READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
ITALY AND HER INVADERS.BOOK VII. THE LOMBARD KINGDOM, A.D. 600-744CHAPTER VI.GRIMWALD AND CONSTANS
The central figure of Lombard history in the seventh century is (as I
have already said) King Grimwald. It is true that his reign (662-671) was not a
long one, but it was filled with important events, and included the most
serious encounter with the power of the Eastern Empire that had been witnessed
since Alboin entered Italy. Moreover, the events of his early and middle life
attached a kind of romantic interest to his career which powerfully affected
the imaginations of his countrymen. No name, we may safely say, except those of
Alboin and Authari, was dearer to the Lombard minstrel than that of Grimwald,
and if he has therefore invested him with a robe of beautiful Saga, every fold
of which may not accurately correspond to the truth of history, we can easily
pardon the illusion for the sake of at last finding a man who is something more
than a mere name in a pedigree. Telling the tale as it is told us by Paulus, I
have already related how Grimwald, son of Gisulf, duke of Friuli, was carried
captive by one of the terrible Avar horsemen,—how, though little more than a
child, he slew his unsuspecting captor and rejoined his flying brethren; how,
after his two elder brothers had been basely assassinated at Opitergium by a
treacherous Exarch, Grimwald and his brother Eadwald, disdaining to be subject
to their uncle, who succeeded to the duchy of Friuli, betook themselves to the
court of the old friend of their family, Arichis, duke of Benevento. It has
also been told how Aio, the hypochondriac son of Arichis, after a short reign
(641-642) was slain by the Slavonian invaders, and how he was succeeded by his
kinsman and friend, Radwald (642-647), and he in turn by Grimwald, who reigned
for fifteen years (647-662) as duke of Benevento. We have now to trace the course
of events which made the fugitive prince of Friuli and the guest friend of
Benevento king in the palace at Pavia, and lord of all Lombard Italy.
Rothari, the legislator of the Lombards, died in the year 652 and was
succeeded by his son RODWALD, whose short and inglorious reign (of five months
and seven days) was ended by the sword or the dagger of a Lombard whose wife he
had seduced. He was succeeded by ARIPERT, nephew of the great queen
Theudelinda, whose family, as has been before said, was the stock from whence
most of the Lombard kings were drawn throughout the seventh century. Of the
reign of Aripert, which lasted nearly nine years (653-661), all that we learn
is that he built, adorned, and richly endowed a church in honour of the Saviour
outside the western gate of Pavia, which was called Marenca. On his death he
was succeeded by his two sons, Perctarit and Godepert, who reigned, the one at
Milan and the other at Pavia. It was the first time that the Lombards had tried
the Frankish plan of a royal partnership; and that without the justification
which might be supposed to exist in the case of the vast Frankish Empire, for
the two royal cities of the Lombards were only twelve miles asunder. The
experiment answered as ill with the sons of Aripert as with any of the
fratricidal posterity of Clovis. Jalousies and suspicions soon arose between
the two brother kings, and the discord, fanned by artful councillors on both
sides, broke out into an open flame of war. Hereupon, Godepert sent Garipald,
duke of Turin, to sue for the help of Grimwald, duke of Benevento, promising
him the hand of his sister as a reward for his championship. But Garipald,
dealing deceitfully with his master, suggested to Grimwald that he should
himself strike a blow for the Lombard crown, pointing out, with some truth,
that a strong, experienced and fore-seeing ruler like himself would be better
for the nation of the Lombards than these weak youths who were wasting the
strength of the realm by their unnatural contest. The temptation was listened
to, and Grimwald, having nominated his son Romwald to the duchy of Benevento,
set forth for Pavia with a chosen band of warriors. Everywhere on the road he
gathered friends and helpers for his now scarcely veiled designs on the supreme
power. Transamund, count of Capua, being sent through the regions of Spoleto
and Tuscany, collected a band of zealous adherents in those two duchies, with
whom he met Grimwald on the Aemilian Way. So the host, with ambiguous purpose,
rolled on through the valley of the Po; and when Grimwald had reached Piacenza,
he sent the traitorous Garipald to announce his coming to Godepert.
