had contracted, and implored or demanded to be repaid. Justin in his
speech to the senators had signified his purpose of liquidating these debts,
and he now commanded that the money should be paid on the spot. The scene is
graphically described by the obsequious pen of Corippus.
This popular act was followed by another example of clemency, and many
prisoners were released at the prayers of their kinsfolk. Corippus seems to imply that the prisons were entirely
emptied, and takes pains to justify a hardly justifiable act.
The poet goes on to describe the obsequies of Justinian,
the beauties of the imperial palace, and the reception of the Avaric ambassadors, but we need not follow him further. The
Emperor appointed his son-in-law Baduarius, who had
married his daughter Arabia, to the post of curopalates,
which his own accession had rendered vacant.
The accession of Justin was not wholly unendangered or
unstained with blood. A conspiracy of two senators was detected and punished,
and the Emperor's namesake Justin, the son of his cousin Germanus, was put to
death in Alexandria as a dangerous and perhaps designing relation. The
influence of Sophia may have been operative here, for enmity and jealousy had
always prevailed between her aunt Theodora and the family of Germanus.
Sophia had the ambition, without the genius, of her aunt
Theodora. Like her, she had been originally a monophysite.
But a bishop had suggested that the heretical opinions of her husband and
herself stood in the way of his promotion to the rank of Caesar; and
accordingly the pair found it convenient to join the ranks of the orthodox, on
whom they had before looked down as "synodites".
It is perhaps to be regretted that Sophia was not content to induce her husband
to alter his opinions and to retain her own faith. The administration of an
orthodox Emperor and a monophysitic Empress had worked well in the case of
Justinian and Theodora; the balance of religious parties had been maintained,
so that neither was alienated from the crown. It is probable that if Sophia had
remained satisfied with One
Nature, the persecution of monophysitic heretics, which disgraced
the latter half of Justin's reign, would not have taken place, and the eastern
provinces would have been less estranged from the central power.
When Justin came to the throne he decided to make a fresh
start and abandon the unpopular system of his uncle, as is clearly indicated in
the poem of Corippus. An opportunity of taking a first step in this direction was offered
almost immediately by the arrival of an embassy of Avars to demand the payments
which Justinian's policy was accustomed to grant. Justin boldly refused to
concede these payments any longer, and his refusal was the signal for a series
of ruinous depredations, which prepared the way for a complete change in the
population of the Illyrian provinces. This resolution of Justin was a direct
break with a vital part of the Justinianean system,
and was perhaps not unwise, for money payments could have hardly restrained the
Avars and Slaves much longer from invading the cis-Danubian countries. It was a popular act, because it seemed brave, and might lead to the
possibility of lightening the burden of taxation.
Justinian's religious doctrines in his last years had been
erratic, and he was stigmatized as a heretic. In this respect, too, Justin's
accession signalized a reaction. He published a manifesto to all Christians
strictly orthodox, from whom he expressly excluded the friends of one nature.
But at this time he did not purpose to do more than withdraw the light of his
countenance from the party which had, in recent years at least, been contented
with Justinian. A monophysite expressly acknowledges
that for the first six years of his reign Justin was mild and peaceable in his
religious policy.
Circumstances necessitated the reaction which Justin's reign inaugurated, but they equally necessitated the
failure of this attempt at a new policy. Justin was not a strong man, and the
circumstances of the time were strong and inexorable. He was completely
unsuccessful, as he owned before he died, and his mind was probably diseased
long before he became undoubtedly insane. We Can measure his want of success by
the fact that even the orthodox did not approve of him; and ecclesiastical
historians are prepared to forgive much for the grace of the two natures. Evagrius speaks of him in harsh terms, charging him with
avarice and profligacy, and with trafficking in ecclesiastical offices. And he
seems to have resorted to many modes of raising money which were not calculated
to make his rule beloved; for though he wisely remitted a burden of arrears which
could not be profitably exacted, he levied on ship-cargoes taxes, which brought
in large sums, and also taxed the bread which was publicly distributed in the
capital and called "political (or civil) loaves."
But the state of the Empire was such that popularity could
only have been obtained by an almost unwise generosity, such as that by which
Tiberius afterwards won general affection; and such a policy would have
ultimately aided rather than arrested the forces of disintegration. The
disintegration took place in two different ways.
(1) On the one hand the imperial power was no longer
absolute. The Emperor found himself face to face with a number of wealthy and
influential aristocrats, whose power had increased so much in the declining
years of Justinian that they were almost able to assume an independent attitude.
History shows us that the maintenance of law is least
secure when aristocratic classes become predominant; turbulence waxes rife,
attempts to override the rights of inferiors are sure to take place, and the
only safeguard is a strong monarchical authority. Now this evil prevailed in
the days of Justin. The noble lords were turbulent and licentious, and while
Justin made praiseworthy efforts to enforce the law at all costs, there was,
doubtless, a constant struggle, in which Justin was generally obliged to compromise;
and we can thus understand a bitter allusion in a speech which he delivered on
the occasion of Tiberius' elevation to the rank of Caesar. He bade Tiberius
beware of the lords, who were present at the ceremony, as of men who had led
himself into an evil plight.
Justin's desire to enforce the maintenance of justice, and
the corruption with which he had to contend, are illustrated by an anecdote.
The prefect of the city was a man who, knowing Justin's anxiety to protect the
oppressed, had proposed himself for the post, and had promised that if he
received for a certain time full powers, unrestricted by any privilege of
class, the wronged individuals who were always addressing appeals to the throne
would soon cease to trouble the sovereign. One day a man appeared before the
prefect and accused a person of senatorial rank. The accused noble did not
vouchsafe to notice the prefect's summons, and, on receiving a second
citation, attended a banquet of the Emperor instead of appearing in court.
During the feast the prefect entered the banqueting-hall of the palace, and
addressed the Emperor: "I promised your Majesty to leave not a single
oppressed person in the city within a certain time, and I shall succeed
perfectly in my engagement if your authority come to my aid. But if you shelter and
patronize wrongdoers, and entertain them at your table, I shall fail. Either
allow me to resign or do not recognize the wrongdoers". The Emperor
replied: "If I am the man, take me". The prefect, thus reassured,
arrested the criminal, tried him, found him guilty, and flogged him. The
plaintiff was recompensed amply. It is said that people were so terrified by
this example of strictness that for thirty days no accusations were lodged with
the prefect
(2) At the same time the bonds which attached the provinces of the Empire to the centre, and thereby to each other, were being loosened; and it is important to notice and easy to apprehend that this change was closely connected with the diminution of the imperial authority. For that authority held the heterogeneous elements together in one whole; and if the position of the Emperor became insecure or his hand weak, the centrifugal forces immediately began to operate. Now, it is to be noted that certain changes introduced by Justinian, which from one point of view might seem to make for absolutism, were calculated to further the progress of the centrifugal tendency if it once began to set in. I refer to the removal of some important rungs in the ladder of the administrative hierarchy; the abolition of the count of the East and the vicarius of Asiana. These smaller centres had helped to preserve the compactness of the Empire, and their abolition operated in the reverse direction.A remarkable law of Justin (568 AD) is
preserved, in which he yields to the separatist tendencies of the provinces to
a certain extent. This law provided that the governor of each province should
be appointed without cost at the request of the bishops, landowners, and
inhabitants of the province. It was a considerable concession in the direction
of local government, and its importance will be more fully recognized if it is
remembered that Justinian had introduced in some provinces the practice of
investing the civil governor, who held judicial as well as administrative
power, with military authority also. It is a measure which sheds much light on
the state of the Empire, and reminds us of that attempt of Honorius to give
representative local government to the cities in
the south of Gaul, a measure which came too late to cure the political lethargy
which prevailed.
The estrangement of the eastern provinces from the crown
was further increased by the persecutions of heretics, which began about the
year 572. The Emperor fell under the influence of the Patriarch, John of Sirimis (a place near Antioch), and to have been induced by
him to make a new attempt at unifying the Church by means of persecution. The
procedure against the Samaritans (572 AD) was
so effective that that important people became quite insignificant. The
monophysitic monks and nuns were expelled from their monasteries and convents,
fleeing "like birds before the hawk." John of Ephesus, a monophysite, describes in his ecclesiastical history the
details of this persecution. We may take as an example the case of Antipatra and Juliana, two noble ladies attached to the
monophysitic faith. They were confined in a monastery at Chalcedon, and,
because they would not accept the formula of the orthodox, were obliged to wear
the dress of nuns, were shorn of their hair, and were "made to sweep the
convent, and carry away the dirt, and scrub and wash out the latrinae, and serve in the kitchen, and wash the
candlesticks and dishes, and perform other similar duties." Unable to
endure these hardships, they submitted in form to the Chalcedonian communion.
This, however, is said to have been a very mild case. The measure which the monophysites most resented was the annulling of the orders
of their clergy. The Patriarch of Constantinople had hereby a welcome opportunity
for interfering with the dioceses of Antioch, Alexandria, and Cyprus over which
he desired to exercise a jurisdiction like that which the bishop of Rome
possessed over the see of Thessalonica, for example, or the see of Ravenna.
In the year 574 the Emperor became a hopeless and even
dangerous lunatic, and his vagaries were the talk of Constantinople. It was
necessary to place bars on his windows to prevent him from hurling himself
down, and in his fits he used to bite his chamberlains. The only charm by which
they could then quiet his fury was the words, "The son of Gabolo is coming"—a reference to Harith, king of a
tribe of Arabs. When he heard this exclamation he was cowed at once. His
favourite amusement was to sit in a little waggon, which his attendants used to
draw about in the palace chambers, and a musical instrument was constantly
played in his presence to calm his temper.
Sophia did not feel equal to carrying on the government
without male assistance, especially as the Persian war was pressing the realm
hard. Her representations of the unfortunate state of things in the capital
had, it is said, induced Chosroes to grant a temporary peace, but the renewal
of the war was certain at a near date, while the Avars were unceasing in their
hostilities. A firm hand at the reins was indispensable. Accordingly, in the
last month of 574, in one of his sane intervals, Justin, at her instance,
created Tiberius, the count of the excubiti, a
Caesar. On this occasion he delivered an unexpectedly candid and repentant
speech, which made a deep impression on contemporaries.
"Know, he said, that it is God who blesses yon and
confers this dignity and its symbols upon you, not I. Honour it, that you may
be honoured by it. Honour your mother, who was hitherto your queen; you do not
forget that formerly you were her slave, now you are her son. Delight not in the shedding of blood; take no share in
murder; do not return evil for evil, that you may become like unto me in
unpopularity. I have been called to account as a man, for I fell, and I
received according to my sins; but I shall sue those who caused me to err at
the throne of Christ. Let not this imperial garb elate thee as it elated me.
Act to all men as you would act to yourself, remembering what yon were before and
what you are now. Be not arrogant, and you will not go wrong: you know what I
was, what I became, and what I am. All these are your children and servants—you
know that I preferred you to my own blood; you see them here before you, you
see all the persons of the administration. Pay attention to the army; do not
encourage informers, and let not men say of thee, 'His predecessor was such and
such'; for I speak from my own experience. Permit those who possess to enjoy
their property in peace; and give unto those who possess not."
The Patriarch then pronounced a prayer, and when all had
said Amen, and the new Caesar had fallen at the feet of the Augustus, Justin
said, "If you will, I live; if you will not, I die. May God, who made
heaven and earth, place in your heart all that I have forgotten to tell you."
But although Sophia approved and promoted the elevation of
Tiberius to the rank of Caesar and the position of regent, she was determined
to retain all her authority and sovereignty as Augusta, and above all she would
not consent to the presence of another queen in the palace. Justin, with the
good-nature of a man, suggested that Ino, the wife of
Tiberius, should reside with him, for "he is a young man, and the flesh is
hard to rule"; but Sophia would not hear of it. "As long as I
live," she said, "I will never give my kingdom to another",
words that breathe the spirit of the great Theodora. Accordingly, during
Justin's lifetime Ino and her two daughters lived in
a house near the palace in complete retirement. The wives of noblemen and
senators were much exercised in their minds whether they should call upon the
wife of the Caesar or not. They met together to consider the important
question, but were afraid to decide to visit Ino without consulting the wishes of Sophia. When they asked the Empress, she
scolded them sharply; "Go, and be quiet", she said, it is
no business of yours." But when Tiberius was inaugurated Emperor in
September 578, a few days before Justin's death, he installed his wife in the palace, to the chagrin of Sophia, and
caused the new Augusta to be recognized by the factions of the circus. It is
said that a riot took place in the hippodrome, as the Blues wished to change
her pagan name to "Anastasia". while the Greens proposed
"Helena." Anastasia was adopted as her imperial name.
II. Tiberius II.The independent reign of Tiberius Constantine (for he had
assumed with the purple a new name) lasted only four years. Although during his
regency the administration was in his hands, yet the influence of Sophia over
the occasionally sane Justin had been a considerable limit on his powers and
scope of action; for the Empress was determined to be queen in more than name.
The limitation of the powers of Tiberius when he was only Caesar are fully
apparent from the mere fact that Sophia and Justin retained the management of
the exchequer in their own hands. Sophia judged, and not without reason, that
the young Caesar was inclined to be too lavish with money; and her prudence
withheld from him the keys of the treasury, while he was granted a fixed
allowance. After the death of Justin, he did not delay to emancipate himself
from her dictation, and she is said to have set afoot several conspiracies to
dethrone him. It is related that she suborned Justinian, the son of Germanus,
who had won laurels in the East, to join in a plot against Tiberius; but this
treason was discovered in time. The clemency of the Emperor pardoned Justinian,
but his "mother" was deprived of her retinue and subjected to a strict
supervision.
It was thought that of all men Tiberius was the man, had he lived longer, to have checked the forces of dissolution
that were at work, and placed the Empire on a new basis. Yet what we
know of him hardly justifies such a conclusion. The fact that he was
thoroughly well intentioned, and the fact that he was very popular,
combined with the circumstance that his reign was prematurely ended by
death, have pre-possessed men strongly in his favour. No charges can
be brought against him like those that have been brought against his
predecessor Justin or his successor Maurice. But, notwithstanding, I
think it may be shown that he did as much harm as good to the Empire, and
that he was not in any way the man to stem the tide.
The chief services rendered to the State by Tiberius
consisted in the care which he bestowed upon strengthening the army
and his attention to military matters. In this important department he had able
supporters in Justinian, the son of Germanus, who is recorded to have revived
the discipline of the army, which was beginning to relax, and in Maurice, who
became Emperor afterwards. "We are told that Tiberius expended large sums
of money in collecting troops, and it deserves to be specially noticed that in
the last year of his reign he organized a body of 15,000 foederati, which may
be perhaps looked upon as the original nucleus or form of the bodyguard which
in later centuries was called Varangian. Maurice was appointed general of this
company, with the title "Count of the Federates."
But though he might have made a very good minister of war,
Tiberius did not make a good Emperor. It was natural that his first acts should
be reactionary, as Justin's government had been extremely unpopular. He removed
the duty on the "political bread", and remitted a fourth part of the
taxes throughout the Empire. Had he been contented with this he might deserve
praise, but he began a system of most injudicious extravagance. He gratified
the soldiers with large and frequent Augustatica, and he
granted donations to members of all the professions—scholastics or jurists (a
very numerous profession), physicians, silversmiths, bankers. This liberality
soon emptied the treasury of its wealth. "What use," cried Tiberius,
"is this hoarded gold, when all the world is choking with hunger?" a
sentiment which was hardly relevant, as his generosity benefited the rich and
not the hungry. The result was that by the end of the first year of his reign
he had spent 7200 lbs. of gold, beside silver and silk in abundance; and before he died he was obliged to have recourse to the
reserve fund which the prudent economy of Anastasius had laid by, to be used in
the case of an extreme emergency. And, notwithstanding these financial
difficulties, he laid out money on new buildings in the palace.
The consequence of this recklessness was that when Maurice
came to the throne he found the exchequer empty and the State bankrupt. He was
thus, by no fault of his own, compelled to be extremely parsimonious; and his
scrupulous economy rendered him unpopular, while it endeared, by the force of
contrast, the memory of the deceased, who had been really the cause of the
perplexing situation. There is considerable reason, I think, to remove Tiberius
from his pedestal.
Nor did his reign lack the distinction of a persecution of heretics; and yet his pleasant and easy fiscal system secured him such general popularity that even the monophysites were disposed to excuse him from the blame of the persecution, because he was so much occupied with wars. But his persecution of the Arians will perhaps reflect little credit on him in the eyes of humanity. When he enlisted Goths to compose his corps of foederati, they urged the modest demand that a church for holding Arian services should be granted to them. The bigots of Constantinople were furious at this impious prayer, and there arose a sedition of such formidable aspect that Tiberius, in order to quell it, resorted to the device of commanding or permitting a general persecution of the Arians, that he might thereby be acquitted of having entertained any ntention of granting such an outrageous request.Theophylactus, the historian of Maurice, remarked in praise of Tiberius that "he preferred that his subjects should share the imperial authority with him to their being tyrannically governed like slaves." The natural comment is that these two modes of State economy do not exhaust the alternative courses open to Tiberius; but this remark has a deeper historical significance. The point is not the preference of Tiberius; the point is that the imperial power was drifting away from its old moorings at the promontory of absolutism.Maurice returned from Persia in the summer of 582, to find the Emperor sick unto death, and to be elected by him to reign in his stead. The ceremony was performed on the 5th of August. There were present not only the Patriarch (John the Paster) and the chief ecclesiastics, the guards of the palace, the aulic officials and senators, as in the case of Justin's accession, but also the "more distinguished men of the people", by which must be meant the demarchs and prominent persons in the circus factions. In his oration on this occasion Tiberius expressed a hope that his fairest funeral monument might be the reign of his successor. A marriage was arranged between Maurice and Constantina, Tiberius’ younger daughter; and thus Maurice, as being the son-in-law of Tiberius, who was the adopted son of Justin and Sophia, may be regarded as belonging to the dynasty of Justinian. Eight days later Tiberius expired in the palace of Hebdomon, outside the walls.CHAPTER II
MAURICE
Two years after his accession, a son was born to Maurice
(4th August 584), whom he named Theodosius, in
memory of Theodosius II, the last Emperor who had
been born in the purple. This event is said to
have been the cause of great rejoicing, and when
Maurice appeared in the hippodrome the people shouted,"God grant thee well, for thou hast freed us from
subjection to many". This illustrates the fact that a feeling of
uncertainty and apprehension always prevailed in the Roman Empire when there
was no apparent heir marked out by birth; men dreaded a struggle for
sovereignty. In regard to the question how far the principle of heredity was
acknowledged, it is important to observe that there is no case of
a difficulty arising as to the accession of an Emperor's
legitimate son; he was always acknowledged to be the rightful
successor. Maurice occupied the throne for twenty years. During
all that time the Empire was harassed by the troublesome hostilities of
the Avars and Slavs, and for the first ten years of his reign the wearisome war
with Persia was protracted. His great difficulty was want of money, which
produced want of public confidence; and the
unavoidable parsimony, which he was forced to practice, naturally won for him
the repute of avarice and meanness; he was said to have a diseased appetite for
gold. Soon after his accession he was obliged to purchase a temporary peace
from the Avars, whom he was not prepared to oppose, by paying a considerable
sum from the almost exhausted treasury. Perhaps the impecuniousness which
pressed hard on him during the first years of his reign habituated him to a
spirit of parsimony, which he continued to exhibit when circumstances both
admitted and demanded a less scrupulous economy. It is certain that he
attempted several times to retrench in the pay or commissariat of the army;
serious mutinies were the consequence; and this unwise policy was one of the
chief causes of his fall.
Evagrius, a contemporary
ecclesiastical historian, says that Maurice was moderate, self-willed, and
keen-witted. He showed his self-will in his operations at Arabissus,
which by no means tended to increase his popularity. Though a Roman by descent,
he was born at Arabissus in Cappadocia, and he
cherished such a curious love for this insignificant place (as Justinian had
done for his birthplace in Dardania) that he
determined to convert it into a splendid city, and began elaborate buildings,
in spite of his parsimonious proclivities. When the buildings were considerably
advanced, an earthquake destroyed them, and the self-will of Maurice, who had a
touch of the Roman passion for building, caused them to be begun all over
again. To this strange affection of Maurice for his remote birthplace was
joined a strong attachment to his kinsmen, whom he was anxious to advance into
high places. He made his father Paul president of the senate, he gave all his
relations rich palaces, and he divided the large property of Justin's brother
Marcellus between Paul his father and Peter his brother.
He was also "moderate". His moderation appears
especially in his ecclesiastical policy, for he completely rejected the
practice of persecution adopted by his two predecessors, and passed a law that
schismatics should not be compelled to conform. It is hard to say, however,
whether the credit of this ought not to be ascribed to the Patriarch Johannes
rather than to Maurice; we cannot be sure that if the former had urged
persecution, the latter would not have acquiesced. For it is worthy of note
that at this period the Emperors, feeling that their authority rested on an
insecure footing, formed close alliances with the Patriarchs, who possessed
immense influence with the people. Justin was prepared to adopt the
ecclesiastical policy of John of Sirimis, Tiberius
was ready to support Eutychius, and now we find
Maurice standing fast by John Nesteutes in his
contest with the see of Rome. It was the aim of the patriarchs of
Constantinople to hold the same position in eastern Christendom that the bishop
of Rome was acknowledged to hold in universal Christendom. In order to
accomplish this aim they had two problems to solve. One problem was to reduce
the large independent sees of the East, Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, under
the jurisdiction of Byzantium; the other problem was to prevent the
interference of the Pope in the affairs of the East and thereby induce him to
acknowledge the Patriarch of Constantinople as a pontiff of ecumenical position
like his own. The first of these objects was directly aimed at, as we are
expressly told, in the persecutions organized by John of Sirimis;
the second was essayed by John the Faster, who assumed the title of
"Ecumenical bishop". Gregory the Great, who occupied the chair of St
Peter from 590 to 604, was horrified and grieved at such presumption. He wrote
a friendly letter of expostulation on the subject to Maurice, in which he said
that he was "compelled to cry aloud and say, O tempora!
O mores!" He also wrote a letter to the Empress Constantina, for he understood the art, which popes,
bishops, and priests so easily learn, of bringing female influence into play.
To the Empress he expressed his conviction that John's assumption of the
title universal was
a clear indication that the times of Antichrist were at hand. His argument that
Maurice ought to interfere in the matter is impressive. No one, he says, can
govern on earth rightly except he knows how to handle divine things; and the
peace of the State depends on the peace of the
whole Church. It is this peace, not any personal interest, that he himself is
defending; it is this peace that John is troubling, by interfering with the
established economy of Christendom. It consequently behoves Maurice, in the
interests of the State, to inhibit the proceedings of his Patriarch. Maurice,
however, was not convinced by the reasons of the Pope, but sympathized
thoroughly with John's claims to ecumenical dignity. Hence a breach ensued
between the Emperor and the Pope, and the latter complains that Maurice,
touching another matter, had the indecency to call him "fatuous."
"We may date the long struggle between the sees of Rome and Constantinople, which culminated in the
final schism of 1055, from the reign of Maurice and the pontificate of Gregory
I.
Maurice gives us the melancholy impression of a prince who,
possessing many good qualities and cherishing many good purposes, was almost
completely ineffectual. The army detested, and pretended to despise him, and
the disaffection prevalent in the capital presented a favourable opportunity
for revolution. In the year 599 he refused to ransom 12,000 captives from the
chagan of the Avars, who consequently put them to death; and this refusal,
which perhaps seems inhuman, increased the detestation in which he was held.
Theophylactus, in his panegyrical history of the reign of Maurice, does not
mention the matter, and his silence suggests that he did not feel able to
palliate the act; but it has been conjectured that many of the prisoners were
probably deserters, and in any case it is evident that it was not to save
money, but to punish soldiers who had been mutinous and intractable, that
Maurice acted as he did. It was an impolitic measure, and two years later he
attempted another measure, which under the circumstances was equally impolitic,
and illustrates that self-will which Evagrius ascribes to him. He issued commands that the army which was defending the
Balkan provinces should winter in the trans-Danubian lands of the Slovenes, in order to save supplies. This led to a rebellion.