“And where shall I receive him?” asked the inexperienced and misdoubting
king.
“You have promised him the hand of your sister”, answered Garipald, “and
cannot do less than assign him quarters in the palace. Notwithstanding, when
the solemn interview takes place between you, it might be prudent to put on a
coat of mail under your royal robes, for I fear that he has designs on your
life”.
With similar words did the cunning deceiver poison the mind of Grimwald
: “Go to the interview well armed; be vigilant; I doubt the designs of
Godepert. I hear that he wears a coat of mail under his mantle”.
Accordingly, Grimwald and his followers entered the palace of Pavia, and
on the next day the duke of Benevento was ushered into the hall of audience.
The two men met apparently in friendly embrace, but even in the act of
embracing, Grimwald felt the coat of mail under the regal mantle of his host.
The dark suggestions of Garipald seemed in that moment to be verified; and,
slaying that he might not be slain, he drew his sword and killed the hapless
Godepert. All disguise was then thrown off, and Grimwald reigned as king in
Pavia. The infant son of Godepert, named Raginpert, was conveyed away to some
safe hiding-place by the trusty servants of the late king, and Grimwald,
despising his tender years, made no effort to arrest him.
When Perctarit, reigning at Milan, heard the tidings of his brother's
murder, fearing that he would be the next victim, he left the country with all
speed and sought refuge at the barbarous court of the Khan of the Avars. His
wife Rodelinda and his little son Gunincpert fell into the hands of Grimwald,
who sent them for safe-keeping to Benevento. Except for the one foul deed, the
murder of Godepert, into which he was entrapped by the perfidious counsels of
Garipald, the hands of Grimwald were unstained by innocent blood.
As for Garipald, the contriver of all this wickedness he did not long
rejoice in the success of his schemes. He had indeed deceived his employers all
round, for he had embezzled some part of the presents which he had been ordered
to carry to Benevento. The discovery of this fraud would probably before long
have alienated from him the new king's favor, but more speedy vengeance
overtook him. A certain dwarfish retainer of Godepert, born at Turin, burned to
avenge the murder of his master. Knowing that Duke Garipald was coming on
Easter Day to pray in the basilica of St. John, he hid himself in the church,
climbing up above the baptistery, and holding on by his left arm to the column
which supported the canopy. When the duke entered the church the little Turinese
drew his sword, but kept it concealed under his robes. As soon as Garipald came
under the place of his hiding, up flew the robe, out flashed the sword, wielded
with all the strength of which the dwarf was capable, and the head of Garipald
rolled on the pavement of St. John's basilica. All the followers of the duke
rushed upon the dwarf, and pierced him with many wounds. But the little
champion died happy, for he had avenged his master.
Grimwald, now, without a rival, king of all the Lombards, took for his
second wife the sister of the slain Godepert, who had been betrothed to him
before he set out from Benevento. He was probably twice as old as his new
queen, but he was a man who, if there had not been that stain of kindred blood
upon his hands, might have won the love even of a young bride. Tall, with
well-knit limbs, with bald head and full flowing beard, he was, by the
admission of all, a man of absolutely dauntless courage, and as great in
counsel as in war. Secure in the affections of the Northern Lombards, he sent
back the mass of his Beneventan army to their homes, enriched by great gifts,
but retained a few of the leaders at his court, endowing them with large
possessions.
But though Grimwald was not by nature cruel or suspicious, the thought
of the exile Perctarit could not but sometimes threaten the solidity of his
throne. He sent an embassy to the Khan of the Avars, offering him a modius full
of golden coins if he would surrender the fugitive into his hands. But the
barbarian, who had sworn by his idol to Perctarit that he would never abandon
him to his foes, replied, “Without doubt the gods would slay me if I sacrifice
this man whom I have sworn in their presence to protect”.
Another embassy came, not this time offering gold, but warning the Khan
that the peace which had now long time subsisted between the Avars and the
Lombards would not endure unless Perctarit departed from his borders. Evidently
the Avars were weaker or the Lombards stronger, than in the day when Grimwald's
own home was ravaged, and himself all but carried into captivity by these
terrible barbarians from the Danube. And now the Khan, while still faithful to
the oath which he had sworn in the presence of his idol, and refusing to
surrender Perctarit to his foes, appealed to the generosity of his guest to go
whither he would, but not to involve him in war with the Lombards. Thus
adjured, Perctarit determined to return to Italy, and throw himself on the
clemency of the new king, for all men said that Grimwald was merciful. Having
arrived at Lodi, he sent forward a faithful henchman named Unulf, who announced
to Grimwald Perctarit’s approaching arrival, and received an assurance that
since he thus trusted to the king’s honour, he should suffer no harm. When
admitted to the royal presence Perctarit sought to throw himself at Grimwald's
feet, but was gently restrained from that humiliation, and received the kiss of
peace. Said Perctarit, “I am thy servant. Knowing thee to be most Christian and
kind, I determined, instead of continuing to dwell amongst Pagans, to trust thy
clemency, and come to throw myself at thy feet”. The king renewed his promise,
and sealed it with his accustomed oath : “By Him who gave me life, since thou
hast come into mine allegiance, no harm shall happen to thee, and I will
arrange that thou shalt have the means of living in comfort”. He then invited
the weary fugitive to rest in a spacious dwelling, ordering that all his needs
should be sumptuously supplied from the public treasury. But when Perctarit
reached the guest-house provided for him by the king, troops of the citizens of
Pavia waited upon him to renew their old acquaintance. Whispering tongues
reported these visits to Grimwald, assuring him that Perctarit was forming so
large a party in the city that he would undoubtedly deprive the reigning king
of his crown and life together. Again Grimwald listened to the fatal
suggestion, “Slay or be slain”, and forgetful of his sworn promise, began to
plan the death of the innocent and unsuspecting Perctarit. The deed was to be
done on the morrow, and meanwhile Perctarit was to be intoxicated that he might
not perceive his danger and escape. A great banquet was prepared in Preterit’s
dwelling, and was shared by many guests. Costly meats and various kinds of wine
were brought from the king's table to Perctarit, and he feasted right royally.
But one of his father's old servants bringing to the guest a portion from the
royal table, bowed so low in salutation that his head went below the board, and
then whispered, “The king has a purpose to slay you”. At once Perctarit gave a
sign to the butler who waited upon him to fill his silver goblet with water
only. Messenger after messenger brought generous wines from the king, and
Perctarit seemed to drink them eagerly, while really imbibing only water. The
servants carried back to the king the tidings that Perctarit was drinking
heavily, to which Grimwald coarsely replied, “Let that drunkard drink today :
tomorrow he will disgorge the wine mingled with blood”. Meanwhile Perctarit
found means to communicate with Unulf, and tell him of the impending danger.
Then Unulf sent a servant to his own house with orders to bring his bedding
from thence, and spread his couch beside that of Perctarit. The guards whom
Grimwald had by this time stationed to watch the doors of Perctarit’s abode saw
the slave enter with the bedding, and then after the supper was ended and all
the other guests departed, they saw Unulf emerge, attended apparently by a
young slave, whose head and neck were covered by the bed-clothes, the
counterpane and the bearskin, under the weight of which he staggered. His
brutal master urged him on with blows and curses, and more than once the
overloaded youth fell to the ground while trying to escape from the blows. When
they came to the place where the king's sentries were posted, these naturally
enquired what was the matter. “My rascal of a slave”, said Unulf, “spread my
couch in the chamber of that tipsy Perctarit, who has filled himself with wine,
and now lies like a corpse on the floor. But I have followed his mad courses
long enough. So long as my lord the king lives, I shall henceforward stay in my
own house”. When the guards heard this they were glad, and let Unulf and the
slave (who of course was Perctarit in disguise) pass without further question.