Peter, the general, was placed in a disagreeable predicament between the
peremptory behests of his brother the Emperor and the undisguised
dissatisfaction of the army. When the matter came to a crisis at Securisca, the soldiers
positively refused to cross the river, and raising the centurion Phocas on a
shield, they conferred on him the title of captain (exarch).
When the news of the revolt reached Maurice he did not
allow it to be published, but with an air of security which he was far from
feeling he celebrated a series of equestrian contests in the hippodrome, and
made light of the rumours which had reached the city concerning the military
insurrection. His heralds or mandatores bade the
demes not to be alarmed or excited by an unreasonable and unimportant disorder
in the camp; at which proclamation the Blues shouted, “God, O Emperor! who
raised you to the throne, will subdue unto you every conspirator against your
authority. But if the offender is a Roman, ungrateful to his benefactor, God
will subject him unto you without shedding of blood”.
Three days later Maurice summoned to the palace Sergius and Cosmas, the demarchs of the green and blue
factions respectively, and inquired the numbers of the members of their demes. Sergius counted fifteen hundred Greens, while on the list
of Cosmas there were only nine hundred Blues. The object of Maurice's inquiries
was to form the demesmen into a garrison for the
protection of the city against the army, which was already advancing under the
leadership of Phocas. They were set to guard the walls of Theodosius.
It is difficult to grasp the exact cause of this revolution
and the intrigues which underlay it; but the following points may be
emphasized. In the first place, there was not at the outset any intention of
elevating Phocas to the throne; he was merely elected general of the rebellious
army. In the second place, it was the purpose of the army to depose Maurice and
elect a new Emperor, perhaps Theodosius, the son of Maurice, or Germanus,
Theodosius' father-in-law. In the third place, the declaration of disloyalty on
the part of the army was followed up in Constantinople by the movement of a
disaffected party, on whose co-operation the military ringleaders had probably
calculated. In the fourth place, the demes play an important part in this
movement, and Maurice seems to have acted imprudently in arming them.
While the citizens and the sovereign were in a state of
expectancy and anxiety as to the events which a few days might bring about, it
happened that the young Emperor Theodosius and his father-in-law Germanus were
hunting outside the walls of the city, near a place called Callicratea.
A messenger suddenly accosted Theodosius and gave him a letter, purporting to
come from the army. The contents of the letter were a request that either he or
Germanus should assume the reins of government; “the forces of the Romans will
no longer have Maurice to reign over them”. The sportsmen were accompanied by
an imperial retinue, and the incident of the letter soon reached the ears of
Maurice, who immediately summoned his son. On the morning of the second day
after this occurrence Germanus was admitted to the presence of the Emperor,
who, with tears in his eyes, charged him with being the prime promoter of the
whole movement. Not only the letter, but the ambiguous fact that the ravages of
the mutineers in the neighbourhood of the city had diligently spared the horses
of Germanus, seemed to the suspicious monarch sure proofs of guilt. The accused
indignantly denied the charge, but the Emperor either was not or feigned not to
be convinced. Theodosius, who had been present at the interview, secretly
admonished his father-in-law that his life was in danger, and Germanus betook
himself to the asylum of the church erected by Cyrus to the Mother of God.
Towards sunset the Emperor sent the eunuch Stephanus, the tutor of the young
princes, to persuade the suppliant to leave the altar, but members of the
household of Germanus, who had attended him to the church, drove the tutor
forth ignominiously. Under the cover of night Germanus stole to the surer
refuge of the altar of the great church. In the meantime Maurice flogged his
son, whom he accused of also tampering with treason. He then sent a body of
guards to drag Germanus from St. Sophia, and a large multitude of indignant
citizens gathered round the portals of the church. Germanus was at length
persuaded to leave the altar, but as he approached the door a man named Andrew
cried out,"Back to the shrine,
Germanus, save thy life! An thou goest, death is in
store for thee." These ominous words arrested the steps of Germanus, and
repenting of his imprudent submission, he returned to the safety of the altar.
The populace meanwhile loaded the name of the Emperor with execrations and
abuse, calling him a Marcionist, a term
which implied not only impiety but folly. As the uproar increased, the demesmen, who were stationed on the walls under the command
of Comentiolus, were excited by the significant sounds of tumult and sedition;
they left their posts, and soon gave the menaces of the crowd a definite
direction. The object of their fury was the house of Constantine Lardys, the praetorian prefect of the East, one of the most
illustrious senators in the Empire and a trusted friend of the Emperor; it was
burned down.
When the revolt had reached this point, Maurice dressed
himself in the apparel of a private individual, and along with his wife Constantina, his children, and the faithful minister, whose
house was even then in flames, embarked in a vessel which lay moored by the
private stairs of the palace. The imperial fugitives reached the church of Autonomos the Martyr, on the bay of Nicomedia, and the
distress of a nocturnal flight was aggravated for Maurice by a severe attack of
gout, a disease to which the luxurious inhabitants of Constantinople were
peculiarly liable. As soon as they reached the shore of Asia, Theodosius was
despatched to Persia to supplicate the assistance of Chosroes II for the
Emperor, who had assisted that monarch in his own hour of necessity.
It seemed possible that Germanus might be raised to the
throne, and in that case the revolution might have been bloodless; but the
rivalry of the factions decided that it was not to be so. He had always been a
partisan and patron of the Blues, but it was now important for him to gain the
united support of both factions, especially as the Greens were numerically
stronger. Accordingly he opened negotiations with Sergius, the demarch of the Greens, and promised to favour
them in case he were elected. The demarch communicated this proposal to the
managing committee of his party, but they met it with a decided refusal. The
Greens were convinced that Germanus would never really abandon the Blues.
Recognizing, then, that he had no chance of realizing his ambitious aspiration,
Germanus embraced the party of the winner, the centurion Phocas, to whom
members of the green faction were already hastening to present their allegiance.
The question arises whether Germanus cherished any
treasonable ambition before the suspicion of the Emperor fell on him, or did
this suspicion first arouse in him the hope as well as the fears of a
conspirator. The narrative of Theophylactus naturally suggests the latter
alternative, but does not exclude the former. Another point, which must remain
obscure, is whether the letter received by Theodosius really expressed the
wishes of the army, or was a device of Phocas, intended to awaken the
suspicions of Maurice. The fact that the news of its arrival reached the ears
of Maurice so soon, coupled with the probability that Theodosius did not
communicate its contents to any one save Germanus, suggests that the intention
of the epistle was not what it seemed. If this conjecture is right, it will go
far to establish the innocence of Germanus; for the object of Phocas must have been
to divide the camp of his opponents by sowing discord between Germanus and
Maurice.
The Greens, who had gone forth from the city to meet
Phocas, found him at Rhegium, and persuaded him to
advance to Hebdomon. Theodore, one of the imperial
secretaries, whose presence at Rhegium is not
explained by our authorities, was sent to the city to bid the senate and the
Patriarch proceed to Hebdomon for the purpose of
crowning Germanus, in whose interests Phocas still pretended to be acting. The
name of Germanus moved the senators and the Patriarch Cyriacus; they hastened to the designated spot, only to see
the diadem placed on the head of Phocas, amidst the acclamations of the demes,
in the church of St. John the Baptist. On the morrow the new Emperor entered the
city, carried in an imperial litter drawn by four white horses, and his
progress was marked by showers of golden coins among the people. Horse races
celebrated his entry; on the following day he bestowed the usual donations on
the soldiers, and his wife Leontia was crowned
Augusta.
On the occasion of the coronation of Leontia an incident occurred which indicated that the seat of Phocas was not yet
secure. An important part of these ceremonies consisted in the procession from
the palace to the great church, and it was customary for the various demes to
post themselves at certain stages in the course of the processions, and to
utter certain formulae or exclamations as the Emperor or imperial party passed.
In certain cases the Emperor used to stop and receive the homage of the demes.
The station of each deme was prescribed by custom, but on this occasion a
dispute arose between the Greens and the Blues. The Greens desired to make
their station in the portal of the palace called Ampelios,
and there receive the Empress with the appropriate shouts of applause, but
their jealous rivals objected to this arrangement as contrary to precedent. A
tumult ensued, and Phocas sent out Alexander, who had made himself conspicuous
in the revolt against Maurice, to calm the strife. Cosmas, the demarch of the
Blues, entered into argument with the imperial emissary, and Alexander, with
the insolence of an Emperor's friend, heaped abuse on the demarch, and even
pushed him aside so roughly that he fell. Thereupon the insulted Blues gave
vent to their wrath in ominous words, "Begone! understand the situation,
Maurice is not yet dead!"
The appearance of the usurper quieted the dispute of the factions, but the words that the Blues had spoken sank
into the heart of Phocas, and he decided that the death of Maurice and the
extinction of Maurice's children were necessary to his own safety. Accordingly,
on the morrow he sent Lilius over to Chalcedon to carry out this decision. In
the harbour at Eutropius the four sons of Maurice were first slain, in their
father's presence, and the Emperor, adopting the attitude of a philosopher or
of a resigned Christian, is reported to have said "Thou art just, Lord,
and just is thy judgment." An incident took place which illustrates the
faithfulness of a nurse and the steadfastness of an Emperor. The nurse
concealed one of the imperial infants, and presented a child of her own to the
sword of the executioner; but the sovereign was as superior as the servant to
the promptings of nature and declared the fraud Theodosius, the eldest son, did
not escape the fate of his father and brothers. He had only reached Nicaea when
Maurice, assuming a temper of dignified resignation, gave up all thoughts of
struggling, and, disdaining to beg for the assistance of Chosroes, recalled his
son. But the report gained ground and was afterwards made use of by the enemies
of Phocas, that Theodosius, having reached Persia safely, had wandered to
Colchis and ended his life in desert places. This report seemed to have some
basis from the fact that Theodosius was not slain at the same time as his
father. Phocas had entrusted his creature Alexander with the task of removing
both the prince and Constantine Lardys, who had taken
refuge in churches, and it was said that Alexander was bribed by Germanus not
to slay hi son-in-law. Three distinguished men are mentioned as having shared
the fate of their august master; Comentiolus “the general of Europe!”, George
the lieutenant of Philippicus, and Praesentinus the domesticiis of Peter.
It is important to notice the part that the factions of the
hippodrome played in this revolution; they strike us a suddenly reasserting a
suppressed existence. There was still a strong spirit of rivalry; and although
the Blues were obliged to acquiesce in the coronation of Phocas, they were not friendly to him. Both parties were opposed to the
government of Maurice, but they were not at one touching the question who
should be his successor.
Here a conjecture may be put forward as to the significance
of this opposition of the demes to Maurice. Finlay acutely suggested that the
observation of Evagrius, that Maurice installed an
aristocracy of reason in his breast and expelled the democracy of the passions,
contains a significance below the surface, and was intended as a hint at the
circumstance that Maurice had allied himself with that aristocracy, which, as I
said before, was endangering and limiting the extent of the imperial power.
However this may be, there is no doubt that Maurice maintained his position as
long as he did through the support of those men, of whose pernicious influence
Justin had bitterly complained. Now, it seems almost certain that in this
respect the attitude of Tiberius differed from that of Justin and from that of
Maurice. Tiberius took Justin's advice to heart and assumed a position
independent, as far as was possible, of the nobles, whose power was dangerously
and unhealthily increasing. But in order to render himself independent of this
class he was obliged to depend on another; and the organized demes of the
hippodrome were an obvious resort. I conjecture, therefore, chat he gave them
and their leaders a political influence which they had not possessed since the
revolt of 532.
Thus Tiberius and Maurice tried to meet the danger which
was threatening the imperial power in divergent ways. Tiberius opposed the
influence of the aristocrats by making an Alliance with the demes, while
Maurice tried to overcome the peril by an unnatural bond with the forces that
were tending to undermine the throne, and thereby placed himself in opposition
to both the army and the people. This difference partly explains the popularity
of Tiberius and the unpopularity of Maurice, who seems to have been by
temperament inclined o a certain aristocratic
exclusiveness.
In support of these remarks I may add that in their light
the observation of Theophylactus that Tiberius desired that his subjects should
rule along with him, has a special point the expression is strong and must mean
more than the influence of court officials. Moreover, as a matter of fad
Tiberius recognized the demarchs and others as possessing political status.
Further, the words of Evagrius about Maurice, in
accordance with Friday's explanation, will be still more speaking; the
expulsion of the democracy of passion will have the definite meaning that
Maurice abandoned this democratic policy of Tiberius. Moreover, the important
part that the factions played in the revolt of 602 seems to presuppose a
considerable revival of their political power an almost a reorganization since
they had been crushed under the rule of Justinian; and this reorganization I
would attribute to the policy of Tiberius.
The testament of Maurice, which he had drawn up in the
fifteenth year of his reign, on the occasion of a severe illness: was found
more than eight years after his death, at the beginning of the reign of
Heraclius. The document possess a considerable interest, for Maurice had
conceived the design of adopting the Constantinian policy of dividing the
Empire among his children. The fatal results to which this had led in the case
of the sons of Constantine did not deter him. He assigned New Rome and
"the East" to his eldest son Theodosius; Old Rome, Italy, and the
western islands to hi second son Tiberius; while the remaining provinces were
to be sliced up among his other sons, and Domitian of Meliten was appointed their guardian. This intention to recur to in fourth-century
practice is worthy of note; and but for the revolution it might have been
carried out.
CHAPTER III
THE PERSIAN WAR (572-591 AD)
THE peace which Justinian
and Chosroes had ratified in 562, although the
long term of fifty years was fixed for its duration, was
of necessity doomed to be short-lived, because its basis was a payment of
money, and neither party had entertained any expectation
that it would last long. The Roman government was fully determined to renew the
war, when the first ten years, for which term they made the stipulated payment
in two sums, had expired; and Chosroes, though he would have been
glad to protract the peace, was indisposed to make any concessions.
And so, as we might expect, the relations between the
Empires during the first seven years of Justin are strained; they collide in
numerous ways, and causes for hostility accumulate. During the first few
years fruitless negotiations are carried on, in regard (1) to the
cession of Suania to Rome, and (2) to the claims
of the Persophil Saracens of Hirah to subsidies from the Roman Emperor, and these haggling negotiations tended to
produce ill feeling and dissatisfaction which more important circumstances soon
brought to a crisis.
One of these circumstances was the interference of Persia
in the affairs of the kingdom of Yemen, in south Arabia. Yemen had been reduced
under the sway of an Abyssinian dynasty, with
which the Roman Emperor was always on friendly terms. Saif,
a descendant of the native Homerite kings, intolerant
of the yoke of the strangers, sought refuge at the court of Chosroes, and by
Persian assistance Yemen was conquered and the Homerite dynasty, in the person of Saif, restored. But Saif reigned only for a short time; his government was a
failure; and Chosroes set a Persian marzpan (or
margrave) over the country, which was placed in somewhat the same relation to
Persia as the exarchate of Ravenna to Constantinople. But the Homerites found that the little finger of the marzpan was thicker than the loins of an Abyssinian prince,
and sent an embassy to New Rome to beg for assistance.
In 571-572, when the term of ten years was approaching its
close and a new payment would soon be due, another appeal to the Emperor, which
he was only too ready to entertain, rendered an outbreak of war with Persia
probable. Persarmenia, which was in a constant state
of actual or intermittent rebellion, as the Christian population could not
remain happy under Persian domination, appealed to the Emperor of the Romans in
the name of their common religion; he accepted their allegiance, and, when
Chosroes remonstrated, replied that Christians could not reject Christians.
These relations with two peoples over which Chosroes exercised
jurisdiction, and especially the protection accorded by the Emperor to the Persarmenian, were important causes of the ensuing war. But
with these yet another cause concurred in producing the result. This was a
newly formed relation of alliance with the Turks, who now for the first time
appear in the West. They were gradually taking the place of the Ephthalite Huns, whom they had made their tributaries,—
those Huns who had been such formidable neighbours to Persia. The Chinese silk
commerce and the trade on the Caspian, which had been hitherto monopolized by
the Huns, were passing into their hands.
The Turks sent an embassy to the Byzantine court at the end
of 568 or early in 569. They had previously tried to enter into commercial
relations with Persia, but the Persian king
had a wholesome horror of Turks, and did not wish his subjects to have any
dealings with them. He poisoned some of their ambassadors, so that they should
not come again. Then Dizabul, khan of the Turks,
determined to seek an alliance with the Roman Empire, which seemed to offer
special advantages, as its inhabitants used more silk than any other nation.
Justin received the embassy kindly, and sent back Roman ambassadors in the
autumn to see the Turkish chagan and conclude a treaty. These negotiations did
not please Persia, and attempts were made by that power to waylay the
ambassadors on their journey back to Byzantium.
The dominion of Dizabul was not a
kingdom; it was an empire whose sovereign held sway over four subject kingdoms
and received tribute from other peoples, as for instance from the Ephthalites. This empire threatened now to become
formidable to Persia, just as the Avars (who, once the subject of these very
Turks, had revolted and migrated to the West) had become formidable to the
Romans. In fact the Roman Empire and the Persian kingdom were in very similar
circumstances. The former was placed between the Avars and the Persians, just
as the latter was placed between the Turks (on the north) and the Romans.
The new allies of Justin were anxious that the forces of
Persia should be occupied with a war on the western frontier, and did all they
could to induce Justin to renounce the peace of fifty years.
Any one of the causes mentioned might have been
insufficient to produce a rupture, but all together were irresistible, and
accordingly, when the time came for paying the stipulated annuity, Justin
refused (572). The war which ensued lasted for twenty years; and its conclusion
was due to the outbreak of a civil war in Persia. We may conveniently divide it
into two parts, the death of Chosroes Nushirvan in
579 forming the point of division. The meagre accounts of the operations which
we possess present little interest and much difficulty.
(1) Marcian, a senator and patrician, perhaps a cousin of
Justinian, was appointed general in 572, and arrived in Osroene at the end of summer. Nothing took place in this year except an incursion of
three thousand Roman hoplites into Arzanene. In 573
Marcian gained a great victory at Sargathon, but
failed to take Nisibis, which he had blockaded. It was not for this failure
alone that Marcian was deposed and Acacius appointed
in his stead; a curious complication with the Saracens of Ghassan seems to have
led to the recall of the general. Harith, king of Ghassan, died and was
succeeded by Mondir; and Kabus,
king of the rival Saracens of Hirah, seized the
opportunity to invade the Ghassanid dominion. But Mondir, having collected an army, defeated the invader, and
followed up his success by invading the territories of Kabus,
over whom he gained yet another victory. After these successes he ventured to
address a letter to the Roman Emperor, with a request for money, and this
presumption inflamed the indignation of Justin. The Emperor indited two
letters, one to Mondir full of soft words and
promises, the other to Marcian ordering him to assassinate the king of Ghassan.
Through some mistake the missives were interchanged, and Mondir read with surprise and consternation the warrant for his own destruction.
"This is my desert," he said bitterly. Full of resentment, he vowed
vengeance against the Romans. At this juncture the Persians and Persophil Saracens invaded Syria and laid it waste as far
as Antioch, but Mondir stood aloof, like Achilles,
and retired into the desert. Justin bade the generals try to conciliate him,
but he would not receive them. He held aloof for three years, at the end of
which term he entered into communication with Justinian, the son of Germanus,
whose honorable character had won men's confidence;
and by his means a reconciliation was effected.
The invasion of Syria just referred to took place under the leadership of Adormahun (Adarmanes), and the country, as has been said, was
devastated up to the walls of Antioch. The city of Apamea was committed to the
flames. Syria seems to have been entirely undefended; for thirty years the
inhabitants had been exempt from hostile attacks, and had consequently become
so unmanly and unaccustomed to the sights of war that they were unable to take
measures for their own defence. The captives who were led away to Persia are
said to have numbered two hundred and ninety-two thousand.
From these captives Chosroes is recorded to have selected
two thousand beautiful virgins, and ordered them to be handsomely adorned like
brides and sent as a present to the chagan of the Turks. Two marzpans and a body of troops were appointed to escort them
to the land of the barbarians, and received express orders to travel at a
leisurely pace. The virgins were dejected for their souls' sakes, because they
could no longer hope to receive religious instruction, and they revealed their
longings for death to other Syrian captives. When they had arrived within fifty
leagues of the Turkish frontier, they came to a great river, and agreed among themselves
to die rather than to pollute themselves with heathen ways and lose their
Christianity. "Before our bodies are defiled by the barbarians and our
souls polluted and death finally overtake us, let us now, while our bodies are
still pure, and our souls free from heathendom, in the name and trusting to the
name of our Lord Jesus Christ, offer unto him in purity both our souls and
bodies by yielding ourselves up now to death, that we may be saved from our
enemies and live for evermore. For it is but the pain of a moment which we have
to endure in defense of our Christianity and for the
preservation of our purity in body and soul." As the virgins were never
allowed to be alone, they asked their conductors for permission to bathe in the
river: "We are ashamed to bathe if you
stand by and look on." The permission to bathe and the seclusion which
they requested were granted, and the whole company of virgins rushed suddenly
into the water and were drowned. The Persians saw them floating and sinking,
but were unable to rescue them.
This example of Christian martyrdom, as it may be called,
and of overpowering dread of the Turkish minotaur, so many centuries before he
had set foot in Europe, is recorded only by John of Ephesus.
It seems that Marcian was recalled and Acacius sent to the East at the beginning of 574. When the Romans abandoned the siege
of Nisibis, Chosroes swooped down upon Daras and
besieged it, using against its walls the engines which the Romans had left
behind them at Nisibis. But it was not easily taken, and the Persians almost
despaired. Finally, over-confidence produced remissness in the garrison, and
after a siege of six months the city passed into the hands of the Persians,
about seventy years after its foundation by Anastasius. Thus Chosroes now held
the two great fortresses of eastern Mesopotamia, Nisibis and Daras.
Besides these disasters, other difficulties beset the Roman
government. It was perplexed by the hostilities of the Avars on the Danube and
it was embarrassed by the mental aberration of the Emperor. Sophia was driven
to write a letter of entreaty to Chosroes, and as her request was supported by
a sum of 45,000 pieces of gold, she obtained the respite of a year's truce
(spring 574 to spring 575). As Justin's malady increased, Tiberius was
made regent, or rather subordinate co-regent
with Sophia, and although the new caesar had no
intention of bringing the war to a conclusion, he saw that it was absolutely
necessary to gain time and prolong the cessation of hostilities. Accordingly,
when the truce had expired, a peace was made for three years, not applying,
however, to the war in Persarmenia, on condition that
the Romans paid 30,000 pieces of gold annually. For the following three years
(576, 577, 578) therefore the war was confined to Persarmenia.
Justinian, the son of Germanus, was appointed commander of
the armies and repaired to Armenia (576). Chosroes advanced in person,
intending to invest Theodosiopolis, but finding that
it was too strong he proceeded westward, and, entering the Roman provinces,
marched in the direction of Caesarea in Cappadocia through the country included
between the Euphrates and the Lycus. The Romans marched to obstruct his advance
in the Antitaurus mountains, in the north-east corner
of Cappadocia, but when they approached Chosroes made a northward movement
against Sebaste, which he took and burned. But he
obtained no captives in that town, for when the rumour spread that the Persians
were coming, all the inhabitants of those districts fled. Finding himself in
serious difficulties in a hostile and mountainous country, and apparently not
supported in the rear, Chosroes began to retreat. But he was not allowed by
Justinian to depart with impunity; the Romans pressed on, and the Persians were
forced to fight against their will. The battle was fought somewhere between Sebaste and Melitene, probably in
the valley of the river Melas, land its details are described or invented by a
rhetorical historian. It resulted in a complete victory for Justinian; Chosroes
was forced to flee from his camp to the mountains, and leave his tent
furniture, with all the gold, the silver, and the pearls which an oriental
monarch required even in his campaigns, a prey to the conqueror. The booty, it
is said, was immense.
The routed Persians grumbled at their lord for conducting
them into this hole in the mountains, and Chosroes with difficulty mollified
their indignation by an appeal to his gray hairs.
Then the Sassanid descended into the plain of Melitene and burned that city, which had no means of resisting his attack. In the
meantime, it may be asked, how was the Roman army occupied? It would seem that
there was nothing to prevent the Romans from following the defeated and
demoralized Persians, and at least hindering the destruction of Melitene, if they did not annihilate the host. This loss of
opportunity is ascribed by a contemporary to the envy and divisions that
prevailed among the Roman officers.
After the conflagration of Melitene,
Chosroes retired towards the Euphrates, but he received a letter from the Roman
general, reproaching him for being guilty of an unkingly act in robbing and then running away like a thief. The great king consented to
accept offer of battle, and awaited the arrival of the Romans. The adversaries
faced one another until the hour of noon; then three Romans rode forth, three
times successively, close to the Persian ranks, but no Persian moved to answer
the challenge. At length Chosroes sent a message to the Roman generals that
there could be "no battle today," and took advantage of the fall of
night to flee to the river. The Romans pursued and drove the fugitives into the
waters of the Euphrates. More than half of the Persian army was drowned; the
rest escaped to the mountains. It is said by Roman historians that Chosroes
signalized these reverses by passing a law that no Persian king should ever go
forth to battle in person.
Thus the campaign of 576 was attended with good fortune for
the Romans, notwithstanding the destruction of Sebaste and Melitene. Nor were the events to the west of the
Euphrates the only successes. Roman troops penetrated into
Babylonia, and came within a hundred miles of the royal capital; the elephants
which they carried off were sent to Byzantium.
The following year, 577, opened with negotiations for
peace, which Chosroes, dispirited by his unlucky campaign, was anxious to
procure. His general, Tamchosro, however, gained a
victory over Justinian in Armenia. The Romans, in consequence of their successes,
had become elated and incautious, and the Persians suddenly approached,
surprised, and routed them. The victors, it is said, lost 30,000 men, the
vanquished four times as many, so that the battle must have been an important
affair. Encouraged by the change of fortune, Chosroes no longer desired peace,
and the negotiations led to no result.
A pious historian considers that this reverse was a
retribution on the Roman soldiers for their irreligious behaviour in Persarmenia, a district where there were many Christian
settlers. When the Roman army invaded it, Christian priests came out to meet
them with the holy Gospels in their hands, but no reverence was shown to their
pious supplications. The worst outrages were committed, without distinction of
creed. The soldiers seized infants, two at a time, by their legs, and tossing
them up in the air caught the falling bodies on the points of their spears;
monks were plundered, hermits and nuns were tortured, if they could not or
would not produce gold and silver to satisfy the greed of the depredators. This
imprudent behaviour produced a reaction against Roman rule among the Christians
of Persarmenia; twenty thousand immediately went over
to the Persians,—all in fact except the princes, who escaped to Byzantium.
After this defeat Maurice, who held the office of comes excubitorum which
Tiberius had filled before his investiture as Caesar, was sent to the East with
full powers, and Gregory, the praetorian prefect, accompanied him to administer
the military fiscus. Having collected troops in Cappadocia, his native
province, Maurice assembled the generals and captains at Kitharizon,
a fortress near Martyropolis, and assigned to each his part. Tamchosro, the
Persian general in Armenia, employed a stratagem to put the Romans off their
guard. He wrote to the troops at Theodosiopolis,
bidding them prepare for battle on a certain day, and in the meantime he left
Armenia and invaded Sophene, devastating the country
about Amida and thus violating the peace, which had
not yet expired. Maurice retaliated by carrying his arms into Persian
territory; he overran Arzanene, and penetrated into
the province of Corduene, which no Roman army had
entered since the days of Jovian. He did not, however, occupy any country
except Arzanene; his invasion was the same sort of
blow to Persia that the expedition of Adormahun in
573 had been to the Empire. More than ten thousand captives were taken, of whom
most were Christian Armenians, and a large number were located in Cyprus, where
lands were allotted to them. Thus the current of Persian success has now been
finally stopped.
There is no doubt that the successes of Chosroes had been
due to the bad condition and the disorganization of the Roman army, and the
tide began to change when the generals Justinian and Maurice assumed the
command in the East. Justinian reformed the degenerate discipline of the
soldiers, and Maurice, who, though he had not enjoyed the advantage of a
military training, had made a special study of warfare and afterwards wrote a
book on Strategic, did much for the reorganization of the army. As an example of
the kind of reform which Maurice found necessary, I may notice that he was
obliged to re-introduce the custom of entrenching a camp; the laziness and
negligence of soldiers and officers had, it seems, come to such a pass that
they dispensed with the loss as a useless expenditure of labour.
(2) The turn which affairs had taken would certainly, as
Menander remarks, have led to a peace, and that on term tolerably favourable to
the Romans, but for the death of the aged
Chosroes in spring 579, a few months after the death of Justin (December 578).
His son and successor Hormisdas, whose character has
been painted in dark colours, rejected the proposals which Tiberius made, and
Maurice continued a career of partial success, which culminated in the
important victory of Constantina in 581. It must be
also observed that Tiberius purchased peace from the Avars for 80,000 aurei in
order to throw all the energies of the Empire into the Persian war. Events on
the Ister and events on the Euphrates constantly
exerted a mutual influence.
The year 579 was marked by the invasion of Media by a
portion of the Roman army. In the following year, 580, Maurice combined forces
with the Saracen king Mondir (Alamundar)
for a grand invasion; but disputes arose between the Roman and the Saracen
leaders in the neighborhood of Callinicum; Mondir is said to have acted treacherously, and the
expedition failed. Adormahun had harried Osroene, leaving not so much as a house standing, and had
written to Maurice and Mondir, "Ye are exhausted
with the fatigue of your march; don't trouble yourselves to advance against me.
Rest a little, and I shall come to you." And he was allowed to retreat,
says the historian, although 200,000 men were eating at the Emperor's expense.
In 581 the Romans gained a great victory at Constantina.
When Maurice became Emperor, in the following year, he
adopted the precedent of his predecessors and ceased to be a general. He
appointed John Mystacon ("the
Moustachioed") commander of the eastern armies, and the year 583 was marked
by a defeat of the Romans in a battle on the river Nymphius,
the Persians being led by a general entitled the kardarigan.
The defeat was mainly due to enmity between John and a captain named Kurs, who was appointed to command the right wing, and
disloyally took no part in the engagement.
At the beginning of 584 John Mystacon was deposed from his command as not sufficiently energetic, and was succeeded
by Philippicus, the husband of Gordia the Emperor's sister. In autumn Persia was invaded and the pursuit of
the kardarigan was eluded, but nothing of consequence
occurred. Early in 585 Philippicus invaded Arzanene,
but he was soon obliged by sickness to retire to Martyropolis and entrust the command temporarily to a captain named Stephanus; but this
year, like the preceding, was unmarked by any important event.
In the spring of 586 Philippicus, who had visited Byzantium
during the winter, was met at Amida by Persian
ambassadors, who had come to urge the conclusion of a peace, for which they
expected the Romans to pay money. But the Romans had lately experienced no
reverses, and therefore disdained the offer. The operations of this year took
place in the neighbourhood of the river of Arzamon and the mountain of Izal. The Romans commanded the
banks of the river, and as water was procurable from no other source in these
regions, it was expected that, if the Persians advanced to the attack, thirst
would be a powerful ally. But the Persians loaded camels with skins of water
and advanced confidently, intending to attack the Romans on Sunday.
Philippicus, informed on Saturday of their approach, suspected their design and
drew up his army in array for fighting in the plain of Solachon.
The right wing was commanded by Vitalius; the left
wing by Wilfred (Iliphredas), governor of Emesa; the centre by Philippicus and his lieutenant
Heraclius, the father of that Heraclius who was afterwards Emperor. On the
Persian side, the centre was commanded by the kardarigan; Mebodes faced Wilfred; and Aphraates,
a nephew of the kardarigan, opposed Vitalius. The Roman troops were encouraged by the elevation
of a flag adorned with a picture of Christ, which was believed not to have been
made by hands; it was known as a "theandric image." On the other hand
the Persian general resorted to the desperate measure of destroying the water
supply, in order that his soldiers might feel that life depended on success.
The battle was begun by the advance of the right Roman
wing, which forced back the Persian left and fell on the baggage in the rear.
But, occupying themselves with the plunder, the victors allowed the fugitives
to turn and unite themselves with the Persian centre, so that the Roman centre
had to deal with a very formidable mass. Philippicus, who had retired a little
from the immediate scene of conflict, resorted to a device to divert the troops
of Vitalius from their untimely occupation with the
baggage. He gave his helmet to Theodore Ilibinus, his
spear-bearer, and ordered him to strike the plunderers with his sword. This
device produced the desired effect; the soldiers thought that Philippicus
himself was riding about the field, and returned to the business of battle. The
left wing of the Romans was completely successful, and the routed Persians fled
as far as Daras. But in the centre the conflict raged
hotly for a long time, and it was believed by the Christians that a divine
interposition took place to decide the result in their favour. The kardarigan fled to an adjacent hill, where he starved for a
few days, and then hastened to Daras, whose
inhabitants refused to receive a fugitive.
After the victory of Solachon,
Philippicus invaded Arzanene. The inhabitants of that
district concealed themselves in underground dwellings, and were dug out like
rats by the Romans, who discovered them by the tell-tale subterranean sounds.
Here Heraclius, who had been sent with a small force in the company of two
Persian deserters, who undertook to point out a locality favorable for establishing a fortress, fell in with the kardarigan,
but succeeded in eluding his superior forces by a dexterous retreat. A
messenger was sent to Philippicus, who was besieging the fortress of Chlomari, to apprise him of the approach of the enemy; and
he ordered the trumpet to be sounded, to recall all the troops who were
scouring the surrounding country. The kardarigan soon
arrived, and the Persians and Romans found themselves separated by a large
ravine, which prevented an immediate battle. At night the Persians, marching
round this ravine, encamped behind the Romans, and apparently occupied such a
dominant position on the hill that it would have been impossible to continue
the siege of Chlomari. On the following night in the
first watch the Roman camp was suddenly alarmed by the departure of the
general, whose conduct seems quite inexplicable, as the Persian forces led by
the kardarigan were no match for his own, and there
appears to have been no imminent danger. The soldiers followed him in
confusion, with difficulty finding their way through the darkness of a moonless
night; and if the enemy had known the actual state of the case the army might
have easily been annihilated. But the movement was so unaccountable that the
Persians suspected a stratagem, and did not leave their camp during the night.
The fortress of Aphumon, whither Philippicus had made
his way, received the Romans, who, harassed by the arrows of the slowly
following Persians, arrived during the forenoon, and consoled themselves by
deriding the general. The whole army retreated to Amida,
the Persians still following and harassing, but not venturing on a general
battle.
Philippicus did not carry on in person any further operations
during this year, but his second in command, the able officer Heraclius,
invaded and wasted the southern regions of Media. In the spring of 587 Philippicus consigned two-thirds of his
forces to Heraclius, and the remaining third to Theodorus of Kabdis and Andreas, a Saracen interpreter, with
instructions to harass the territory of the enemy by incursions. The general
himself again suffered from illness, and was unable to take the field. Both
Heraclius and Theodorus were successful; each of them
laid siege to a strong fortress, and both fortresses were stormed.
In winter Philippicus set out for Constantinople, leaving
Heraclius in charge of the army, but before he reached Tarsus he learned that
the Emperor had signified his intention of appointing Priscus
commander-in-chief instead of himself. In spring, accompanied by Germanus the
bishop of Damascus, Priscus arrived at Monokarton,
where the army was stationed. It was usual for a new general on his arrival to
descend from his horse, and, walking between the rows of the marshalled army, honour
them with a salutation. Priscus neglected this ceremony; and a dissatisfaction
which had been long brewing among the soldiers
burst out into open mutiny. This dissatisfaction was caused, not only by the
deposition of Philippicus, who was popular among the troops, notwithstanding
his strange flight in 586, but by an unpopular innovation of Maurice, who ordained
that the rations of the soldiers should be reduced by one-quarter. The
injudicious haughtiness or indifference of Priscus offended the soldiers,
already disposed to murmur; and the camp became a scene of disorder. Priscus
was thoroughly frightened, and resorted to the expedient of sending Wilfred to
march through the camp with the holy "theandric" standard in his
hands; but such was the excitement that the mystic symbol was received with
contumely and stones. The general escaped, not unwounded, to the city of Constantina, where he had recourse to the services of a
physician; and he despatched letters to the governors of the surrounding cities
and forts, with reassurances that the soldiers would not be deprived of any
portion of what they were in the habit of receiving. He likewise sent a
messenger to the camp at Monokarton, to announce that
the Emperor had changed his mind and that the rations would not be diminished.
The old bishop Germanus went on this mission, but the soldiers meanwhile had
elected an officer named Germanus, not to be confounded with the bishop, as
their general. The representations of the prelate were not listened to, and the
soldiers urged the inhabitants of Constantina to expel
Priscus.
Informed of these events, Maurice recalled Priscus and
reappointed Philippicus, but the mutineers were not satisfied, , and refused to
submit to the command of their former general. The Persians meanwhile attacked Constantina; but the provincial commander Germanus, who
seems to have acted through constraint rather than inclination, induced a
thousand men to accompany him, and relieved the menaced city. He then restored
order so far as to enable him to organise a company of four thousand for the
invasion of Persia, and at the same time Aristobulus, an emissary of Maurice,
succeeded by gifts and promises in mollifying the exasperated troops. While
Philippicus, diffident and uncertain, was still at Hierapolis, a battle was
fought at the "City of the Witnesses"—to adopt the style of our
historian Theophylactus—and the Romans obtained a brilliant victory.
Early in 589 the Persians captured Martyropolis by the treachery of a certain Sittas, who introduced
four hundred Persians into the city on the plea that they were deserters to the
Romans, while the truth was that he was himself a deserter to the barbarians.
Philippicus surrounded the city, but Mebodes and Aphraates arrived with considerable forces, and the Romans
were defeated. Thus Martyropolis passed into the
hands of the Persians.
At this juncture Comentiolus succeeded Philippicus, and
almost immediately after his assumption of the command he worsted the enemy in
an important battle near Nisibis, which was fatal to the general Aphraates, and it is specially mentioned that Heraclius
performed signal acts of valor. In the Persian camp
rich spoils were obtained.
In the same year the Roman arms won minor successes in the
northern regions of Albania. Persia had been encompassed by several dangers at
the same time. Arabs invaded Mesopotamia from the south, the Turks threatened
in the north, and in the north-west the Chazars poured into Armenia and penetrated to Azerbiyan. The
general Varahran was victorious in an expedition
against the Turks, and was then sent to Suania, but
as he returned thence he was twice defeated by Romanus in Albania on the banks
of the Araxes.
But now the course of events in Persia took a turn which
proved decidedly favourable to the Romans, and led to a conclusion of the war. Hormisdas deposed Varahran from
the command in consequence of his ill success in Albania, and is said to have
insulted him by sending him the garment of a woman and a distaff. This story
may be true, but we cannot help remembering that it was told long ago of a
Cypriote king and a queen of Cyrene, and in recent years of Sophia and Narses. Varahran revolted against the unpopular monarch, and the
result of the civil war was that (September 590) Hormisdas was slain, and the rebel was proclaimed king. The second act of the drama was
the contest between Chosroes Eberwiz, a son of Hormisdas, and the usurper, which by the help of Roman arms
was decided in favour of the legitimate heir. Chosroes fled for refuge to Roman
territory, and sent an appeal for help to the Roman Emperor. The difficulties
in which Persia was involved offered an excellent opportunity to New Rome, and
Chosroes was fully conscious of this fact. We are informed that the ambassadors
who bore Chosroes' letter used thirteen arguments to persuade Maurice; and
especially worthy of notice, even if it be due, not to the brain of Chosroes,
but to the pen of Theophylactus, is the argument drawn from the example of
Alexander the Great. The Persian empire was at this moment implicated in such
serious difficulties that it seemed by no means a chimerical idea or an impossible
undertaking for the Roman "Republic", in spite of its degenerate
condition, to make an attempt to reduce the Persian kingdom beneath its sway.
Consequently the envoys of Chosroes are represented as being at pains to point
out that while Alexander had subdued Persia, he had not succeeded in forming a
lasting empire; his vast dominion had been broken up among his successors. The
nature of men, the ambassadors are reported to have observed, makes it
impossible that a single universal kingdom, reflecting the unity of the divine
government, should exist on earth.
This contemporary comparison of a possible undertaking on
the part of the Emperor Maurice with the actual undertaking of Alexander more
than nine centuries before is interesting. We pause, as we read Theophylactus,
and reflect that this 'Romaic' Empire, ruling chiefly over lands
which had submitted to the sway of Alexander—Macedonia, Thrace, Asia Minor,
Syria, Egypt,—and Greek not Latin in its speech, was in a stricter sense the
successor of Alexander's empire than the Roman Empire had been when it reached
to the northern seas. It was as if the spirit of Alexander had lain dissolved
in the universal spirit of Rome for seven hundred years, and were now once more
precipitated in its old place, changed but recognisable.
Maurice was not emulous of Alexander's glories and dangers;
the Roman Empire at that moment had not the heart to aspire to new conquests.
He undertook to restore Chosroes to the throne of the Sassanids, on condition
that Persarmenia and eastern Mesopotamia, with the
cities of Daras and Martyropolis,
should be ceded to the Romans. The terms were readily accepted, and two
victories gained at Ganzaca and Adiabene sufficed to overthrow the usurper and place Chosroes II on the throne (591).
The peace was concluded, Maurice withdrew his troops from
Asia to act against the Avars in Thrace, and for ten years, as long as Maurice
was alive, the old enmity between Rome and Persia slept.
A word must be said of the state of
Persia under the rule of Chosroes Nushirvan, whose
reign extends over nearly half of the sixth century, and may be called the
golden or at least the gilded period of the monarchy of the Sassanids. It was a
period of reforms, of which most seem to have been salutary. In order to prevent
the local tyranny or mismanagement of satraps, who were too far from the centre
to be always under the king's eye, he adopted a new administrative division,
which was perhaps suggested to him by the Roman system of prefectures. He
divided Persia into four parts, over which he placed four governors, whose duty
was to keep diligent watch over the transactions of the provincial rulers. And
for greater security he adopted the practice of periodically making progresses
himself through his dominions. He was greatly concerned for the maintenance of
the population, which seems to have been declining, and he employed two methods
to meet the difficulty; he settled captives in his dominions, and he enforced
marriages. He introduced a new land system, which was found to work so well
that after the fall of the Sassanid monarchy the Saracen caliphs adopted it
unaltered. But perhaps his most anxious pains were spent on the state of the
army, and it is said that when he reviewed it he used to inspect each
individual soldier. He succeeded in reducing its cost and increasing its
efficiency. Like Peter Alexiovitch or Frederick the
Great, he encouraged foreign culture at his court, he patronized the study of
Persian history, and caused a Shahnameh (Book
of the kings) to be composed. Of his personal culture, however, the envy or
impartiality of Agathias speaks with contempt, as
narrow and superficial; on the other hand, he has received the praises of an
ecclesiastical historian. “He was a prudent and wise man”, writes John of
Ephesus, “and all his lifetime he assiduously devoted himself to the perusal of
philosophical works. And, as was said, he took pains to collect the religious
books of all creeds, and read and studied them, that he might learn which were
true and wise and which were foolish. ... He praised the books of the
Christians above all others, and said, ‘These are true and wise above those of
any other religion’.”
CHAPTER IV
SLAVS AND AVARS IN ILLYRICUM AND THRACE
THE great Slavonic
movement of the sixth and seventh centuries was similar in its general course
to the great German movement of the fourth and fifth. The barbarians who are at
first hostile invaders become afterwards dependent, at least nominally
dependent, and christianized settlers in the Empire;
and as they always tend to become altogether independent, they introduce into
it an element of dissolution. Slavs too are employed by the Romans for military
service, though not to such an extent as were the Germans at an earlier date.
This resemblance is not accidental; it is due to the
natural relations of things. But it is curiously enhanced by the circumstance
that just as the course of the German movement had been interrupted or modified
by the rise of the Hun empire of Attila in the plains which are now called
Hungary, so the course of the Slavonic movement was modified by the
establishment of the Avar empire, in the latter half of the sixth century, in
the same regions. And as the power of the Huns, after a brief life, vanished
completely, having received its death-blow mainly from Germans, so the power of
the Avars, after a short and formidable existence, was overthrown early in the
seventh century by the Slavs, for whom the field was then clear. The remnant of
the Avars survived in obscure regions of Pannonia until the days of Charles the
Great
The Avars probably belonged to the same Tartaric group as
the Huns of Attila. In the last years of Justinian's reign, about the time of
the invasion of the Cotrigurs, they first appeared on
the political horizon of the West. They had once been tributaries of the Turk
in Asia, and having thrown off his authority had travelled westward; but we are
assured that they had no right to the name of Avars, and that they were really
only Wars or Huns, who called themselves Avars, a name of repute and dread, in
order to frighten the world. These pseudo-Avars persuaded Justinian to grant
them subsidies, in return for which they performed the service of making war on
the Utrigurs, the Zali, and the Sabiri.
But while Justinian paid them, and they professed to keep off all enemies from
Roman territory, their treacherous designs soon became apparent; they invaded Thrace
(562), and refused to accept the home which the Emperor offered them in
Pannonia Secunda. In this year Bonus was stationed to
protect the Danube against them, as Chilbudius in
former times had protected it against the Slavs.
At first the Avars were not so formidable as they
afterwards became. They harried the lands of the Slaves (Antae) who dwelled
beyond the Danube, but they did not venture at first to harry the lands of the
Romans. When Justin refused to continue to pay the subsidy granted by
Justinian, they took no steps for redress, and, turning away from the Empire, directed
their arms against the Franks and invaded Thuringia, a diversion which had no
consequences.
But now a critical moment came, and a very curious
transaction took place which had two important results. The Lombard king Alboin
made a proposal to Baian, the chagan or king of the
Avars, that the two nations should combine to overthrow the kingdom of the
Gepids, over whom Cunimund then reigned. The
conditions were that the Avars should receive half the spoil and all the
territory of the Gepids, and also, in case the Lombards secured a footing in
Italy, the land of Pannonia, which the Lombards then occupied. The last
condition is curious, and, if it was more than a matter of form, remarkably
naive; the Lombards must have known that, in the event of their returning, they
would be obliged to recover their country by the sword. The character of the
Gepids seems to have been faithless; but the diplomacy of Justinian had
succeeded in rendering them comparatively innocuous to the Empire. Justin now
gave them some half-hearted assistance; but they succumbed before the momentary
combination of Avars and Lombards in the year 567.
The two results which followed this occurrence were of
ecumenical importance: the movement of the Lombards into Italy (568), and the
establishment of the Avars in the extensive countries of the Gepids and
Lombards, where their power became really great and formidable, and the Roman
Empire had for neighbours a Hunnic instead of a German people.
The chagan, Baian, was now in a
position to face the Roman power and punish Justin for the contemptuous
rejection of his demands. From this time forward until the fall of the Avar
kingdom there is an alternation of hostilities, and treaties, for which the
Romans have to pay. At the same time the Balkan lands are condemned to suffer
from constant invasions of the Slavs, over whom the Avars acquire an
ascendency, though the relation of dependence is a very loose one. At one time
the Avars join the Romans in making war on the Slaves, at another time they instigate
the Slavs to make war on the Romans; while some Slavonic tribes appear to have
been occasionally Roman allies. The Slavs inhabited the larger part of the
broad tract of land which corresponds to modern Walachia; while the Avar
kingdom probably embraced most of the regions which are now included in Hungary.
The great object of the Avars was to strengthen their new
dominions by gaining possession of the stronghold of Sirmium, an invaluable
post for operations against the Roman provinces. As, however, Bonus held it
with a strong garrison, they could not think of attacking it, and were obliged
to begin hostilities by ravaging Dalmatia. An embassy was then sent to Justin
demanding the cession of Sirmium, and also the pay that Justinian used formerly
to grant to the Cotrigur and Utrigur Huns, whom they had subdued. It is to be observed that they claimed to be
looked upon as the successors of the Gepids. Their demands were refused; but
when Tiberius, who afterwards became Emperor, was sent against them and suffered
a defeat, the disaster led to the conclusion of a treaty, which seems to have
been preserved for the next few years, and the Romans paid 80,000 pieces of
gold.
We may notice that in these transactions a difference is
manifest between the policy of Justin and the would-be policy of Tiberius.
Justin is bellicose, and refuses to yield to the Avars, whereas his general is
inclined to adopt the old system of Justinian and keep them quiet by paying
them a fixed sum. We may also notice a circumstance, which we might have
inferred without a record, that the Haemus provinces, over which a year seldom
passed without invasions and devastations, were completely disorganised and
infested by highwaymen. These highwaymen were called scamars, a name
which attached to them for many centuries; and shortly after the peace of 570
they were bold enough to waylay a party of Avars.
For the next four years we hear nothing of Avar incursions,
nor is anything recorded of the general Tiberius. We may suppose that he
resided at Constantinople, ready to take the field in case of need; and in 574,
when the enemy renewed their importunities for the cession of Sirmium, he went
forth against them, and was a second time defeated. Before the end of the year
he was created Caesar, and, as he determined to throw all the forces of the
realm into the Persian war, he agreed to pay the Avars a yearly tribute of
80,000 pieces of gold.
But now the Slavs, who for many years seem to have caused
no trouble to the Romans, began to move again, and in 577 no less than a
hundred thousand poured into Thrace and Illyricum. Cities were plundered by the
invaders and left desolate. As there were no forces to oppose them, a
considerable number took up their abode in the land and lived at their pleasure
there for many years. It is from this time that we must date the first
intrusion of a Slavonic element on a considerable scale into the Balkan
peninsula.
It was a critical moment for the government, and the old
policy of Justinian, which consisted in stirring up one barbarian people
against another, was reverted to. An appeal for assistance was made by John the
prefect of Illyricum to the chagan of the Avars, who had his own reasons for
hostility towards the unruly Slavs, and he consented to invade their territory.
The Romans provided ships to carry the Avar host across the Ister,
and the chagan burned the villages and ravaged the lands of the Slaves, who
skulked in the woods and did not venture to oppose him.
But Baian had not ceased to covet
the city of Sirmium, and the absence of all the Roman forces in the East was
too good an opportunity to lose. In 579 he encamped with a large army between Singidunum (Belgrade) and Sirmium, pretending that he was
organizing an expedition against the Slaves, and swearing by the Bible as well
as by his own gods that he entertained no hostile intention against Sirmium.
But he succeeded in throwing a bridge over the Save and came upon Sirmium
unexpectedly; and as there were no provisions in the place, and no relief could
be sent, the city was reduced to such extremities that Tiberius was compelled
to agree to its surrender (581). A peace was then made, on condition that the
Avars should receive 80,000 aurei annually.
The loss of Sirmium is a turning-point in the history of
the peninsula, as it was the most important defence possessed by the Romans
against the barbarians in western Illyricum. The shamelessness of the Avaric demands now surpassed all bounds. When Maurice came
to the throne he consented to increase the tribute hy 20,000 pieces of gold, but in a few months the chagan demanded a further
increase of the same amount, and this was refused. Thereupon (in summer 583)
the Avars seized Singidunum, Viminacium, and other
places on the Danube, which were ill defended, and harried Thrace, where the
inhabitants, under the impression that a secure peace had been established,
were negligently gathering in their harvest. Elpidius,
a former praetor of Sicily, and Comentiolus, one of the bodyguard, were then
sent as ambassadors to the chagan, and it is recorded that Comentiolus spoke
such "holy words" to the Lord Baian that he
was put in chains and barely escaped with his life. In the following year (584)
a treaty was concluded, Maurice consenting to pay the additional sum which he
had before refused.
It was, however, now plain to the Emperor that the Avars
had become so petulant that payments of gold would no longer suffice to repress
their hostile propensities, and he therefore considered it necessary to keep a
military contingent in Thrace and modify the arrangement of Tiberius, by which
all the army, except garrison soldiers, were stationed in Asia. Accordingly,
when the Slavs, instigated by the Avars, invaded Thrace soon after the treaty,
and penetrated as far as the Long Wall, Comentiolus had forces at his disposal,
and gained some victories over the invaders, first at the river Erginia, and afterwards close to the fortress of Ansinon in the neighbourhood of Hadrianople.
The barbarians were driven from Astica, as the region
was called which extends between Hadrianople and
Philippopolis, and the captives were rescued from their hands.
The general tenor of the historian's account of these
Slavonic depredations in 584 or 585 implies that the depredators were not
Slaves who lived beyond the Danube and returned thither after the invasion, but
Slaves were already settled in Roman territory. Comentiolus' work consisted in
clearing Astica of these lawless settlers. It is a
vexed question whether the Slavs also settled in northern Greece and the
Peloponnesus as early as the reign of Maurice. There is evidence to show that
the city of Monembasia, so important in the Middle
Ages, was founded at this time on the coast of Laconia, and it seems probable
that its foundation was due to Greek fugitives from the Slavs, just as Venice
is said to have been founded by fugitives from the Huns.
In autumn (apparently 585) the peace was violated. The
chagan took advantage of the pretext that a Scythian magician, who had indulged
in carnal intercourse with one of his wives and was fleeing from his wrath, had
been received by Maurice in Constantinople. The Emperor replied to the Avar
demonstrations by imprisoning the chagan's ambassador Targitios in Chalcis, an island in the Propontis, for a space of six months, because he presumed
to ask for the payment of money while his master was behaving as an enemy.
The provinces beyond the Haemus, Lower Moesia, and Scythia,
were harried by the Avars, indignant at the treatment of their ambassador
(586). The towns of Ratiaria, Dorostolon, Zaldapa, Bononia,—there was
a Bononia on the Danube as well as in Italy and on
the English Channel,—Marcianopolis, and others were
taken, but the enterprise cost the enemy much trouble and occupied a
considerable time.
Comentiolus was then appointed general, perhaps magister militum per Illyricum, to conduct the war against the Avars.
CAMPAIGN OF 587.—The nominal number of the forces under the command of
Comentiolus was 10,000; but of these only 6000 were capable soldiers.
Accordingly he left 4000 to guard the camp near Anchialus, and divided the
fighting men into three bands, of which the first was consigned to Martin, the
second to Castus, and the third he led himself.
Castus proceeded westward
towards the Haemus mountains and the city of Zaldapa,
and falling in with a division of the barbarian army, cut it to pieces. Martin
directed his course northwards to Tomi, in the province of Scythia, where he
found the chagan and the main body of the enemy encamped on the shore of a
lake. The Romans surprised the chagan's camp, but he
and most of the Avars escaped to the shelter of an island. Comentiolus himself
accomplished nothing; he merely proceeded to Marcianopolis,
which had been fixed on as the place of rendezvous for the three divisions.
When the six thousand were reunited they returned to the camp, and taking with
them the four thousand men who had been left there, proceeded to a place called Sabulente Canalin, whose
natural charms are described by Theophylactus, in the high dells of Mount
Haemus. Here they awaited for the approach of the chagan, who, as they knew,
intended to come southwards and invade Thrace. It would appear that the spot in
which the Romans encamped was close to the most easterly pass of Mount Haemus.
In the neighbourhood of Sabulente there was a river which could be crossed in two ways, by a wooden bridge, or,
apparently higher up the stream, by a stone bridge. Martin was sent to the
vicinity of the bridge to discover whether the Avars had already crossed, while Castus was stationed at the other passage to
reconnoitre, and, in case the enemy had crossed, to observe their movements. Martin
soon ascertained that the barbarian host was on the point of crossing, and
immediately returned to Comentiolus with the news. Castus,
having crossed to the ulterior bank, met some outrunners of the Avars, and cut
them to pieces; but instead of returning to the camp by the way he had come, he
pressed on in the direction of the bridge, where he expected to fall in with
Martin. He was not aware that the foe were already there. But the distance was
too long to permit of his reaching the bridge before nightfall, and at sunset
he was obliged to halt. Next morning he rode forward and suddenly came upon the
Avar army, which was defiling across the bridge. To escape or avoid observation
seemed wellnigh impossible, but the members of the little band instinctively
separated and sought shelter in the surrounding thickets. Some of the Roman
soldiers were detected and were cruelly tortured by their captors until they
pointed out where the captain himself was concealed in the midst of a grove.
Thus Castus was taken prisoner by the enemy.
The want of precision in the narrative of the historian and
the difficulty of the topography of the Thracian highlands make it impossible
to follow with anything like certainty the details of these Avaric and Slavonic invasions. The chagan, after he had crossed the river, divided his
army into two parts, one of which he sent forward to enter eastern Thrace by a
pass near Mesembria. This pass was guarded by 500
Romans, who resisted bravely, but were overcome. Thrace was defended only by some
infantry forces under the command of Ansimuth, who,
instead of opposing the invaders, retreated to the Long Wall, closely followed
by the foe; the captain himself, who brought up the rear, was captured by the
pursuers.
The other division of the Avars, which was led by the
chagan himself, probably advanced westward along that intermediate region which
lies between the Haemus range and the Sredna Gora,
and crossed one of the passes leading into western Thrace.
Comentiolus, who had perhaps also moved westward after the
chagan along Mount Haemus, descended by Calvomonte and Libidourgon to the region of Astica.
It was on this occasion, perhaps as they were defiling along mountain passes,
that the baggage fell from one of the beasts of burden, and the words, "torna torna fratre"
(turn back, brother), addressed by those in the rear to the owner of the beast,
who was walking in front, were taken up along the line of march and interpreted
in the sense of an exhortation to flee from an approaching enemy. But for this
false alarm the chagan might have been surprised and captured, for he had
retained with himself only a few guards, all the rest of his forces being
dispersed throughout Thrace. Even as it was, the Avars who were with him fell
in unexpectedly with the Roman army, and most of them were slain.
After this the forces of the Avars were recalled and
collected by their monarch, who for the second time had barely escaped an
imminent danger. They now set themselves to besiege the most important Thracian
cities. They took Moesian Appiaria,
but Diocletianopolis, Philippopolis, and Hadrianopolis withstood their assaults.
An incident characteristic of those days determined the
capture of Appiaria. A soldier named Busas, who happened to be staying in the fortress, had gone
out to hunt, and "the huntsman became himself a prey". The Avars were
on the point of putting him to death, but his arguments induced them to prefer
the receipt of a rich ransom. Standing in front of the walls, the captive
exhausted the resources of persuasion and entreaty, enumerating his services in
warfare, and appealing to the compassion of his fellow-countrymen to redeem him
from death; but the garrison of the town, under the influence of a man whose
wife was reputed to have been unduly intimate with Busas,
were deaf to his prayers. Indignant at their callousness, the captive did not
hesitate to rescue his own life by enabling the Avars to capture the town, and
at the same time he had the gratification of avenging himself on the unfeeling
defenders of Appiaria. He instructed the ignorant
barbarians how to construct a siege-engine, and by this means the fortress was
taken.
While the enemy were besieging Hadrianople,
Maurice appointed to the post of general in Thrace John Mystacon,
who had formerly commanded in the Persian war; and Mystacon was assisted by the ability and valour of a captain named Drocton,
of Lombard origin. In a battle at Hadrianople the
Avars were routed, and compelled to retreat to their own country. Shortly
before this event Castus had been ransomed.
The misfortunes of the army of Comentiolus and the capture
of Castus seem to have produced a spirit of insubordination
in the capital, and increased the unpopularity of Maurice. Abusive songs were
circulated, and though the writer of the panegyrical history of this reign
makes light of the persons who murmured, and takes the opportunity of praising
the Emperor's mildness in feeling, or at least showing, no resentment, yet the
mere fact that Theophylactus mentions the murmurs proves that they were a
notable signification of the Emperor's unpopularity, especially as the events
which caused the discontent were not directly his fault.
During 588 the provinces of Europe seem to have enjoyed
rest from the invaders, but in 589 Thrace was harried by Slaves, and apparently
Slavs who lived permanently on Roman soil.
The position of affairs was considerably changed when in
the year 591 peace was made with Persia, and Maurice was able to employ the
greater part of the forces of the Empire in defending the European provinces.
He astonished the court by preparing to take the field himself, for an Emperor
militant had not been seen since the days of Theodosius the Great. The nobles,
the Patriarch, his own wife and children, assiduously supplicated him to give
up his rash resolve; but Maurice was firm in his determination. His progress as
far as Anchialus is described by the historian of his reign; but when he
arrived there the tidings that a Persian embassy was awaiting him recalled him
to the capital, and his speedy return seems to have been also caused by signs
and portents.
This ineffectual performance of Maurice, who had never been
popular with the army, discredited him still more in the eyes of the troops;
they had now a plausible pretext for regarding him with contempt. He was
skilled in military science, and wrote a treatise on tactics; but henceforward
the soldiers doubtless thought that he might be indeed a grand militarist “who
had the whole theory of war in the knot of his scarf", but that certainly
his mystery in stratagem was limited to theory”.
I may mention an incident which occurred in the progress of
Maurice, and which transports us for a moment to the habitations of a curious,
if not fabulous, people on the Baltic Sea. The attendants of the Emperor
captured three men who bore no weapons, but carried in their hands musical
instruments. Being questioned by their captors, they stated that they were
Slavs who dwelled by the "western ocean". The chagan of the Avars had
requested their people to help him in his wars, and these three men had been
sent as envoys by the ethnarchs or chiefs of their tribes, bearing a message of
refusal. Their journey had occupied the almost incredible period of fifteen
months. The chagan had prevented them from returning home, and they had
resolved to seek refuge with the Roman Emperor. They had no arms, because the
territory in which they lived did not produce iron; hence their occupation was
music, which, they said, was much more agreeable, and they lived in a state of
continual peace. We are not told what subsequently became of these
extraordinary Slaves, except that Maurice, struck with admiration at their
splendid stature, caused them to be conveyed to Heraclea.
When Maurice returned to Byzantium he was waited on not
only by a Persian embassy but by two envoys, Bosos and Bettos, of a king of the Franks, who proposed
that the Emperor should purchase his assistance against the Avars by paying
subsidies. Maurice consented to an alliance, but refused to pay for it.
During the last ten years of Maurice's reign hostilities
were carried on both with the Avars and with the Slaves. As the narrative of
our original authority, Theophylactus, is in some points chronologically
obscure, it will be most convenient to treat it in annual divisions.
(1) 591 ad—The operations of the Avars
began at Singidon, as the Greeks called Singidunum, on the Danube. Having crossed the river in
boats constructed by the labor of subject Slavs, the
host of the barbarians laid siege to the city, but when a week had passed and Singidon still held out, the chagan consented to retire on
the receipt of two thousand aurei, a gilt table, and rich apparel. It will be
remembered that the capital of Upper Moesia had been captured by the Avars in
583; we must presume that they did not occupy it, for in that case its
recapture by the Romans would certainly have been mentioned by the historian.
The chagan then directed his course to the region of
Sirmium, where, with the help of his Slavonic boatbuilders, he crossed the
Save; thence marching eastwards he approached Bononia on the fifth day. The chief passage of the Timavus (Timok) was at a place called Procliana,
and here the advance guard of the Avars was met by the Roman captain Salvian with a thousand cavalry. Maurice had appointed
Priscus "General of Europe", and Priscus had selected Salvian as his captain or "under-general." A severe
engagement took place, in which the Romans were victorious; and when on the
following morning eight thousand of the enemy
advanced under Samur to crush the small body of Salvian, the Avars were again defeated. The chagan then
moved forward with his whole army, and Salvian prudently retreated to the camp of Priscus, of whose movements we are not
informed.
Having remained some time at Procliana,
the Avars came to Sabulente Canalin,
and thence, having burnt down a church in the vicinity of Anchialus, entered
Thrace, about a month after they had crossed the Danube. Drizipera,
the first town they besieged in Thrace, is said to have been saved by a
miracle, and, having failed here, the enemy marched to Heraclea, where the
general of Europe was stationed. Priscus seems to have gradually fallen back
before the advancing enemy, and now, when an engagement at length took place,
he was routed. Retreating with the infantry to Didymoteichon,
he soon shut himself up in the securer refuge of Tzurulon,
where he was besieged by the chagan. In order to drive away the barbarians, the
Emperor adopted an ingenious and successful stratagem. A letter was written,
purporting to come from the Emperor and addressed to Priscus, in which the
general was informed that a large force had been embarked and sent round by the
Black Sea to carry captive the families of the Avars left unprotected in their
habitations beyond the Danube. This letter was consigned to a messenger, who
was instructed to allow himself to be captured by the enemy. When the alarming
contents of the letter, whose genuineness he did not suspect, became known to
the chagan, he raised the siege and returned as speedily as possible to defend
his country, having made a treaty with Priscus, and received, for the sake of appearance,
a small sum of money. In autumn Priscus retired to Byzantium, and the troops
took up their winter quarters in Thracian villages.
(2) 592 AD—This
year was remarkable for a successful expedition against the Slavs beyond the Ister, who, under the leadership of Ardagast,
had been harrying Thrace. The Emperor had at length come to the conclusion that
the invaders should be opposed at the Danube, and not, as the practice had been
for the last few years, at the Haemus. Priscus, who continued to hold the
position of commander-in-chief, and Gentzon, who had
the special command of the infantry, collected the army at Heraclea and marched
to Dorostolon, or Durostorum,
which is now Silistria, with the intention of
crossing the river and punishing the Slavs in their own country. At Dorostolon, Koch, an ambassador of the Avars, arrived in
the Roman camp, and remonstrated with Priscus on the appearance of an army on
the Danube after the treaty which had been made at Tzurulon.
It was explained that the expedition was against the Slavs, not against the
Avars, and that the Slavs had not been included in the treaty. Having crossed
the Ister, Priscus surprised the camp of Ardagast at midnight, and the barbarians fled in confusion. Ardagast himself was almost captured, for in his
flight he was tripped up by the stump of a tree; but, fortunately for him, the
accident occurred not far from the bank of a river. Plunging in its waves,
perhaps remaining under water and breathing through a reed as the amphibious
Slavs were wont to do, he eluded pursuit.
This victory was somewhat clouded by a mutiny in the army.
When Priscus declared his intention of reserving the best of the spoils for the
Emperor, his eldest son, and the rest of the imperial family, the soldiers
openly showed their displeasure and disappointment at being put off with the
refuse of the booty, or perhaps receiving none at all. Priscus, however,
succeeded in soothing them, and three hundred soldiers, under the command of Tatimer, were sent with the spoils to Byzantium. On their
way, probably in Thrace, they were assailed by a band of Slavs as they were
enjoying the relaxation of a noonday rest. The plunderers were with some
difficulty repulsed, and fifty were taken alive. It is plain that these
marauders belonged to the Slaves who had permanently settled in Roman territory.
Priscus meanwhile sent his lieutenant Alexander across the
river Helibakias to discover where the Slavs were
hiding. At his approach the barbarians fled to a safe retreat in a difficult
morass, where they could defy the Roman troops, who were almost lost in
attempting to penetrate the marsh. The device of setting fire to the woody
covert in which the fugitives were concealed failed on account of the dampness
of the wood. But a Gepid Christian, who had
associated himself with the Slavs, opportunely deserted and came to the aid of
the foiled Alexander. He pointed out the secret passage which led into the
hiding-place of the barbarians, who were then easily captured by the Romans.
The obliging Gepid informed his new friends that
these Slavs were a party of spies sent out by the King Musokios,
who had just learned the news of the defeat of Ardagast;
and when Alexander returned triumphantly with his captives to Priscus, the
crafty deserter, who was honored with handsome
presents, arranged a stratagem for delivering Musokios and his army into the hands of the Romans. The Gepid proceeded to the presence of the unsuspecting Musokios and asked him for a supply of boats to transport the remnant of the Slavonic
army of Ardagast across the river Paspirion. Musokios readily placed at his disposal 150 monoxyles and thirty oarsmen, and he crossed the river.
Meanwhile Priscus, according to the preconcerted arrangement, was approaching
the banks, and at midnight the Gepid stole away from
the boatmen to meet the Roman army, and returned to the river with Alexander
and two hundred soldiers. At a little distance from the bank he placed them in
an ambush, and on the following night, when the time was ripe, and the barbarians,
heavy with wine, were sunk in slumber, the Romans issued from their
hiding-place, under the conduct of the Gepid. The
signal agreed on was an Avaric song, and the soldiers
halted at a little distance till their guide had made sure that all was safe. The
signal was given, the boatmen were slaughtered as they slept, and the boats
were in the possession of the Romans. Priscus transported three thousand men
across the river, and at midnight Musokios, who, like
his boatmen, was heavy with the fumes of wine—he had the excuse of celebrating
the obsequies of a brother—was surprised and taken alive. The massacre of the
Slaves lasted till the morning. But for the energy of the second officer, Gentzon, this success might have been followed by a
reverse; the sentinels were careless, and some of the Slaves who escaped
rallied and attacked the victors. Priscus gibbeted the negligent guards.
At this juncture Tatimer arrived
with an imperative message from the Emperor, that the army should remain during
the winter in the Slavonic territory. The unwelcome mandate would certainly
have been followed by a mutiny on this occasion, and perhaps the events of 602
would have been anticipated by ten years, if the commander had been another
than Priscus, who had always shown dexterity in managing intractable soldiers.
Priscus did not comply with the wishes of Maurice; he broke up his camp and
crossed the Ister. Hearing that the chagan of the
Avars, indignant at the successes of the Romans, was meditating hostilities, he
sent Theodore, a physician, as an envoy to the court of the barbarian. Theodore
is said to have reduced to a lower key the arrogant tone of the chagan by
relating to him an anecdote about Sesostris, and the
barbarian said that all he asked was a share in the spoil which had been won
from the Slavs. Priscus, in spite of the protests of the army, complied with
the demand and sent him five thousand captives. For this "folly" he
incurred the resentment of the Emperor, who some time previously had determined
to depose Priscus and appoint his own brother Peter to the command in Europe.
(3) 593 AD—The
new general, Peter, proceeded by Heraclea and Drizipera (Drusipara) to Odessus,
where the army accorded him a kind reception. But unfortunately he was the
bearer of an imperial mandate, containing new dispensations, highly unwelcome
to the soldiers, concerning the mode in which they were to be paid. The whole
amount of the stipend was to be divided into three portions, of which one was
to be delivered in clothes, another in arms, and the third in money. When the
general read aloud the new ordinance all the soldiers with one accord marched
out of the camp, leaving the general alone with the paper in his hands, and
took up their quarters at a distance of about half a mile. But Peter was the
bearer of other imperial commands also, which were of a more acceptable
character, and he decided, by communicating these immediately, to calm the
wrath of the soldiers at this attempt to cheat them of their pay. The angry
troops were holding a seditious assembly, and loading the name of Maurice with
objurgations, when Peter appeared and, procuring silence, informed them from an
elevated platform, that the Emperor whom they reviled had resolved to release
from service and to support at the public expense those soldiers who had
exhibited special bravery and conspicuously endangered life and limb in the
recent campaigns; and that he had also decreed that the sons of those who had
fallen in battle were to be enrolled in the army list instead of their parents.
At these tidings resentment was turned into gratitude, and the Emperor was
extolled to the heavens. It is not stated, but it seems highly probable, that
the new arrangement in regard to the mode of payment was not pressed; we are
only told that Peter sent an official account of these occurrences to the
Emperor.
Three days later the army moved westward to Marcianopolis, and on reaching that city Peter sent forward
a reconnoitring body of one thousand cavalry under Alexander. These soon fell
in with a company of six hundred Slavs, driving waggons piled up with the booty
which they had won in depredations at the Moesian towns of Akys, Zaldapa, and Scopis. As soon as they saw the Romans, their first
care was to put to death the male prisoners of military age; then, making a
barricade of the waggons, they set the women and children in the enclosed
space, and themselves stood on the carts brandishing their javelins. The Roman
cavalry feared to approach, lest the darts of the enemy should kill the horses under
them; but their captain Alexander gave the command to dismount. The engagement
which ensued was decided by the valor of a Roman
soldier who, leaping up on one of the waggons, felled with his sword the Slavs
who were nearest him. The barricade was then dissolved, but the barbarians were
not destroyed themselves until they had slain the rest of their captives.
About a week later Peter, who lingered in this region
perhaps for the pleasures of the chase, met with an accident in a boar hunt.
The furious animal suddenly rushed upon him from a thicket, and in turning his
horse he sprained his left foot, which collided with the trunk of a tree. The
severe sprain compelled him to remain for a considerable time longer in the
same place, to the disgust and indignation of Maurice, who seems to have
regarded the cause as a pretext, and wrote chiding letters to his brother.
Stung by the imperial taunts, Peter ordered the army to move forward, intending
to cross the Danube and invade the territory of the Slavs, even as Priscus had
invaded it in the preceding year. But two weeks later a letter from Maurice
enjoined on him not to leave Thrace—Thrace is here used in the sense of the
Thracian diocese, including Lower Moesia and Scythia—because it was reported
that the Slaves were contemplating an expedition against Byzantium itself.
Peter accordingly proceeded to Novae, passing on his way the cities of Zaldapa and the fortress of Latarkion.
The inhabitants of Novae gave the general a cordial reception, and induced him
to take part in the feast of the Martyr Lupus, which was celebrated on the day
after his arrival.
On quitting Novae, Peter advanced along the Danube by Theodoropolis and Securisca—or,
as it was generally called, Curisca—to Asemus, a city which had been always especially exposed to
the incursions of the barbarians from beyond the river, and had therefore been
provided with a strong garrison. A circumstance occurred here, which
illustrates the quarrels that probably often arose between cities and generals,
and which also shows that the firm temper of the men of Asemus had not changed since the days when they defended their city with triumphant valor against the Scythian host of Attila. Observing the
splendid men who composed the garrison of Asemus, Peter
determined to draft them off for his own army. The citizens protested, and
showed Peter a copy of the privilege which had been granted to them by the
Emperor Justin. Peter, bent on carrying his point, cared little for the
imperial document, and the soldiers of the garrison prudently took refuge in a
church. Peter commanded the bishop to conduct them from the altar, and when the
bishop declined to execute the invidious task, Gentzon,
the captain of the infantry, was sent with soldiers to force the suppliants
from the holy place. But the solemnity of the church presented so forcibly the
deformity of the act which he was commanded to commit, that the captain made no
attempt to obey the order, and Peter deposed him from his office. On the morrow
a guardsman was sent to hale the disobedient bishop to the camp, but the
indignant citizens assembled and drove the officer out. Then, shutting the
gates, they extolled Maurice and reviled Peter, who deemed it best to leave the
scene of his discomfiture without delay.
It is to be presumed that the army advanced westward; but
we are merely told that a few days later a thousand horsemen were sent forward
to reconnoitre. They fell in with a party of Bulgarians equal in number to
themselves. These Bulgarians, subjects of the Avars, were advancing carelessly,
confiding in the peace which existed between the chagan and the Emperor. But
the Romans assumed a hostile attitude, and when the Bulgarians sent heralds to
deprecate a violation of the peace, the commander sent them to appeal to Peter,
who was still about a mile behind the reconnoitring party.
Peter brooked as little the protest of the Bulgarians as he
had brooked the protest of the men of Asemus, and
sent word that they should be cut to pieces. But, though the barbarians had
been unwilling to fight, they defended themselves successfully and forced the
aggressors to flee; in consequence of which defeat the Roman captain was
stripped and scourged like a slave. When the chagan heard of this occurrence he
sent ambassadors to remonstrate with Peter, but the Roman general feigned
complete ignorance of the matter and cajoled the Avars by plausible words.
At this point the narrative of the historian who has
preserved the memory of these events suddenly transports us, without a word of
notice, into a totally different region,—into the country beyond the Danube,
where Priscus had operated successfully in 592. And he transports us not only
to a different place, but to a different time; for, having recorded the ill
success of Peter and his deposition from the command, he makes it appear, by a
chronological remark, that these events took place at the end, not of 593, but
of 597.
We are thus left in the dark concerning the events of 594,
595, and 596; while as to 597, we know that Peter was commander of the army, we
know some of the details of an expedition against the Slavs beyond the Danube,
and it appears probable that in this year the Avars invaded the Empire and
besieged Thessalonica. From a Latin source we know that in 596 the Avars made
an expedition against Thuringia.
(4) 597 AD.—At
the point where we are first permitted to catch sight of the operations of
Peter in Slavinia, as we may call the territory of
the Slavs, he is sending twenty men across an unnamed river to spy the movements
of the enemy. A long march on the preceding day had wearied the soldiers, and
towards morning the twenty reconnoitrers lay down to rest in the concealment of
a thicket and fell asleep. Unluckily Peiragast, the
chief of a Slavonic tribe, came up with a party of riders and dismounted hard
by the grove. The Romans were discovered and taken, and compelled to reveal the
intentions of their general as far as they knew them. Peiragast then advanced to the ford of the river and concealed his men in the woods which
overhung the banks. Peter, ignorant of their proximity, prepared to cross, and
a thousand soldiers, who had reached the other side, were surprised and hewn in
pieces by the enemy, who rushed forth from their lurking places. The general
then determined that the rest of the army should cross, not in detachments, but
in a united body, in the face of the barbarians who lined the opposite bank.
Standing on their rafts in midstream, the Roman soldiers received and returned
a brisk discharge of missiles, and their superior numbers enabled them to clear
the bank of the Slaves, whose chief, Peiragast, was
mortally wounded. As soon as they landed they completely routed the retreating
adversaries, but want of cavalry rendered them unable to continue the pursuit.
To explain this circumstance, we may conjecture that the thousand men who had
crossed first and were slain by the Slavs were a body of horse.
On the next day the guides lost their way, and the army wandered about unable to obtain water. They were obliged to appease their thirst with wine, and on the third day the evil was aggravated. The army would have been reduced to extreme straits if they had not captured a barbarian, who conducted them to the river Helibakias, which was not far off. The soldiers reached the bank in the morning and stooping down drank the welcome element. The opposite bank was covered with an impenetrable wood, and suddenly, as the soldiers were sprawling on the river margin, a cloud of darts sped from its fallacious recesses and dealt death among the helpless drinkers. Retreating from the immediate danger, the Romans manufactured rafts and crossed the river to detect the enemy, but in the battle which took place on the other side they were defeated. In consequence of this defeat Peter was deposed and Priscus appointed commander in his stead.Of the circumstances which led to the attack of the Avars
on Thessalonica in this year we are left in ignorance. For the fact itself our
only authority is a life of St. Demetrius, the patron saint of Thessalonica,
who on this occasion is said to have protected his city with a strong arm. As
this work is, like most lives of saints, written rather for edification than as
a record of historical fact, we are not justified in using it further than to
establish that the Avars besieged the city and were not successful, and that
the ordinary evils of a siege were aggravated by the fact that the inhabitants
had recently been afflicted by a plague.
In the period of history with which we are dealing we are
not often brought into contact with the rich and flourishing city of
Thessalonica, the residence of the praetorian prefect of Illyricum. It is not
that Thessalonica has been always exempt from sieges and disasters, but it so
happens that during the period from the death of Theodosius to the end of the
eighth century it enjoyed a remarkably untroubled existence. Just before the
beginning of this period its streets were the scenes of the great massacre for
which Ambrose constrained Theodosius the Great to do penance at Milan,—an event
of which a memorial remained till recently in Salonica, a white marble portico
supported by caryatids, called by the Jews of the place "Las incantadas", the enchanted women. And a century after
the close of this period, in the year 904, the city endured a celebrated siege
by the Saracens; while in later times it was destined to suffer sorely from the
hostilities of Normans (1185) and of Turks (1430), under whose rule it passed.
In the seventh and eighth centuries the surrounding districts were frequently
harried by the Slavs who had settled in Macedonia, but with the exception of
the siege in 597 and three successive sieges in the seventh century (675-680
AD), the city of Demetrius was exempted from the evils of warfare. Its prosperity
is indicated by the fact that it was always a headquarters for Jews, and at
the present day Jews are said to form two-thirds of the population.
(5) 598 AD—The
two chief events of this year were the relief of Singidunum,
which was once more besieged by the Avars, and their invasion of Dalmatia.
Priscus collected his army in the region of Astica in Thrace, and discovered that the soldiers had
become demoralised under the ungenial command of Peter; but his friends
dissuaded him from reporting the matter to the Emperor. Having crossed the
Danube, he proceeded to a town known as Upper Novae, and was met by ambassadors
from the chagan, to whom he explained his presence in those regions by the
circumstance that they were good for hunting. Ten days later news arrived that
the Avars were besieging Singidunum, with the
intention of transporting the inhabitants beyond the Ister,
and Priscus hastened to its relief. Encamping provisionally in the river-island
of Singa, from which the adjacent town derives its
name, the general sailed in a fast dromon to Constantiola, where he had an unsatisfactory interview with
the chagan. Returning to Singa, Priscus ordered his
forces to advance against the besiegers of Singidunum,
who speedily retired. The walls of the city, which were unfit to stand a
serious siege, were strengthened.
About ten days after this the chagan proceeded to invade
the country of Dalmatia. He reduced the town of Bonkeis,
and captured no less than forty forts. Priscus despatched a captain named Gudwin, whose German nationality is indicated by his name,
with two thousand infantry, to follow the Avaric army. Gudwin chose bypaths and unknown difficult
routes, that he might avoid inconvenient collisions with the vast numbers of
the invaders. A company of thirty men, whom he sent forward to observe the
movements of the enemy, were fortunate enough, as they lay hidden in ambush at
night, to capture three drunken barbarians, from whom they learned something of
the dispositions of the hostile army, and especially the fact that two thousand
men had been placed in charge of the booty. Gudwin,
delighted at obtaining this information, concealed his men in a ravine, and as
the day dawned suddenly fell upon the guardians of the spoils from the rear.
The Avars were cut to pieces, and Gudwin returned
triumphantly with the recovered booty to Priscus.
We are told that after these events the chagan desponded,
and that for more than eighteen months, from about the early summer 598 to the
late autumn of 599, no hostilities were carried on in the Illyrian and Thracian
lands.
(6) 599 AD—The
chagan invaded Lower (or Thracian) Moesia and Scythia, and Priscus, learning
that he intended to besiege the maritime town of Tomi, hastened to occupy it.
The siege began at the end of autumn and lasted throughout the win
(7) 600 AD—In
spring the Roman garrison began to feel the hardships of famine. When Easter
approached, Priscus was surprised at receiving a kind message from the chagan,
who offered to grant a truce of five days and to supply them with provisions.
This unexampled humanity on the part of an Avar was long remembered as a
curiosity. On the fourth day of the truce a messenger from the chagan requested
Priscus to send his master some Indian spices and perfumes. Priscus willingly
sent him pepper, which was still as great a delicacy to the barbarians as it
had been in the days of Alaric and Attila, Indian leaf, cassia, and spikenard;
"and the barbarian, when he received the Roman gifts, perfumed himself,
and was highly delighted." The cessation of hostilities was protracted until
the Easter festivities were over, and then the chagan raised the siege.
Meanwhile, as Priscus was shut up in the chief town of
Scythia, the Emperor had commissioned Comentiolus to take the field in Moesia.
The chagan advanced against him and approached the city Iatrus,
on the river of the same name, where the general had taken up his quarters. In
the depth of night Comentiolus sent a message to his adversary, challenging him
to battle on the following day, and at the same time commanded his own army to
assemble in fighting array early in the morning. But the soldiers did not
comprehend that this order signified a real battle, and, under the false
impression that their commander's purpose was merely to hold a review, they
appeared in disorder and defectively equipped. Their surprise and indignation
were great when, as the rising sun illumined the scene, they beheld the army of
the Avars drawn up in martial order. The enemy, however, did not advance, and
they had time to curse their general and form in orderly array. But Comentiolus
created further confusion by a series of apparently unnecessary permutations;
changing one corps from the left wing to the right, and removing some other
battalion from the right wing to the left. The right wing fled, and there was a
general flight, but the Avars did not pursue. During the following night
Comentiolus made provision for his own escape, and next morning left the camp
on the pretext of hunting. At noon the army discovered that their general had
deserted them, and hastened to follow him. But they were pursued by the Avars,
who occupied a mountain pass or cleisura,— perhaps the Sipka pass,—and the Romans, now leaderless, were not able
to force a passage until many were slain. When Comentiolus appeared before the
walls of Drizipera he was driven away with stones and
taunts, and was obliged to pass on to Byzantium. The fugitive troops, with the
barbarians close at their heels, arrived soon afterwards at Drizipera,
and the Avars sacked the city.
But the triumph of the chagan was soon turned into
mourning. A plague broke out in his army, the plague of the bubo, and
seven of his sons who had accompanied the expedition died on the same day.
Meanwhile the citizens of Byzantium were so much alarmed at the menacing
proximity of the Avar army, before which Comentiolus had fled, that they
entertained serious thoughts of migrating in a body to Chalcedon. Maurice first
manned the Long Wall with infantry and with companies formed of members of the
blue and green factions, and then, by the advice of the senate, sent an
ambassador to the chagan. When Harmaton arrived at Drizipera he found the great barbarian in the throes of
parental grief, and was obliged to wait ten days ere he could obtain an
audience in the tent of mourning. Soothing words with difficulty induced the
Avar to accept the gifts of an enemy, but on the following day he consented to
make peace, as his family affliction had rendered him indisposed for further
operations. He bitterly accused Maurice of being the peacebreaker, and the
Roman historian admits the charge.
The terms of the peace were these: the Ister was acknowledged by both parties as the frontier between their dominions, but
the Romans had the privilege of crossing it for the purpose of operating
against the Slavs; twenty thousand aurei were to be paid by the Romans to the
Avars.
It was on this occasion that Maurice refused to ransom
twelve thousand captives from the chagan, who consequently executed them all.
The author of the panegyrical history of Maurice makes no reference to the
matter, and his silence is remarkable. He would certainly have mentioned it if
he could have made any apology for this unpopular act of Maurice.
The Emperor had no intention of preserving the peace, and unblushingly
commanded his generals, Priscus and Comentiolus, to violate it. Comentiolus had
been reappointed commander, notwithstanding the complaints of the soldiers
concerning his recent behaviour. The generals joined their forces at Singidunum, whither Priscus seems to have proceeded after
the siege of Tomi, and advanced together down the river to Viminacium (Kastolatz). The chagan, meanwhile, learning that the Romans
had determined to violate the peace, crossed the Ister at Viminacium and invaded Upper Moesia, while he entrusted a large force to
four of his sons, who were directed to guard the river and prevent the Romans
from crossing over to the left bank. In spite of the barbarians, however, the
Roman army crossed on rafts and pitched a camp on the left side, while the two
commanders sojourned in the town of Viminacium, which stood on an island in the
river. Here Comentiolus is said to have acted the part of a poltroon, according
to a now exploded derivation of the word (pollice truncus). He employed a surgeon's lancet to mutilate his hand,
and thereby incapacitated himself for action. His poltroonery was probably
conducive to the success of Roman arms, for Priscus, untrammelled by an
incompetent colleague, was able to win a series of signal triumphs.
Unwilling at first to leave the city without Comentiolus,
Priscus was soon forced to appear in the camp, as the Avars were harassing it
in the absence of the generals. A battle was fought which cost the Romans only
three hundred men, while the ground was strewn with the corpses of four
thousand Avars. This engagement was followed by two other great battles, in
which the strategy of Priscus and the tactics of the Roman army were
brilliantly successful. In the first, nine thousand of the enemy fell, while the second was fatal ten fifteen thousand, of whom the
greater part, and among them the four sons of the chagan, perished in the
waters of a lake, into which they were driven by the Roman swords and spears.
Such were the three battles of Viminacium, fought on the
left bank of the Danube. But Priscus was destined to win yet greater victories
and to vanquish the chagan himself, who, unable to recross the river at
Viminacium, had returned to his country by the region of the Theiss (Tissos). Thither Priscus
proceeded, and, a month after his latest victory at Viminacium, he defeated the
forces of the barbarians on the banks of the Theiss.
He then sent four thousand men to the right bank of that river to reconnoitre
the movements of the enemy. This was the territory in which the kingdom of the
Gepids had once flourished, and certain regions of it were still inhabited by
people of that nation, living in a state of vassalage under the Avars. The reconnoitring
party came upon three of their towns, and found the inhabitants engaged in
celebrating a feast. Before the dawn of day, when the barbarians were overcome
by their debauch, the Romans fell upon and slew thirty thousand; it seems,
however, doubtful whether all these were Gepids. A few days later the energy of
the chagan had assembled another army, and another battle was fought on the
banks of the Theiss. Three thousand Avars, a large
number of Slavs, and other barbarians were taken alive; an immense number were
slain by the sword; many were drowned in the river. The captives were sent to
Tomi, but Maurice was weak enough to restore them to the chagan without a
ransom.
When winter approached, Comentiolus proceeded to Novae, and
thence, having with considerable difficulty procured a guide, followed the
road, or rather the path, of Trajan to Philippopolis.
(8) 601 AD—Comentiolus,
who had wintered at Philippopolis and proceeded to Byzantium in spring, was
again appointed commander, but the summer was marked by no hostilities. In
August, Peter the Emperor's brother was created "General of Europe",
Having remained for some time at Palastolon on the
Danube, he proceeded to Dardania, for he heard that
an army of Avars, under a captain named Apsich, was
encamped at a place in that province called the Cataracts. After an ineffectual
interview between the Avar commander and the Roman general, the former
retreated to Constantiola and the latter withdrew to
Thrace for the winter.
(9) 602 AD—No
martial operations took place during spring, but in summer Gudwin,
the officer second in command to Peter, invaded the land of the Slavs beyond
the Ister and inflicted terrible slaughter upon them.
One Slavonic tribe, the Antae (or Wends), were allies of the Romans, and the
chagan accordingly sent Apsich against them by way of
a reply to the invasion of Gudwin. We are not
informed whether Apsich was successful, but it is
recorded that about the same time a large number of Avars revolted from their
lord and sought the protection of Maurice.
The last scene in the reign of Maurice has been related in
a previous chapter; and at this point our historian, Theophylactus, concludes
his work. As no other writer continued where he left off, we hear no more of
the Avars and Slavs for sixteen years. Of their doings during the reign of
Phocas and the first eight years of the reign of Heraclius our scanty
authorities are silent, with the exception of the single notice that in the
second year of Phocas the tribute to the Avars was raised. We can, however,
entertain no doubt that the Balkan provinces were subjected to sad ravages
during the disorganisation which prevailed in the reign of Phocas and the
consequent paralysis from which the Empire suffered in the first years of
Heraclius. The hostilities of Asiatic enemies were generally wont to have an
effect on events in the vicinity of the Danube, and the barbarians can hardly
have been disposed to miss such an unrivalled opportunity as was offered to
them when Asia Minor was overrun by the Persians.
CHAPTER V
THE LOMBARDS IN ITALY
The character of the medieval history of Italy was decided
in the sixth century. We can hardly overrate too highly the importance of its
reconquest by Justinian, which brought it into contact again with the centre of
Graeco-Roman civilization. The tender hotbed plant of Theodoric's
Ostrogothic civilitas, which had
never looked really promising, had perished before a bud was formed; the thing
intermediate between barbarism and high civilisation was put away; and the
future development of Italy was to result from the mixture of centuries between
the most rude and the most refined peoples dwelling side by side.
The extirpation of the Ostrogoths was almost immediately
followed by the invasion of the Lombards; the whole land was imperial for a
space of but fifteen years (553-568). These two events, the imperial conquest
and the Lombard conquest, possessed a high importance not merely for Italy but
for the whole western world. The first secured more constant intercourse
between East and West, the second promoted the rise of the papal power.
After the battle in which the allied Avars and Lombards
destroyed the monarchy of the Gepids (567 AD), Alboin, the Lombard king, with
an innumerable host, including many nationalities, even Saxons, advanced from
Pannonia to the subjugation of Italy (568 AD). The greater part of northern
Italy, Venetia, and Gallia Cisalpina, of which a
large region was afterwards to be called permanently by the name of the new
conquerors, had no means of defence. Milan was occupied without resistance; and
in these regions the invaders were perhaps supported by a remnant of the
Ostrogoths. Pavia, the ancient Ticinum, destined to
be the capital of the new Teutonic kingdom, held out. The exarch Longinus, who
had succeeded Narses, could do little more than make Ravenna and the Aemilia secure. The bishop of Aquileia had fled to Grado,
and Honoratus, the bishop of Milan, to Genoa, but Ticinum defended itself so long and so firmly that the irritated Lombard is said to
have vowed that he would massacre all the inhabitants. But when the place was
taken after a siege of three years, he relented and chose it for his capital.
Milan and Ticinum were the cities which Alboin was
destined to possess; Ravenna, the Aemilia, and the
Pentapolis stood out against the invaders, and Ravenna was probably not even
attacked by them. Alboin himself did not penetrate farther south than Tuscany,
but his nobles, with bands of followers, pressed forward and formed the duchies
of Spoletium and Beneventum.
Most of the towns in these districts were totally undefended; the walls of Beneventum had been destroyed by Totila; and thus the conquests were
effected without difficulty. The name Zotto, and he
is little more than a name, is well known as that of the first duke of Beneventum; he ruled for twenty years, and as his successor Arichis was appointed in 591, the foundation of the
duchy of Beneventum is fixed to 571. At first small,
the duchies of Spoletum and Beneventum soon expanded at the expense of their Roman neighbours, and the dukes were
afterwards able to maintain a position independent of the Lombard kings, in
consequence of their geographical separation from the northern duchies by the
strip of Roman territory which extended from Rome to the lands of the
Pentapolis.
King Alboin was slain in 573. Fate is said to have
overtaken him by the hands of his second wife Rosamund,
the Gepid princess, who cherished feelings of revenge
towards her lord on account of the death of her father Cunimund,
and a dark legend has associated itself with her name. The existence of a king
was not a necessary element in a Lombard's political vision; royalty could
easily be dispensed with. Accordingly, after the short reign of Clepho, Alboin's successor, the dukes did not elect a new
sovereign, and for about eleven years there was no central Lombard power. But
in 584 the invasions of the Franks compelled the dukedoms to form a united
resistance, and necessitated the renewal of the kingly office for the purpose
of this unity. Autharis, Clepho's son, was elected king. At the same time the Emperor Maurice appointed a new
exarch, Smaragdus, to succeed Longinus.
For a moment it seemed possible that the Lombard power in
Italy might be extinguished in the cradle. The activity of Smaragdus succeeded in forming a great coalition against the invaders (588 AD); the
Franks and the Avars united with the Romans for their destruction. But the
Franks were not really earnest supporters of the Roman cause; and the
enterprise came to nothing. A year or two later we find the ambassadors of the
Franks at Constantinople, attempting to induce Maurice to make them grants of
money.
In 590 Agilulf succeeded Autharis.
He conquered the eastern parts of northern Italy which were still ruled by the
exarch; especially the cities of Patavium and
Cremona, in the east. The Lombard conquests were not accomplished as rapidly as
is sometimes represented, not as rapidly by any means as the conquest of the
Vandals in Africa. It was not till the reign of Rotharis (636-652) that the coast of Liguria and the city of Genoa were won. The
conqueror of Liguria is now celebrated as the compiler of the Lombard code of
laws; but he also deserves to be remembered as the victorious combatant on the
banks of the Scultenna (Tanaro),
where the exarch and the Romans suffered a great defeat
(642 AD). After this the geographical limits of the Romans and
Lombards altered but little; towns were taken and retaken, but the general
outline of the territories remained the same.
The exarchate of Ravenna, including the Pentapolis and the Aemilia, naturally maintained itself, as the imperial power
was concentrated there. Rome, although in a state of sad decline and often hard
pressed, was able to keep the Lombards at bay, chiefly through the exertions of
the Popes, who possessed influence over the Lombards themselves. Naples and Amalfi
also remained imperial, and the land of Bruttii, for
a moment occupied by the Teutons, was soon won back by the Empire. In the
north, Venice and Istria were under the immediate jurisdiction of the exarch of
Ravenna.
It is apparent that the imperial possessions tended to
break up into three groups. Venice, Grado, and Istria, the nucleus of the
future sovereignty of Venice, formed a group by themselves in the north; the
exarchate of Ravenna, with which Rome was both administratively and
territorially connected, formed a group in the centre, although Rome tended to
become independent of the exarch; Naples sometimes seemed to belong to this
group, and at other times to fall in with the southern group, which comprised
Sicily, Calabria, and Bruttii.
The distribution of the Lombards corresponds, and each group fulfils its special function.
(1) The northern group includes Pavia, the royal residence, the duchies of
Bergamo, Brescia, Friuli, Trent, etc., and Tuscany: this group was associated
more especially with the Lombard kings, for in it they possessed a real as well
as a nominal jurisdiction. Its function was to oppose the Frank invasions in
the north-west and to threaten the exarchate, while on the dukes of Friuli in
their march-land devolved the defence of Lombardy against the Slavs and Avars,
who pressed on the frontier. (2) The Lombard territory in central Italy was the
duchy of Spoletium, which endeavoured to extend its
limits to the north at the expense of the Pentapolis and to the west at the
expense of Rome. This duchy tended to join Tuscany and include the isthmus of
land which lay along the Flaminian road between Rome and the Adriatic. (3) In
the south, the duchy of Beneventum included almost
all the territory east of Naples and north of Consentia.
But this description of the geographical demarcation of Lombard and Roman
territory is not sufficient to explain the relations of the powers. There are
two facts which should be emphasized, as having exercised a decisive influence
on the development of Italy. The first is, that the Lombards were a military
nation with no aptitude for cultivating the soil. They consequently at first
left the landowners in possession of their land, exacting from them a tribute
of one-third of the produce, but afterwards occupied a third of the land
themselves, employing of course slave labour. The result was that no violent
change was produced in the character of the population. The other fact was the
wide extent of the possessions of the Church, the patrimony of St. Peter; but
to understand the importance of this we must consider the development of the
papal power, which the kingdom of the Lombards largely effected, and become
acquainted with Pope Gregory I, the greatest figure in Europe at the end of the
sixth century.
The greatness of Gregory I is due to the fact that he
gathered up and presented in a new form and with new emphasis the most lively
religious influences that had operated in the Latin world, namely the
theological system of St Augustine and the monastic ideal of St. Benedict; and
that, on the other hand, he seized and made the most of the gracious
opportunities which the time offered for increasing and extending the influence
of the Roman see.
The events of his life peculiarly fitted him for achieving
these results. From the diverse characters of his parents he inherited both a
capacity for worldly success and a spiritual temperament; his father was a
civil magistrate in Rome and his mother Silvia was a saint. He studied law with
a view to a secular career, but his leisure hours were spent in reading Jerome
and Augustine. The inner voice triumphed in the end, for, when he attained the
high dignity of prefect of the city (574), the circumstances of state and the
gilded pomp which surrounded him struck him with a sort of terror; he felt that
the temptations lurking in them might assail and win; and he fled, as if from
foes, to the shelter of cloister life, having broken with the world by spending
the patrimony of his father on the foundation of seven monasteries. But the
ascetic rigors to which he zealously submitted himself began to harm his
health, and Pope Pelagius, kindly interfering, caused him to leave his cell and
enter the ranks of the clergy, and sent him as an apocrisiarius, or
nuncio, to Constantinople, where he remained for six years (579-585). On his
return to Rome he became abbot of the monastery which he had himself founded
there, and it was at this time that he observed the Anglo-Saxon slaves in the
market-place and conceived the idea of a mission for the conversion of Britain.
He had made all the necessary preparations to set out for that obscure island,
which had already become a land of fable to the inhabitants of the Empire, but
was prevented from carrying out his intention by Pope Pelagius, to whom he was
far too useful to be lost. Pelagius died in 590, and Gregory was unanimously
elected to succeed him, but sorely, it appears, against his own will. It is a
remarkable coincidence that the contemporary Patriarch of Constantinople was
also forced unwillingly to accept his chair, and that he also, like Gregory,
practised the most rigorous asceticism; and yet that John Jejunator tenaciously clung to the title "Ecumenical", while Gregory won for
the Roman bishop a more ecumenical position than he had ever held before. In
these men there seems to have been a real union of pride in their office with
personal humility.
From this sketch it will be seen that Gregory had three
different experiences. He had the experience of civil affairs, he had the
experience of monastic life, he had the experience of ecclesiastical diplomacy.
Thus he was peculiarly fitted to carry on the various forms of activity which
the papal dignity and the difficult circumstances of Italy rendered possible;
and his strong nature, of somewhat coarse fibre, was well adapted to contend
with and take advantage of the troubled times. We may consider, in order, his
relation to the Lombards, his position in western Christendom, his relation to
the Emperor, his theological and literary work.
The hands of the Roman Emperors, Justin, Tiberius, and
Maurice, were so full with the wearisome Persian and Avaric wars that they had no money or men to send to the relief of Italy. The exarch
could do little, for though he was invested with military as well as civil
authority, his attention was chiefly confined to the collection of taxes. While
the Pope was naturally concerned for the defence of Rome in the first place,
his concern extended also to the rest of Italy, especially to the southern
provinces. It was Pelagius, and not the exarch of Ravenna, who sent entreaties
for assistance to the Emperors. One of the missions assigned to Gregory when he
was apocrisiarius was to obtain aid against the Lombards; but Tiberius was
unable to send succour, and advised the Pope either to buy off the enemy, or by
a bribe to persuade the Franks to invade Cisalpine Gaul. Shortly after this the
Franks were induced to undertake three successive invasions; but these came to
nothing, as no intelligent co-operation was carried out between the invaders
and the military forces of the exarchate.
In the year in which Gregory became Pope, Autharis died, and his widow, the Bavarian Theudelinda, married Agilulf, who became the new king.
Agilulf was an Arian, but Theudelinda was a Catholic,
and Gregory possessed so much influence over her that her husband allowed their
son to be baptized into the Catholic faith and ceased to place the Catholics in
his realm under any disabilities. Thus in Gregory's time the see of Rome and
the Lombard court were generally on very good terms, although on one occasion
(593) Agilulf threatened Rome, and it was necessary to buy him off. The Pope
was the mediator of a peace between Pavia and Ravenna in 599.
Thus it was not the king of Lombardy who was a thorn in the
side of the Pope, but the dukes of Beneventum and Spoletium. The former pressed on the Roman territory in the
south, the latter pressed on it in the east. Now, while it was of course
necessary to defend Rome and other important cities against Lombard
aggressions, it was also extremely desirable for the Popes to be at peace with
the Lombard rulers, as the lands of the Church were scattered through their
dominions. Thus the Pope had a far greater interest in maintaining peace than
the exarchs, who had no pledges in the hands of the enemy. This circumstance
was apparent when, in 592, Gregory concluded a peace with the duke of Spoleto,
who was threatening Rome; and the Emperor Maurice called him
"fatuous" for so doing.
Gregory practically managed all the political and military
affairs in the south of Italy, though this was strictly the duty of the exarch.
He appointed the commanders of garrisons and provided for the defence of
cities; and in this activity not only were his early secular training, and his
experience in public affairs, of service, but the fact that he had been a civil
functionary in Rome must have secured for him considerably greater power and
influence with the people than he could otherwise have possessed. The Pope's
practical experience aided him in administering "the patrimony of
Peter", to which I have already referred. This was an important matter, as
the large possessions of the Church were one of the chief means of supporting
and extending the papal power. Nor were these possessions confined to Italy;
the Church owned property in north Africa, in Gaul, and in Dalmatia. The income
from these lands enabled Gregory to take measures for the defence of Rome, to
give the monthly distributions of bread and money to the poor, to ransom captives
taken in war. He was therefore extremely careful in watching over economy of
the Patrimony, which was placed in the hands of ordained clergy called rectores or defensores; and he used
to inquire into the minutest details.
In Spain, in Gaul, and in Africa the influence of Rome was
considerably increased under Gregory, while the conversion of Britain extended
the limits of western Christendom. Leander, the bishop of Seville, who was a
warm supporter of Gregory, induced Reccared, the
Visigothic king, whom he had converted from Arianism to Catholicism, to send to
the bishop of Rome an announcement of his conversion, accompanied by the
guerdon of a gold cup, as an offering to St. Peter. In Gaul Gregory exercised
considerable indirect influence, and the bishop of Arles acted as a sort of
vicar or unofficial representative. The exertions of the Pope were successful
in suppressing or lessening many abuses, such as simony and persecution of the
Jews; and he maintained a correspondence with the celebrated Queen-mother
Brunhilda. Brunhilda's acts are supposed to have secured her an honourable
place among the Jezebels of history, but Pope Gregory felt great joy over her
"Christian spirit." It is certainly futile to assume, with Gregory's
defenders, that he was ignorant of the contemporary history of the courts of
Paris and Soissons, because very small connection subsisted then between Italy
and France; nor, on the other hand, can the correspondence be regarded as
either surprising or damning. Brunhilda was liberal in endowing churches and
religious institutions; she was sympathetic and helpful in Gregory's missionary
enterprises; she was Roman in her ideas. If her political conduct was not
irreproachable, she had thrown much in the counter scale; if she was a fiend, she
was certainly a fiend angelical. When we take into account the ideas of that
age, in which heresy was looked on as the deadliest sin and religious zeal as
efficient to cancel many crimes, it is hardly to be wondered that Gregory
treated Brunhilda with respect.
In Africa Gregory had far greater authority than in Gaul,
where he had no official position. Not only were the bishops of Carthage and
Numidia his ardent supporters and useful instruments, but the exarch Gennadius, who had earned a fair fame by delivering his
provinces from the Moorish hordes who vexed it, favoured and encouraged the
increase of the Pope's influence. A regular, system was introduced of appealing
to the see of Rome as the supreme ecclesiastical court.
The relations of Gregory to the Emperor Maurice, whose
subject he was, were not untroubled by discord, and in the extension of his
ecclesiastical jurisdiction the Pope sometimes came into collision with the
Emperor. In Dalmatia, for example, a certain Maximus was elected bishop of
Salona. Gregory forbade his consecration, and Maximus appealed to Maurice, who
espoused his cause. Then Gregory forbade him to perform the episcopal offices,
but Maurice continued to support Maximus in his contempt of the papal commands.
As Gregory had no means of enforcing his will, he consulted his dignity by
transferring the matter to Maximian, the bishop of Ravenna, and Maximus, as
directed, betook himself thither. He was there convinced of his fault and
confessed that he had "sinned against God and against Pope Gregory."
Gregory's quarrel with the Patriarch of Constantinople has
been already referred to, and in this affair too the Pope came into collision
with the Emperor. It has also been mentioned that there was discord between
them on the matter of Gregory's relations to the Lombards. A law of Maurice
which prevented soldiers from shirking service by entering monasteries was yet
another cause of dispute.
The consequence was that the relations between Gregory and
Maurice were strained; Gregory was inclined to attribute all the evils which
beset the Empire to the iniquity of the Emperor, and he was so unspeakably
relieved by the death of Maurice that he could not restrain the voice of
jubilation. He looked upon Phocas, whose name became in the eastern part of the
Empire a "common nay word and recreation" for all that is abominable,
as a public deliverer to whom the thanksgiving of the world was due; and his
congratulatory letter to Phocas, wherein he says that "in heaven choirs of
angels would sing a gloria to the Creator," may still be read.
This is a page in Gregory's correspondence which, like his
letters to Brunhilda, has been made a subject for sectarian controversy.
Protestants seize hold of it as a glaring blot in the Pope's character, while
Catholics are at pains to defend him on the plea that he knew nothing either of
Phocas personally or of the circumstances under which he had assumed the crown.
It has been especially urged that there was no apocrisiarius at Constantinople
at the time to inform him of the details, and that he had merely heard the bare
fact that Phocas had succeeded Maurice. Here again we have no proof of the
extent of the Pope's information; but it seems gratuitous to assume that he
knew nothing of the details. Such an assumption would not be made in the case
of any one but a saint; the ground for the exception being that the character
of a saint is inconsistent with the authorship of a letter in which the
perpetrator of such acts as those of Phocas is not merely acknowledged but
eulogised. But we must remember the ideas which were prevalent at the time;
when we are at a house of entertainment in the sixth or seventh century we must
be particularly careful not to reckon without our host. Maurice was, in the
eyes of Gregory, a pestilence to the Empire and a foe to the Church; his death
was a consummation eminently to be desired; and he who should achieve such a
consummation was a person devoutly to be blessed. There seems therefore no
reason to suppose that Gregory was not aware that the feet of Phocas, as he
ascended the throne, were stained with innocent blood; he looked upon the acts
as a political necessity, for which it would have been hardly fair to condemn
the new Emperor. On the other hand, we need not suppose that Gregory was
influenced by any ulterior motive to speak insincerely in his letter, or that
he aimed at flattering Phocas into commanding the Patriarch of Constantinople
to discard the obnoxious ecumenical title. This ensued; but we need not assume
that it was compassed by insincerity on the part of the Pope.
Thus Gregory with consummate dexterity took advantage of
all the means that presented themselves to put the papal power on an
independent footing, and win for it universal recognition in the West. But it
is especially important to observe how the double rule in Italy contributed to
the realization of the Pope's ambition. If there had been no Lombard invasion,
if Italy had been the secure possession of the Roman Empire, Gregory would have
been at the mercy of the Augustus of Byzantium and would have had no power to
act independently. On the other hand, the presence of the imperial power was
equally important; it would have been still more disastrous to become the
subject of the Lombard king. Thus the independence of the Popes was struck like
a spark between the rival temporal powers that divided Italy.
If we turn to his more specially religious work, we find
that Gregory exerted a far-reaching influence over the future life of the
Church. He had himself been deeply moved by the monastic ideal of St. Benedict,
of whom he wrote a biography; and he assiduously endeavoured to make salutary
reforms in cloister life. He firmly suppressed those vagrant monks, whom the
sanctity of a religious dress could not always shield from the obnoxious name
of beggars. He
forbade youths under eighteen years to take the vows, nor would he permit a
married man to enter a monastery without his wife's express consent. He
relieved monks of all mundane cares by instituting laymen to look after the
secular interests of the religious establishments.
The clergy (clerus), whom he was careful to dissociate
completely from the monastic profession, were the object of still more
solicitous attention. His Regula pastoralis, or manual of duties for
a bishop, became and remained for centuries an authority in the Church and an
indispensable guide for bishops. The celibacy of the clergy was his favourite
and most important reform, and even in Gaul he was able to exert influence in
that direction. The reforms in the liturgy which have been attributed to him
are doubtful; but the introduction of the solemn Gregorian chant instead of the
older less uniform Ambrosian music has rendered his name more popularly known
than any of his other achievements.
In doctrine he followed the respectable authority of the
founder of Latin theology, St. Augustine. But theology was the Pope's weak
point; here the coarse fibres of his nature are apparent, his want of
philosophy, his want of taste. Take, for example, his theory of the redemption.
Influenced by familiarity with the ideas of Roman law, men were prone to look
on the redemption as a sort of legal transaction between God and the devil, in
which the devil is overreached. Gregory, true to the piscatorial associations
of the first bishop of Rome, presents this idea in a new, definite, and
original form. It is easy to identify leviathan in Job with the Evil One; and
once this identification is made, it is obvious that the redemption must have
been a halieutic transaction, in which God is evidently the fisherman. On his
hook he places the humanity of Jesus as a bait, and when the devil swallows it
the hook pierces his jaws.
Consistent with the coarseness displayed in this grotesque
conception, which is put forward earnestly, not as a mere play of imagination,
was his unenlightened attitude to literature and classical learning, in which
he went so far as to despise grammar; and this trait of his character is
brought out in the twelfth-century legends, which ascribe to him the
destruction of the Palatine library and other acts of vandalism. The
superstitious love of miracles and legends, exhibited in every page of his
works, may be added to complete a superficial sketch.
The great historical importance of the pontificate of
Gregory I consists in the fact that he placed the Roman see in a new position
and advanced it to a far higher dignity than it had previously enjoyed. The
germ of the papal power, which so many circumstances combined to foster and
increase, lay in the position of the Pope as a defender of the people against
temporal injustice and misery. This idea is expressly recognised by
Cassiodorus, the secretary of Theodoric. It was on the same principle that the
bishops influenced the election of the defensores civitatis and
co-operated with them. Justinian in 554 sent standards of coins, measures, and
weights to the Pope and the senate, thus recognising that the activity of the
bishop of Rome was not limited to affairs of religion and morals. But Gregory
the Great was the first pontiff who made temporal power an object of
aspiration, and took full advantage of the opportunities which were offered.
Pope Pelagius (555-560) had called in the assistance of military officers
against bishops who resisted his authority, but Gregory appointed civil and
military officers himself. He nominated Constantius tribune of Naples when that
city was hard pressed by the Lombards, and entrusted the administration of Nepi, in southern Tuscany, to Leontius, a vir clarissimus. He
made peace on his own account with the Lombards when they were at war with the
imperial representative, and asserted that his own station was higher than that
of the exarch. At the same time he would not tolerate interference in temporal
affairs on the part of any subordinate dignitary of the Church, whether bishop
or priest, and, like Pelagius, he used the arm of lay authority to suppress
recalcitrant clergy.
During the seventh century, for it is convenient to
anticipate here the only remarks that have to be made on the subject, no great
Pope arose, no Pope of the same power as Gregory I; yet his example was not
forgotten. Honorius (625-638), the dux plebis as he is called in an
inscription, consigned the government of Naples to the notary Gaudiosus and the master of soldiers Anatolius,
and instructed them in what manner they were to govern. We shall see that
during the disputes with the monotheletic Emperors of
Constantinople the soldiers at Rome always espoused the cause of the Popes
against the exarchs.
CHAPTER VI
THE EMPIRE AND THE FRANKS
We have become acquainted with the internal decline of the
Empire from the death of Justinian to the fall of Maurice, we have followed the
course of the wars with Persia and witnessed the depredations of the Avars and
Slaves in the Balkan peninsula, and we have seen how the Lombards wrested half
of the Italian peninsula from its Roman lords. We must now learn the little
that is to be known of the relations of the Empire to the Merovingian kings of
Gaul; and our evidence, although fragmentary, is quite sufficient to show not
only that the Roman Empire still maintained its position as the first state in
Europe, and that New Rome was regarded as the centre of civilization, but that
the Merovingians still acknowledged a sort of theoretical relation of
dependence on the Emperors.
Chlotar, son of Chlodwig, survived his brothers, and was sole king of Gaul
for a short time before his death. He died in 561, and his four sons, Sigibert, Chilperic, Charibert, and
Gunthramn, divided Gaul into four kingdoms, even as their father and uncles had
divided it fifty years before after the death of Chlodwig.
In 574 Sigibert, who ruled in Austrasia (formerly the kingdom of Theoderic), sent an embassy to Justin. The two envoys, Warmar a Frank and Firminus a
Gallo-Roman of Auvergne, sailed to Constantinople, and were successful in
obtaining from Justin what their master sought; what this was we are not
informed. In the following year they returned to Gaul.
Some years later, probably at the end of 578 after the death of
Justin, Chilperic sent ambassadors to New
Rome. The object of this embassy was, I conjecture, to congratulate the new
Emperor Tiberius on his accession. The ambassadors did not return to the court
of Chilperic until the year 581; the delay
seems to have been partly due to a shipwreck which they suffered near Agatha,
on the coast of Spain. They brought back gold coins, each weighing no less than
a pound, sent by the munificent Tiberius as a present to Chilperic. On the obverse was an image of the Emperor with
the legend, round the edge, tiberii constantini perpetui avgusti,
while on the reverse were represented a chariot and charioteer, with gloria romanorum.
These coins and many other ornaments, which the envoys had brought, were shown
by Chilperic to the historian Gregory of
Tours.
It is remarkable that, while Childerich and Sigibert thus
maintained friendly relations with the Empire, we never hear of Gunthramn
sending embassies to Constantinople. Now, the interests of Gunthramn and the
interests of the lords of Austrasia collided. When Sigibert died, his son
Childebert was a mere child, and his widow Brunhilda carried on the government.
Brunhilda was a Visigothic princess, and had received a Roman education; she
had, therefore, a leaning towards the Roman Empire, and maintained a friendly
intercourse both with New Rome and with Old Rome. Gunthramn was not on good
terms with his sister-in-law; presuming on the youth of his nephew and the rule
of a woman, he had seized cities which had belonged to Sigibert, and was determined
to retain them.
This then is the situation at the accession of
Maurice. Brunhilda, the queen of Austrasia, is friendly to the Empire and
at enmity with Gunthramn, the king of Burgundia,
who maintains apparently no relations with the Empire. It is plain that it
would be advantageous for Maurice to have a friend or a vassal in the south of
Gaul instead of Gunthramn, and that such a change would also
please Brunhilda. Accordingly, we are not surprised to find that both
Maurice and Brunhilda support the enterprise of a pretender to wrest
Burgundy from Gunthramn.
This pretender was named Gundovald, and he fancied himself,
whether truly or not, to be the son of Chlotar I.
He had been born in Gaul, carefully nurtured, and received a
liberal education; his hair fell in tresses down his back, as it was worn
by sons of kings; and he was presented by his mother to Childebert as
the son of Chlotar, and therefore Childebert's nephew; "His father hates him",
she said, "so do you take him, because he is your flesh". Then Chlotar sent a message to his brother demanding the
boy, and Childebert did not refuse to send him. Gundovald's hair was shorn by the order of his reputed
father, who repudiated the relationship. From this time until the death
of Chlotar he supported himself by painting
the walls and domes of sacred buildings. After the death of Chlotar he found a refuge with Charibert, whom he regarded as his brother. His hair grew
long again, but, probably after Charibert's death, Sigibert summoned
him to his court, and having caused him to be tonsured, sent him to
Koln. Gundovald fled from Koln to Italy, where he was received by the
exarch Narses, and married a wife, by whom he had two sons. From Italy he
proceeded to Constantinople, where the Emperors Justin and Tiberius accorded
him a kind welcome, and he abode there for several years, treated as a royal
refugee.
Gunthramn Boso, a general of
Gunthramn, king of Burgundy, arrived at Constantinople and informed Gundovald
of the situation in Gaul. The only representatives of the house of Chlodwig were the childless Gunthramn, the child
Childebert, and Chilperic, whose family was dying
out. It seemed an excellent opportunity for Gundovald to claim a share in the
heritage of his father Chlotar, and Boso invited him to return to Gaul: "Come", he
said, "for all the chief men of the kingdom of King Childebert invite you,
and no one has dared to breathe a word against you. For we know that you are
the son of Chlotar, and there is left in Gaul none
able to rule his kingdom, unless you come". Having assured himself of the
good faith of Boso by exacting oaths from him in
twelve different sanctuaries, and having bestowed gifts upon him, Gundovald set
sail for Massilia, where he was received by the
bishop Theodoras. Massilia nominally belonged to both Burgundy and Austrasia, but at this time Gunthramn's power was preponderant there. The sympathies of
the bishop, however, were with Brunhilda and Childebert, and he therefore
welcomed Gundovald, whom they had invited.
Although no Roman ships or Roman soldiers
had accompanied Gundovald from Constantinople to support him in his
attempt to establish himself on a throne in Gaul, yet there is no doubt that
Maurice looked with favor on his enterprise, and
assisted him with ample sums of money. He arrived at Massilia with
large treasures, of which the perfidious Boso robbed
him. Gunthramn of Burgundy considered the arrival of Boso due to a definite scheme on the part of
the Roman Emperor to reduce the kingdom of the Franks under the
imperial sway; and he arrested bishop Theodoras on
the charge that he co-operated in this scheme by receiving the
"stranger" Gundovald.
From Marseilles Gundovald proceeded to Avignon, where
he was received by the Patrician Mummolus, who embraced his cause.
But Boso, having betrayed the man whom he had
invited to Gaul, and robbed him of his treasures, returned to his loyalty
to Gunthramn, and led an army against Mummolus. The Burgundians,
however, were vanquished, and Gundovald, who had withdrawn to an island on
the sea-coast, returned to the city of Avignon. Two important dukes, Desiderius
and Bladastes, embraced the pretender's cause;
and after Chilperic's death, in 584, the
arms of Gundovald and his supporters won many important towns in
south-western Gaul, including Tolosa and Burdigala. But his success depended ultimately upon the
support of Austrasia, and when Childebert made peace
with Gunthramn the cause of Gundovald was lost. He was
deserted by his adherents, and delivered by Mummolus into the hands
of Gunthramn's army. Boso killed him by hurling a stone at his head, and
his corpse was treated with contumely by the soldiers. Such was the end of the
pretender Gundovald, who seems to have been commissioned by the Emperor
Maurice to wrest southern Gaul from Gunthramn in somewhat the same
way as the great Theodoric was commissioned by Zeno to wrest Italy from
Odovacar.
The peace between Gunthramn and Childebert did
not interfere with the relations between the court of Metz and the court of
Byzantium. Maurice sought the help of the Austrasian forces against the Lombards of Italy, and for that purpose sent fifty
thousand solidi to Childebert or Brunhilda. He also adopted Childebert as
a son, even as Justinian had adopted Theudebert. Childebert crossed
the Alps with a large army, but the Lombards hastened to submit themselves
before he had time to strike a blow, and induced him with gifts and promises of
loyalty to return to his kingdom. When Maurice heard that he had made peace
with the Lombards he sent ambassadors to demand back the money from Childebert,
who had not fulfilled his part of the bargain; but Childebert, confiding in his
strength, did not even deign to reply.
No less than four times did the king of Austrasia, urged by the
importunities of his "father" the Emperor Maurice, set forth against
the lords of northern Italy, but each time he accomplished nothing. In the year
586, two years after his first expedition, the incessant demands of the
imperial envoys that he should either perform his promise or repay the money,
induced him to lead an army against Italy; but dissensions among the generals
compelled him to return, probably before he had reached the Alps, and he made
peace with Autharis, king of the Lombards, to
whom he also promised his sister Chlotsuinda in
marriage. But in 588 he promised the same lady to Reccared,
king of the Goths, who had been converted recently to the Catholic faith, and
determined once more to cross the Alps and co-operate with the exarch
of Ravenna in driving the Lombards from Italy. This time the Lombards
and Franks met in battle, and the forces of Childebert suffered a
terrible defeat.
The letter of Maurice, in which he reproaches Childebert for
his half-heartedness after this failure, is preserved,
and Childebert again crossed the Alps in 590 with an army commanded
by no fewer than twenty dukes. The fourth expedition was little more successful
than the other three. The Romans failed to co-operate with the
Franks; the Lombards diligently avoided hazarding a battle; and ultimately
disease broke out in the army of Childebert, and compelled him to return
to Transalpine Gaul.
But the question of warring together against the Lombards was
not the only cause of the embassies which passed between the courts of New Rome
and Austrasia. Childebert had a sister, Ingundis, who
married Hermenigild, son of Leovigild,
king of the Visigoths. Ingundis and her husband were
adherents of the Catholic faith, and they both endured persecution at the hands
of the Arian king. It was in vain that they placed themselves under the
protection of the "Republic" in southern Spain; Leovigild captured Hermenigild and
threw him into prison. Ingundis, with her infant
son Athanagild, resolved to seek at New Rome the
protection which the Republic could not afford her at Seville (Hispalis). She died on her journey, but Athanagild reached Byzantium and was reared as
a Roman by the care of Maurice. What ultimately became of this
Visigothic prince is not known, but in the year 590 we find his
grandmother Brunhilda, herself originally a Visigothic princess, and his
uncle Childebert begging Maurice to send the boy to Gaul. Maurice
probably regarded him as a useful hostage for the loyalty of the Austrasian king; but though we have the letters
of Brunhilda and Childebert concerning the restitution
of Athanagild, the reply of Maurice has not been
preserved. Childebert left no stone unturned to induce Maurice to
comply with his wish. He wrote not only to Maurice himself, but to all the
persons at Constantinople who possessed influence at court, including Paul the
Emperor's father, Theodore the master of offices, John the quaestor, Magnus the
curator (of the palace), Italica a patrician
lady, Venantius a patrician.
Moreover, Brunhilda wrote both to Maurice and to the Empress
Anastasia. We have also the letters
of Brunhilda and Childebert to Athanagild.
All these epistles were carried to New Rome by ambassadors, of whom
the spatharius Gripo seems
to have been the chief, and the tone of this correspondence illustrates the
lofty position which the Roman Emperor held in the eyes of the
western nations. The majesty of the Imperator was still considered something
far higher than all German royalties. Childebert's letter
to Maurice begins thus: "The King Childebert to the glorious
pious perpetual renowned triumphant Lord, ever Augustus, my father Maurice,
Imperator." The Emperor, on the other hand, adopts the following form of
address, which may be given in the original Latin: Domini nostri Dei Jesu Christi
Imperator Caesar Flavius Mauritius
Tiberius fidelis in Christo mansuetus maximus beneficus pacificus Alamannicus Goticus Anticus Alanicus ;Wandalicus Herulicus Gypedicus [Gepaedicus] Africus pius felix inclytus victor
ac triumphato semper Augustus Childeberto viro ;glorioso regi Francorum.
Like Justin II, Maurice adopts all the pompous titles of his
great predecessor Justinian; they were part of the inheritance. He is fully
conscious that he is the greatest sovereign in Europe, or even in the world,
and the kings of the West acknowledge that they owe him homage and deference
as Roman Emperor. In the economy of the Empire the king of the Franks
is only a vir gloriosus.
CHAPTER VII
THE LANGUAGE OF THE ROMAIOI IN THE SIXTH CENTURY
It will not be inappropriate to give some account of the
Greek language as it was spoken by the Romans of the fifth and sixth centuries
and written by their historians. It is to be observed that in the year 400,
when Gaul and Spain were still Roman, the Greek-speaking people in the Empire
were in a minority, and the official language of the Empire was still purely
Latin. In the year 500, when not only Gaul and Spain, but Africa and even Italy
(practically if not theoretically) had been lost, the Empire was a realm of
Hellenic speech with the exception of Illyricum, and though Latin was still the
official language, the Emperors often issued their constitutions in Greek. When
Africa, Italy, and the western islands were recovered, the Latin element was
once more considerable, but not so considerable as the Greek. Justinian,
although Latin was his native tongue, as he often states with a certain pride,
issued most of his constitutions, which were to have effect in the
Greek-speaking part of the Empire, in the Greek language. An official of the
civil service in the sixth century complains that a knowledge of Latin is no
longer as valuable as it used to be, inasmuch as it is being superseded by
Greek in official documents. By the end of the sixth century Latin had ceased
to be the imperial tongue.
This disuse of Latin had a considerable effect on the vocabulary
of the Greek language. Official or technical Latin terms, for which there were
no equivalents ready to hand, had already made their way into Greek speech, but
no one would have ventured to use them in writing without an apology. But once
they were regularly employed in the imperial constitutions, they became as it
were accredited; they began to lose their foreign savor,
and were no longer looked on as strangers; prose-writers no longer scrupled to
use them.
But we must carefully distinguish between three kinds of Greek.
There was (1) the vulgar spoken language, from which modern Greek is derived.
Its idiom varied in different places; the Greek spoken in Antioch, for example,
differed to some extent from that spoken in Byzantium or that spoken in
Alexandria. Antiochian Greek may have been influenced by Syriac, as Syriac was
certainly influenced by Greek. There was (2) the spoken language of the
educated, which, under the influence of the vulgar tongue, tended to degenerate.
There was (3) the conventional written language, which endeavoured to preserve
the traditions of Hellenistic prose from the changes which affected the oral
"common dialect". We may take these three kinds of Greek in order.
(1) Of the vulgar dialect, such as it was spoken at Byzantium in
the sixth century, a specimen has been preserved in the dialogue which took
place in the hippodrome between the Emperor and the green faction shortly
before the revolt of Nika. From this and from stray words which are preserved
by historians or inscriptions, we see that it is already far on its way to
becoming what is called Romaic; in fact it was already called Romaic. A
sixth-century inscription in Nubia proves that the word neron was
then used for "water", whence comes the modern Greek nepó.
Besides the strange vocabulary, derived partly from Latin
and partly from local Greek words, changes are taking place in the grammar and
syntax. Terminations in -ion,
for example, are becoming corrupted to -in: the
perfect tense and many prepositions and particles are falling into disuse.
(2)That the language of educated people was different from that
of the vulgar, and approximated to the written language, is proved by a passage
in Menander. It was, nevertheless, subject to the same tendencies, as is fully
demonstrated by the fact that these very tendencies soon affected written prose
and changed Hellenistic into Byzantine literature. Graecized Latin words must
have been used even more by the higher classes than by the lower; a super
elegant writer at the beginning of the seventh century employs familía (familia) without a line of apology. These Latinisms were
chiefly adopted in matters appertaining to Roman law, to the imperial
administration, or to warfare. There were also many new colloquial usages of
old words, which the purism of Procopius or Agathias would not have countenanced. The adjective oreos, for
instance, meant nothing more than "fair" or "
pretty"; ponó meant
"I am ill", and Kindenévo was used in the
special sense of being sick unto death ... It was some time, doubtless, before
unsightly forms like évala were
adopted from the mouths of the common people, but the perfect and pluperfect
tenses were soon relegated to the speech of the pedant and the prose of the man
of letters; the old variety of particles and prepositions was replaced by a
baldness and monotony of expression which correspond to the more simple
constructions that came into use; ean was used with the indicative mood.
(3) It has been already pointed out that the Greek historians of
the fifth and sixth centuries wrote in a traditional prose style, handed down
by an unbroken series of Hellenistic writers from Polybius, and, although it
underwent some modifications, differing less from the style of Polybius than
the style of Polybius differs from the style of Xenophon. Olympiodorus seems to have been the only writer who ventured to introduce words and phrases
from the spoken language, and thus his writings may be considered, in point of
style, a mild anticipation of the chronicles of Malalas and Theophanes.
Procopius and Agathias and Menander
could not, indeed, avoid the necessity of sometimes introducing technical or
official Latin words which had become current in spoken Greek, but they always
considered themselves bound to add an apologetic "so-called" or
"to use the Latin expression". As a rule, however, they employ
periphrases, and avoid the use of such titles as praetorian prefect, magister militum, or comes largitionum.
Even the word "indiction" is considered
undignified, and rendered by such a circumlocution as "the fifteen-year
circuit". It would be interesting, if we had more data, to trace the
reciprocal influences exerted on each other by the spoken language of the
higher classes and the conventional prose.
This conventional prose never ceased to be written until the
fifteenth century. Laconicus Chalcocondyles and George Phrantzes are, as far as their Greek is
concerned, lineal descendants of Polybius. There was indeed a break from the
middle of the seventh century to the end of the eighth, from Theophylactus to
Nicephorus the Patriarch, but even during this period of historiographical
inactivity the conventional Greek was employed by theological writers.
It is natural that in the sixth century, when the Roman
Empire was losing its Latin appearance and assuming a Greek complexion in
language, and in other respects too, the word "Roman" should have
become elastic and ambiguous. In Greek writers Romaioi generally
means all the subjects of the Empire; but it is also used of the inhabitants of
Old Rome; and it is even used of the ancient Romans as opposed to the
"modern" Romans of the Empire. All these usages will be found in
Procopius. Again, the expression "Romaic language" may signify one of
two things. It sometimes means Latin and sometimes it means Greek. In the
former case it is opposed to Greek, whether spoken or written; in the latter
case it is spoken Greek opposed to written Greek. Written Greek is called the
"language of the Hellenes"; and, as applied to language, the word
"Hellenic" has escaped the opprobrious religious meaning which had
become attached to the name "Hellên."
Procopius for the most part speaks of "Latin" and not of
"Romaic"; the latter term was fast becoming fixed in its application
to the language which was spoken at New Rome. It should be noticed that Romaic
never came to be synonymous with Hellenic; writers could never lose the
consciousness of the vast gulf which separated the conventional language of
written prose, which they often fondly imagined to be Attic, from the language
of daily life. By the end of the sixth century Romaic has become equivalent to
the language of the Romaioi;
it is no longer used for the language of the Romani. This is apparent from its use
in Theophylactus Simocatta. We are often startled in
the pages of this writer by meeting the word Latini, and
reading that the Latins were carrying on operations in Mesopotamia or Thrace.
The affected historian uses the word as synonymous with Romaioi.
The Latin name had once meant the populus Romanus; in
Theophylactus it meant the populus Romaioi.
Virgil or Livy might have spoken of Latins warring
on the Euphrates or the Danube; at a much later time we are accustomed to speak
of the Latins at Constantinople or in Palestine; but it is strange to find the
"Latins" commanded by Priscus and Philippicus—names indeed that
suggest Old Rome—at the end of the sixth century. But if Theophylactus uses
Latin in a forced sense as the equivalent of Romaic, he uses Romaic in its
natural sense and not as an equivalent of Latin. And when a word which he
calls Romaic happens
to be of Latin origin, he does not desire to convey that fact to the reader,
but only to indicate that it is a word of the vulgar language, which cannot be
introduced into prose by a dignified writer without an apologetic explanation.
It is interesting to observe how, while Greek words were told
off to serve as the equivalents for Latin words connoting purely Roman things
or relations, in other cases the Latin words were naturalized and assumed a
Greek garb. Thus at a very early stage of the relations between Rome and
Greece ípatos became
the technical word for consul, and andipatos for
proconsul. Eparchos was
adopted to express prefect, and eparchia was
used in the double meaning of province or prefecture. On the other hand, comes was
introduced as kómis,
and declined as a Greek noun (gen. kómitos)...
The fates of the
words Hellene and barbarian are
extremely curious. Originally they were conjugate terms; the world was divided
into Hellenes and barbarians. The course of history, the diffusion of
Christianity, and the influence of the Roman Empire brought it about that each
became the conjugate of something quite different. Hellene came
to mean a non-christian or a pagan, and thus was
opposed to Christian:
while barbarian came
to be opposed to Romaioi.
It will be remembered that in the plays of Plautus, taken from Greek originals,
a Roman was spoken of as a barbarian. It may be noticed, as a curious freak of
usage, that the Latin word for pagan, paganus,
made its way into the Greek language, but in a different sense; paganikós was
used of secular as opposed to sacred or holyday things, and especially of
everyday as opposed to festal apparel.
When Hellene received
its new theological meaning, what word, it may be asked, was used to denote the
Greeks as opposed to the Latins? The answer seems to be that the need of such a
word was not much felt, and whenever occasion demanded there was the word Graecus to
fall back on. But all the Greeks were Romaioi,
they formed no nation; and no subject of the Empire belonged to a class called
"Greek"; he belonged to such and such a province, or to such and such
a city.
After Justinian the Roman Emperors ceased to speak either in
private or in public life the tongue that was spoken at Old Rome. The official
language had already become practically Greek; we can trace this tendency in
the Code of Theodosius, where we find no vestige of the purism of Claudius, who
would not admit a Greek word in an edict; but in the Code of Justinian it is no
longer a mere tendency. Yet this official Greek is full of Latinisms, and until
the last day of the Roman or Romaic Empire memories of its origin from Latin
Rome survived in its language.
CHAPTER VIII
LITERATURE OF THE SIXTH CENTURY
When the gods of Greece were hurled from heaven by the God
of Christianity, Athens was left for two hundred years as a "hill
retired" on which their votaries could stand apart "in high thoughts
elevate", reasoning of Providence and fate. But this inner circle could
not resist for ever the atmosphere that encompassed it; this quietistic negation of the prevailing spirit could not
last. And so, when Justinian in 529 AD commanded
that the schools of Athens should be closed, we can hardly suppose that he
anticipated by many years their natural death.
Proclus must be looked on as the last link in the chain of Greek
philosophy; he was the last philosophical genius, the last originator of a
system. But the seven professors who were ranged round the deathbed of
philosophy, and who, despairing of pursuing their studies conveniently within
the Empire, betook themselves to Persia, have won a place in the recollection
of posterity by their curious and somewhat pathetic experiences. All seven were Asiatics, and had a high reputation; the most
celebrated were Simplicius of Cilicia and Damascius of Syria, a Neoplatonist. Exaggerated rumours had
represented to them Chosroes as a sort of royal philosopher, if not the ideal
of Plato, yet equal at least to Julian or Marcus Aurelius, and they formed
golden dreams of riving in an enlightened kingdom, a place like heaven, in
which thieves do not break through and steal. They were disappointed. Among the
subjects of Chosroes they found human nature as near the ground as in the lands
which they had left, and on the throne they found a man who affected higher
culture, but was really ignorant. Disillusionized,
they returned to the Roman Empire; it was more tolerable to them to be put to
death among Roman christians than to be lords among
the Persian fire-worshippers. Chosroes, however, rendered them a service. In
the peace of 532 AD he bargained with Justinian for the personal safety of the
seven philosophers, whom he could not persuade to remain at his court.
A thinker who deserves the name of a philosopher, although he
wrote professedly in the interests of Christian theology, was Johannes Philoponus, who lived in the sixth century and was a
contemporary of Simplicius. In his early years he
wrote a book against Aristotle's doctrine that the world is eternal, to which
attack Simplicius wrote a reply. He also composed a
work, still extant, on the eternity of the world, arguing against the
demonstrations of Proclus. The noteworthy point is that he met the pagan
theories on their own ground, and attempted to construct the world from the
indications of reason alone, without help from revelation. His position was
that reason of itself leads to the doctrines of Christianity. In another
direction, however, he propagated nominalistic opinions which endangered a cardinal dogma of the Church. His logical theories
may be considered as a sort of link between the nominalism of Antisthenes the
Cynic and the nominalism of the medieval school of Roscelin;
and he consistently applied his logic to the Trinity in a way that threatened
the divine unity. He may be looked upon as a forerunner of the Christian
philosophers of the Middle Ages, such as Michael Psellus in the East and the schoolmen in the West. He introduced the application of
Aristotelianism to Christianity.
The Christian Topography of Cosmas Indicopleustes,
an Egyptian monk who visited the East' at the beginning of Justinian's reign,
is interesting not only for the light which it throws on the state of southern
Asia, but also for its cosmological speculations. The problem was to explain
the position of the earth in the universe and determine its shape, so as not to
conflict with foregone theological suppositions. The rising and setting of the
sun were of course the chief difficulties. The notion of Lactantius,
Augustine, and Chrysostom touching the Antipodes was that it was a place where
the grass grew downwards and the rain fell up. Cosmas looked on the earth as a
flat parallelogram whose length from east to west was twice as great as its
breadth from north to south. This parallelogram, according to his view, is
enclosed by walls on which the firmament rests, and the sun and the moon and
the stars move underneath this firmament. In the northern part of the earth
there is a very high mountain, round which the sun and other heavenly bodies
move; this explains day and night, as the mountain conceals the sun and stars
from view when they are on the other side. In the same plane as the earth, but
beyond its confines, lies the place where man dwelled before the Deluge.
The difference in spirit between the fifth century and the sixth
is perhaps most evident in the sphere of history. As a rule, the historians of
the fifth century are either pronounced Christians or pronounced pagans; as a
rule the historians of the sixth century are neither pronounced Christians nor
pronounced pagans. Procopius and Agathias, nominally
Christians, allow Christian conceptions to have no influence over their
historical views, and Menander writes in the same spirit.
PROCOPIUSProcopius of Caesarea, the secretary of Belisarius and the
historian of his campaigns, wrote a history of the Persian, Vandalic, and
Gothic wars, which, while it is arranged in geographical divisions after the
fashion of Appian, has its unity in a central figure, the hero Belisarius.
Procopius has been compared both to Herodotus and to Polybius. He has been
compared to Herodotus on account of his love of the marvellous, which, however,
did not eliminate his love of historical truth, such as he conceived it; and if
Herodotus' care for truth can be called in question, that of Procopius can
certainly not be doubted, notwithstanding the fact that his friendship with
Belisarius has often biassed him. Like Herodotus
also, he gives us much ethnographical information. He has been compared to
Polybius because he explains the course of history by reference to Tyche, Fortune, or
to the divinity that shapes our ends. Tyche continually interferes with the
plans of men, and the final cause of their foolish acts is "to prepare the
way for Tyche". He attributes envy to this deity. It would be interesting
to know how he conceived the relation of Tyche to the divine principle, and
whether he was a sceptic in regard to a scheme or a final cause of the
universe. Did he believe that chance corrects chance?
And yet he professes faith in Christianity. He tells us
that he believes that Jesus was the Son of God for two reasons, because he
committed no sins, and on account of the miracles which he performed. The
second reason is characteristic of a lover of the marvellous. He does not think
of questioning the truth of the record; the only question for him is whether
the miracles as recorded point to the divinity of the operator. But this
acceptance of the Christian creed does not affect his views of history. He
practically permits the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost to rest idly like
the gods of Epicurus, careless of mankind; he is not influenced by the
Christian views of history introduced& by Eusebius. In fact Procopius was
at core, in the essence of his spirit, a pagan; Christianity, assented to by
his lips and his understanding, was alien to his soul, like a half-known
foreign language. He could not think in Christian terms; he was not able to
handle the new religious conceptions; he probably felt wonder, rather than
satisfaction, at the joys that come from Nazareth. And we may safely say that
it was just this pagan nature, deeper perhaps than that of the aggressive
Zosimus, that made him such a good historian. He is almost worthy to be placed
beside Ammianus. He attended Belisarius in his campaigns and kept a diary, from
which he afterwards composed the eight books of his History. He adopted a
geographical arrangement, and so placed the two Persian wars together, although
the Vandalic war and the first period of the Gothic war intervened. We have
thus the record of an eye-witness who kept a diary, as is especially plain in
his description of the sailing of the expedition against the Vandals. Of the
history of events in which he did not himself assist as a spectator or actor he
gives us scant information. He is not satisfactory as to the causes of the
Gothic war or as to the intrigues in Constantinople which affected the career
of Belisarius. But these are just the deficiencies to be expected in an
eye-witness who concentrates all his interest on the part of the drama which he
sees himself, and in a contemporary who is unable to obtain a complete view of
the situation.
Procopius is not out of touch with his own age, like
Tacitus or Zosimus; although, on the other hand, he is not enthusiastic about
it, like Polybius or Virgil. He is able to appreciate the greatness of
Justinian, and his ardent admiration of Belisarius sometimes damages the credit
of his statements. The book on Edifices, which he wrote later than his history,
is a monument in honour of Justinian's vast activity, and there is no reason to
consider it an insincere work, although it was perhaps written to order.
The History of Procopius, which closes with 550 AD, was continued
by Agathias of Myrrina, a sckolasticus or lawyer, who wrote five books embracing the
history of seven years (552-558). They contain an account of the end of the
Gothic war and describe the invasion of Zabergan, but
are mainly occupied with the Perso-Colchian wars, and supply us with some
important details about early Sassanid history, which the writer obtained from
Persian records through the medium of his friend Sergius,
who, as an interpreter, was skilled in the Persian language.
AGATHIASLike Procopius, Agathias was a
Christian, and, like Procopius, he did not permit his professed religion to
influence his historical conceptions. We should never have known from his
history that he was not a pagan; but some of his epigrams apprise us of his
Christianity. He does not, however, refer events to the leading of Tyche; he usually
speaks of the divine principle, to which he attributes the exercise of
retribution. In telling of the plague which destroyed the army of Leutharis in Italy, he observes that some wrongly ascribe
it to the corruption of the atmosphere; others, also erroneously, placed its
cause in a sudden change from the hardships of war to the luxury of rest and
pleasure. The real cause, according to him, was the unrighteousness of the victims,
which brought down divine wrath upon their heads.
He has a firm belief in free will, and this is a point of
difference between his view and that
of Procopius. Procopius emphasises Tyche; Agathias emphasises free will. Speaking of wars, he will ascribe them neither to
the divine principle, which is in its nature good and not a friend of wars, nor
yet to fate or j blind astral influences. "For", he says,
"if the power of fate prevail, and men be deprived of the power of volition
and free will, we shall have to consider all advice, all arts, all instruction
as idle and useless, and the hopes of men who live most righteously will vanish
and bear no fruit. He, therefore attributes wars to the nature of men, and
believes that they will continue to occur as long as the congenital nature of
men remains the same.
He professes to have a strict ideal of what history should
be. It should be useful for human life, and not merely a bare uncritical
relation of events, which would be little better than the fables told by women
in their bowers over their spinning. It should be true, irrespective of
persons. Both he and Procopius are distinctly conscious of the obligation to
truth. Agathias blames previous historians for their
careless inaccuracy, for their distortion of facts to flatter kings and lords,
as if history were not different from an encomium, and for their tendency to
revile or disparage the dead.
Agathias, like Thucydides, has a high idea of the vast importance
of the age in which he lived. "It happened in my time that great wars
broke out unexpectedly in many parts of the world, that movements and
migrations of many barbarous nations took place. There have been strange issues
to obscure and incredible actions, random turns of the scales of fortune. Races
of men have been overthrown, cities enslaved and their inhabitants changed. In
a word, all human things have been set in motion. In view of this, it occurred
to me that it would not be quite pardonable to leave these mighty and wonderful
events, which might prove of profit and use to posterity, unrecorded."
He was not content with his profession. He describes himself, in
accents of complaint, sitting from early morn to sunset in the "Imperial
Porch" poring over his briefs and legal documents, feeling a grudge against
his clients for disturbing him, and still more vexed if clients did not appear,
as he depended on the emoluments of his profession for the necessaries of life.
He had thus little leisure to devote to literary pursuits, such as writing
epigrams or making researches in Persian history; and literary composition, he
tells us, was his favourite occupation.
MENANDERMenander of Constantinople studied for the bar, but he had
as little taste as Agathias—whom he admired and
probably knew—for spending his days in the Imperial Porch. As however, unlike Agathias, he had money at his disposal, a profession was
not inevitable; so he cast aside his law books and adopted the idle life of a
"man about town". He took an interest in horseraces and the
excitement of the colours, that is the blue and green factions. He was fond of
theatrical ballet-dancing, and he confesses that in the wrestling schools he
often stripped off all sense and all sense of decency along with his dress.
After this candid confession of wickedness and "wild oats", he
informs us that the taste for letters displayed by the Emperor Maurice, who
used often to spend a great part of the night in discussing or meditating on
questions in poetry and history, infected himself, and caused him to reflect
that he might do something better than loiter about. Thus Maurice appears as a
lover of literature who not only patronised but stimulated; and this character
is confirmed by the testimony of Theophylactus. The only work which the Emperor
is known to have composed is the treatise in twelve books on military science.
Accordingly, Menander determined to continue the history of Agathias cut short by that writer's death. He carried it down to the last year of
Tiberius, 582 AD, and he formed his style on the model of Agathias.
Only fragments of his history remain, but they give us a favourable impression
of the writer.
Almost the same period as that covered by Menander was dealt
with in the history, also lost, of Theophanes of Byzantium, who began with the
year 566 and ended with 581. He wrote in the last years of the sixth century.
JOHANNES THE LYDIANJustinian himself was a man of culture, who occupied
himself with profound studies without allowing them to relax his firm grip of
the helm of State. He presents an example of the polymathy which was
characteristic of the sixth and the two preceding centuries, and of which
Boethius, as we shall see, was a typical example in the West. He composed
treatises on theological controversies which are still extant, but we must suppose
that he also patronised literature in general, even though on religious grounds
he shut up the schools of Athens, whose open paganism was a manifest scandal in
the Christian world. We know that he engaged the services of writers to compose
poems or histories in praise of his own deeds. The book on Edifices of
Procopius is a work of this kind, and it is possible that the book on offices
written by Johannes Lydus was partly inspired by
Justinian.
As most of the literary men of the time were educated for the
legal profession and many of them entered the civil service, it is worthwhile
to give a short biographical account of Johannes (known as Lydus,
the Lydian), from whose pen three treatises are wholly or partially extant.
Born at Philadelphia of noble provincials in easy circumstances, he went to
Constantinople in his youth for the purpose of making a career. He learned
philosophy, and read Aristotle and Plato under the direction of a pupil of the
great Proclus named Agapius, of whom a versifier said
in an unmetrical line, "Agapius is the last, but
yet the first of all."
He had been for a year a clerk in a civil service office, when
he obtained the post of shorthand writer in the staff of his townsman Zoticus of Philadelphia, who had been appointed praetorian
prefect. This post proved lucrative. He won 1000 gold solidi in a single year.
A relation, who was in the same office as he, and Zoticus the prefect were useful friends, and did him a good office in procuring him a
rich wife, who had a dowry of 100 pound weight in gold and was also remarkable
among her sex for her modesty. Johannes wrote an encomium on Zoticus for which he received a golden coin for every line,
which seems a liberal reward to literary merit, and indicates that the bad
poets of the time might count on distinguished patronage. Having steadily
advanced through all the grades of the service, in which his excellent
knowledge of Latin, a rare accomplishment then in Constantinople, must have
stood him in some stead, he reached the rank of cornicularius at
the age of sixty (in 551). But the service was declining owing to a diminution
of the tribute received and for other reasons, and Lydus found that the emoluments long looked forward to with expectant confidence,
which should have been at a minimum 1000 solidi, proved absolutely nil. In
bitterness of mind at this disappointment he composed the book on Offices, in
which he gives an account of the civil service and explains its decline.
Of his personal treatment by the Emperor he could not complain.
Justinian had engaged him, perhaps in the early part of his reign, to compose a
panegyric on himself and also a history of the Persian wars. At the end of
John's career Justinian wrote a letter to the prefecture, in which he dwelled
on his rhetorical excellence, his grammatical accuracy, his poetical grace, his
polymathy, and went so far as to say that his labours illuminated the language
of the Romaioi. He praised him for having spent time
on study, although a civil servant, and enjoined the prefect to reward him at
the public expense, and confer dignities upon him in recognition of his
eloquence. The prefect, on receiving the letter, assigned Lydus a place in the Capitolium or Capitoline Aule, that
is, a lecture-room in the university buildings, where he might give public
instruction, presumably in rhetoric. Pecuniarily, however, he was passed over
as though he had never performed public services; on the other hand, he
received honor and consideration from the Emperor,
and enjoyed the leisure of a quiet life. He retired to the peace of his
library, having served the State for more than forty years, feeling himself
very ill used, and probably soured in temper. In religion the complexion of Lydus was doubtful; sometimes he speaks like a pagan,
sometimes like a Christian, so that one is not quite sure when he is speaking
in earnest; but, Christian or pagan, he was superstitious.
Poetry was dead; the epigrams of Agathias and the composition in hexameters on the church of St. Sophia do not deserve
the name; and few of the verses would satisfy "the scrupulous ear of a
well-flogged critic". We may admit, however, that the iambic lines in the
style of late Attic comedy, which Agathias prefixed
to this book of epigrams, are not quite unworthy of a writer of new comedy, and
that the hexameters which follow, in praise of Justinian's Empire, are written
with some spirit in spite of their affectation. Agathias tells us that in his boyhood he was chiefly addicted to heroic verse, and
"loved the sweets of poetical refinements". This expression could
hardly apply to Homer; his luscious models must have been the Alexandrine
writers, Theocritus, Callimachus, and the rest, or recent composers like Nonnus, as may be also inferred from the works which he
wrote under this inspiration, a collection of short poems in hexameters
called Dafniaká,
consisting of erotic stories and "other such witcheries". In complete
satisfaction with himself and the poetical flights of his youth, Agathias, having given an account of his poems, is unable to
contain his enthusiasm, and suddenly breaks out, "For veritably poetry is
something divine and holy". Its votaries, as Plato would say, are in a
state of fine frenzy. When we think of the productions of the fine frenzy of
the writer himself, this outburst is sufficiently amusing.
The description of St. Sophia and the inaugural poem on the
opening of the cathedral, to which the description is annexed, breathe the
enthusiasm of flattery, in which the flatterer, Paul the Silentiary, was
perhaps himself in earnest. The first eighty lines, written in iambics and
consisting of a glorification of Justinian, were intended to be recited in the
palace. Then follow more iambics to be recited in the Patriarch's residence,
beginning thus: "We come to you, sirs, from the home of the Emperor to the
home of the Almighty Emperor, the deviser of the universe, by whose grace
victory cleaves unto our lord". And this approximation of God to the
Emperor, suggesting a comparison between them, occurs frequently. Speaking with
conventional modesty of his own verses, the author says that they will not be
judged by "bean-eating Athenians, but by men of piety and indulgence, in
whom God and the Emperor find pleasure". This contempt for the
ancient Athenians is a touch of characteristic Christian bigotry, and, if I may
hazard the conjecture, is intended as a laudatory allusion to Justinian's
measure of sweeping away the decrepit survival of Attic culture and
exclusiveness in 529.
The iambics are succeeded by hexameters which begin with the
praise of peace and the boast of the superiority of New to Old Rome, where Paul
does not lose an opportunity of comparing Justinian to the Deity. It would be
wearisome to follow the poem to its close. Its chief interest consists in its
architectural information, which has been encased in a metrical dress with some
ingenuity.
CASSIODORUSWhen we turn to the Latin literature of the sixth century
the most prominent figure that meets us is Cassiodorus, the statesman of
Theodoric and his successors (born about 480). Starting as an assistant in the
bureau of his father, who had served as a finance minister under Odovacar and
held the praetorian prefecture under Theodoric, he was fortunate enough to win
the Gothic king's notice, while yet a mere subaltern, by a panegyric which he
pronounced on him on a public occasion. Theodoric, who immediately recognized
and welcomed his talent, appointed him to the post of quaestor, allowing him to
dispense with all the grades of the civil service. The quaestorship was an office
in which scope was given for literary talents, and Cassiodorus took full
advantage of the opportunity. The letters which he wrote for Theodoric, along
with those which he composed during subsequent reigns, were collected by him
shortly before he retired from public life and published in a still extant
collection under the title of Variae Epistolae.
Under Amalasuntha, Theodoric's daughter, under Theodabad the student of Plato, and Witigis the thorough Goth, Cassiodorus held the exalted post of praetorian prefect.
About the year 539, not long before the capture of Ravenna by the Romans, he
retired after forty years of public service, to his birthplace Squillace in Bruttii, a charming
spot for which he entertained a romantic affection. He founded there two monasteries,
of which one, up in the hills, was for the men who were uncompromisingly
austere, while the other, down below, built beside a fish-pond, and hence
called vivarium, was for those monks who took that less strict and more
cheerful view of the spiritual life of the cloister which characterised western
monasticism once it had grown independent of its oriental origin.
Here Cassiodorus made a new departure, which, quiet and
unostentatious as it was, has led to incalculably fruitful results for the modern
world. This new departure consisted in occupying the abundant leisure of the
monks with the labour of multiplying copies of Latin texts. To this simple but
brilliant idea of taking advantage of the unemployed energy that ran to seed in
monastic society for the spread and transmission of learning, both profane and
sacred, we owe the survival of the great bulk of our Latin literature. There
was a chamber, called the scriptorium or "writing-room," in the
monastery, in which the monks used to copy both pagan and Christian texts,
working by the light of "mechanical lamps," mechanicas lucernas, whose peculiarity was that they were
self-supplying, and measuring their time by sun-dials or water-clocks.
The style of Cassiodorus accords only too well with the
principle stated by himself in the preface to his letters. "It is
adornment alone", he says there, "that distinguishes the learned from
the unlearned." He thus candidly takes pride in what is the characteristic
of all ages of decadence, a love of embellishment for its own sake. He finds it
impossible to state a simple or trivial fact in simple words. He essays to
raise triviality to the sphere of the dignified and solemn; he succeeds in
making it appear ridiculous. He will not allow the simple to wear the grace of
its own simplicity. Nothing is more curious and amusing, though it soon becomes
wearisome, than the correspondence of Theodoric in Cassiodorian dress, each epistle posing as it were in tragic cothurni and trailing a
sweeping train.
Thus in the letters which describe the duties of the various
ministers of state and other public officers, the quaestor makes it his object
to give a tincture of poetry to functions, which in themselves suggest neither
very solemn nor very poetical associations. He reminds the prefect of the
corn-supplies that Ceres herself discovered corn, and that panis,
"bread", may be derived from the great god Pan. The prefect of the
police he apostrophises thus: "Go forth then under the starry skies, watch
diligently with all the birds of night, and as they seek food in the darkness,
so do thou hunt therein for fame". To the count of the port of Rome he
cries : "Excellent thought of the men of old to provide two channels by
which strangers might enter the Tiber, and to adorn them with two stately
cities which shine like lights upon the watery way!".
These examples of his manner are more favourable to him than
many others that might be selected. Yet, though this manner has its amusing
side, it may be said that Cassiodorus had really that sort of nature which,
removing "the veil of familiarity" from common and trivial things,
finds in them a certain dignity and feels a reverence for them; and that he
unsuccessfully tried to express this feeling by using grandiloquent and
embellished language, a feat in which Pindar was successful when, for example,
he called a cloak "a healthy remedy against weary cold."
As an instance of the far-fetched and frigid conceits which were
popular in that age, I may quote the words used by Cassiodorus of monks engaged
in copying the sacred writings: "The fast-traveling reed writes down the
holy words, and thus avenges the malice of the wicked one, who caused a reed to
be used to smite the head of the Saviour."
It is interesting to record the attention paid by Cassiodorus to
the beautiful binding of his books, and the biblical language in which he
justifies it is characteristic of his age. It is meet, he says, that a book
should be clothed in a fair dress, even as the guests were arrayed in wedding
garments in the New Testament parable.
Beside the letters, Cassiodorus wrote (1) a treatise on the soul
in which its relation to the body is treated with a delicate touch of paganism
that reminds us of Hadrian's hospes comesque corporis; (2) the Historia Tripartita, a compilation from Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret, and a
history of the Goths from which Jordanes drew; (3)
various theological works; (4) an educational work on the Arts and Disciplines of the
Liberal Letters; (5) a treatise, composed in his ninety-third year,
on orthography, intended as a guide to the monks at Squillace in their spelling. Thus the influence of Cassiodorus and the traditions of
culture and accuracy which he established at Squillace formed a counterpoise to that spirit, represented by Pope Gregory I, which
regarded grammar as trivial and culture as superfluous, or even a temptation; a
spirit which soon launched the Church into the waters of ignorance and
barbarism.
BOETHIUSAnother prominent figure in the reign of Theodoric, but who
did not, like Cassiodorus, enjoy a happy old age amid the ruins of his country,
was Boethius the Patrician, whose unfortunate end is veiled to a certain degree
in obscurity. We know not what were the real motives for his condemnation,
passed formally by the Roman senate, and his subsequent execution (524 AD) Charges were
brought against him of astrological magic, stigmatized as a serious crime by
the Theodosian Code, but it is evident that these were only pretexts. He seems
to have been suspected of taking part in a conspiracy; yet the silence of
Cassiodorus, as Mr. Hodgkin justly insists, is ominous for the fame of the
Gothic king. The blow seems to have fallen quite unexpectedly on Boethius and
his affectionate father-in-law Symmachus, who had the reputation of being a
"modern Cato", and who shared the fate of his son-in-law.
In prison under the pressure of this sudden calamity, which
burst like a peal of thunder on the calm course of his life,—justifying the
saying of Solon, that the happiness of a man's life must not be asserted till
after his death,—Boethius composed the work which has immortalized him, the Consolation of Philosophy.
He did not lay the world under such a great obligation of gratitude as
Cassiodorus; and yet this work was better known and more read throughout the
Middle Ages, although it completely ignores Christianity, than any of Cassiodorus'
writings. It was translated into Anglo-Saxon by King Alfred, and into English
by Chaucer.
Boethius was an Aristotelian, and he employed his leisure
in translating works of Aristotle into Latin. It was partly through these
translations that Aristotelianism was accessible to the students of the Middle
Ages; and thus the two chief literary men at the beginning of the sixth
century, Cassiodorus and Boethius, made each in his way contributions of vast
importance to the culture of medieval and modern times. Cassiodorus may be
considered to have secured the survival of Latin literature, as was explained
above, while Boethius laid the foundations for Scholasticism. Boethius and
Johannes Philoponus were the realist and the
nominalist respectively of the sixth century.
The Latin of Boethius is far superior to the Latin of
Cassiodorus. It is elegant, but not exaggerated through an extravagant love of
embellishment. In fact he had the faculty of taste, which even in the lowest
stages of decadence distinguishes good and bad writers, and of which
Cassiodorus was almost destitute.
The Consolatio Philosophiae has
a considerable charm, which is increased by the recollection of the
circumstances under which it was composed. A student who, maintaining indeed a
lukewarm connection with politics, had spent most of his days in the calm
atmosphere of his library, where he expected to end his life, suddenly found
himself in the confinement of a dismal prison with death impending over him.
There is thus a reality and earnestness in his philosophical meditations which
so many treatises of the kind lack; there is an earnestness born of a real
fervent need of consolation, while at the same time there is a pervading calm.
The lines of poetry, sometimes lyrical, sometimes elegiac, which break the
discussion at intervals, like organ chants in a religious service, serve to
render the calmness of the atmosphere distinctly perceptible.
The problem of the treatise is to explain the "unjust
confusion" which exists in the world, the eternal question how the fact
that the evil win often the rewards of virtue and the good suffer the penalties
of crime, can be reconciled with a "deus, rector
mundi". If I could believe, says Boethius, that all things were determined
by chance and hazard, I should not be so puzzled. We need not follow him in his
discussion of the subject, which of course is unsatisfactory—did it really
satisfy him?—and need only observe that in one place he defines the relation of
fate to the Deity in the sense that fate is a sort of instrument by which God
regulates the world according to fixed rules. In other words, fate is the law
of phenomena or nature, under the supreme control of the highest Being, which
he identifies with the Summum Bonum or highest good.
But the metaphysical discussion does not interest the student of
literature so much as the setting of the piece and things said incidentally.
Boethius imagines his couch surrounded by the Muses of poetry, who suggest to
him accents of lamentation. Suddenly there appears at his head a strange lady
of lofty visage. There was marvellous fluidity in her stature; she seemed
sometimes of ordinary human height, and at the next moment her head seemed to
touch heaven, or penetrated so far into its recesses that her face was lost to
the vision. Her eyes too were unnatural, brilliant and transparent beyond the
power of human eyes, of fresh color and unquenchable vigor. And yet at the same time she seemed so ancient of
days "that she could not be taken for a woman of our age." Her
garments were of the finest threads, woven by some secret art into an
indissoluble texture, woven, as Boethius afterwards learned, by her own hands.
And on this robe there was a certain mist of neglected antiquity, the sort of colour
that statues have which have been exposed to smoke. On the lower edge of the
robe there was the Greek letter P,
from which stairs were worked leading upwards to the letter TH (Theoritiki,
Pure Philosophy). And her garment had the marks of violent usage, as though
rough persons had tried to rend it from her and carried away shreds in their
hands. The lady was Philosophia;
she bore a sceptre and parchment rolls. She afterwards explained that the
violent persons who had rent her robe were the Epicureans, Stoics, and other
late schools; they succeeded in tearing away patches of her dress, fancying
severally that they had obtained the whole garment. Philosophia's first act is to drive out the Muses, whom she disdainfully terms
"theatrical strumpets", and she makes a remark, with which many perhaps
who have sought for consolation in poetry will agree, that it "accustoms
the minds of men to the disease but does not set them free."
The description of the lady Philosophia has a considerable
aesthetic value. The conception of her robe resembling marble statues
discoloured by smoke, is a really happy invention to suggest that antique
quaintness which the Greeks expressed with the word epifnis.
But the most striking feature of the Consolatio is
the interspersion of the prose dialogue with poems at certain intervals, which,
like choruses in Greek tragedy, appertain, though more closely than they, to
the preceding argument. Thus the work resembles in form Dante's Vita Nuova,
where the sonnets gather up in music the feelings occasioned by the narrated
events. These poems, which betray the influence of Seneca's plays, have all a
charm of their own, and metres of various kinds are gracefully employed.
This idea of the mind, vexed by the cares of earth, leaving
its own light and passing into outer darkness, in externas tenebras, would be a suitable illustration of the spiritual meaning of
the outer darkness spoken of in the New Testament. Another poem, constructed
with as much care as a modern sonnet, sings of the love that moves the
sun and stars, an idea best known to modern readers from the last line of
Dante's Divina
Commedia, but which is as old as Empedocles. In another place we
have an anticipation of Shelley's nought may endure but mutability".
As an example of poetical tenderness, quite Virgilian,
I may quote two lines of a stanza, where the author is illustrating the return
of nature to itself by a caged bird, which, when it beholds the greenwood once
more, spurns the sprinkled crumbs—
silvas tantum maesta requirit,
silvas tantum voce susurrat
Immediately after this poem Boethius proceeds thus:
"Ye too, 0 creatures of earth! albeit in a vague image, yet do ye dream of
your origin",—a felicitous expression of pantheism.
I must not omit to notice the delicate feeling for metrical
effect which Boethius displays in the poem on the protracted toils of the siege
of Troy and the labors of Hercules. It is written in
Sapphic metre, but the short fourth lines are omitted until the end. The effect
of this device is that the mind and voice of the reader continue to travel
without relief or metrical resting-place until all the labors are over and heavenly rest succeeds in the stars of the concluding and only Adonius—
superata tellus
sidera donat.
The age was so poor in works of pure literary interest that I
have gladly lingered a little over the Consolatio of
Boethius. It remains to add that he wrote short books on Christian theology,
and must therefore have been professedly a Christian. This religion, however,
did not influence his pagan spirit, just as it left Procopius untouched; and it
was probably the theological subtleties that interested him and not the spirit
of the faith. He was a very accomplished man, acquainted with a diversity of
subjects; polymathy, as I said before, was a characteristic of the time. As well
as a philosopher and a poet, he was a musician, he was learned in astronomy, he
was fond of inventive science, like the Greek architect Anthemius. It would
appear, indeed, that scientific studies were fashionable in the sixth century;
natural science was a favourite subject of Cassiodorus.
If the church of San Vitale at Ravenna is the great monument of
the imperial restoration in Italy, the poems of Flavius Cresconius Corippus may be considered the monument of the
imperial restoration in Africa. He is not known, indeed, to have chosen the
victories of Belisarius as the subject of a special work, but in his Johannis and
in his de laudibus Justini, which
have been mentioned in previous chapters, joy over the fall of the Vandal and
the restoration of Africa to the Empire is expressed in strong and sometimes
effective language.
|