Meanwhile Perctarit’s valet who was the only other person that had been left in
the house, made fast the door, and all was settled for the night. But Unulf let
Perctarit down by a rope from a corner of the city wall overlooking the river
Ticinus, and he, meeting with some of his friends, galloped away with them on
some horses which they found grazing in the meadows, and the same night reached
the city of Asti which had not yet submitted to Grimwald, but still held out
for the lost cause. Thence one rapid journey to Turin; and the fugitive
disappeared over the ridges of the Alps into the friendly country of the
Franks. “Thus”, says Paulus, “did Almighty God by His merciful providence
deliver an innocent man from death, and at the same time preserve from blood
guiltiness a king who really desired to do what was right”.
Morning came; the guards still paced up and down before the dwelling of
Perctarit; at last the messengers of the king came and knocked at the door. The
valet answered from within, “Have pity on him, and let him sleep a little
longer, for he is weary with his journey and is wrapped in deep slumber”. The
messengers returned and told their tale to the king, who at once attributed
Perctarit's heavy sleep to the potations of the preceding evening. “But it is
time to rouse him now, and bring him to the palace”, said the king. The
messengers returned, knocked louder at the door, and were again entreated by
the valet to let his master sleep a little longer. “The drunkard has slept long
enough”, said they in a rage, kicked open the door of the chamber, and rushed to
the bedside. Finding no Perctarit there, and having hunted for him all over the
house, they asked the valet what had become of his master. “He has fled”, said
the servant, who saw that further evasion was impossible. In their fury they
seized him by the hair, and with many blows they dragged him into the presence
of the king, clamouring loudly for his death as an accomplice in the flight of
Perctarit. But the king ordered them to loosen their hold of the prisoner, and
commanded him to tell the whole story of the escape. When the tale was ended,
Grimwald said to the bystanders, “What think you ought to be done to the man
who has wrought such a deed as this?”. They all with one voice exclaimed that
killing was not enough for him, but he ought to be put to death with many
torments. “By Him who gave me life”, said Grimwald, “the man is worthy of great
honour who feared not to expose himself to death for the sake of his master.
Let him be taken into my service as a valet”. And with that he promised him
great gifts, exhorting him to render to himself the same faithful service that
he had rendered to his late lord. Unulf, for whom the king then enquired, had
taken refuge in the church of St. Michael, but, receiving the royal promise of
his safety, came forth, entered the palace, and threw himself at the feet of
the king. From him, too, Grimwald would fain learn the whole story of the
escape, and when he heard it he greatly commended his prudence and fidelity,
and issued an order that he should be left undisturbed in the possession of all
his property. After some time had elapsed, the king asked Unulf whether he now
ever regretted not being with Perctarit, to which he answered with a solemn
oath that he would rather die with Perctarit than live anywhere else in
uttermost delights. The valet gave the same answer when asked whether he would
rather be with the king in his palace or with his late master in his
wanderings. Their words met with a kindly reception from Grimwald, who praised
their loyalty to their lord, and bade Unulf take from his palace what he would,
slaves or horses or household furniture, and hasten to the master of his
choice. The valet, too, received the same gracious dismissal, and with the help
of the king's safe-conduct, and loaded with his generous presents, they entered
France, and were again with their beloved Perctarit.
It may possibly have been the flight of Perctarit into Frankish
territory that disturbed the peaceful relations of the two kingdoms; but,
whatever was the cause, an army of the Franks, the first that had been seen in
Italy in that century, crossed the Maritime Alps, and threatened the throne of
Grimwald. They were defeated by an easy stratagem, which speaks ill for the
discipline to which they had been subjected. Grimwald having pitched his camp
near to theirs, feigned panic and flight, leaving his tents with all their
treasures, and especially with good store of wine, open to the invaders. They
came, they plundered, they drank, and at night, while they were stretched in
the heavy slumber of drunkenness, Grimwald and his warriors came upon them and
slew so great a multitude that few found their way back to their own land. The
slaughter—battle it can hardly be called—took place at Frenchmen's River, a
village not far from the walls of Asti. Thus the “walls of avenging Asta”, as
Claudian called them, a second time witnessed the repulse of an invader.
But a more formidable foe than the weak Merovingian king or his Mayor of
the Palace was to trouble the repose of Lombard Italy. Constans II, the son of
Heraclius, and the heir of his grandfather's fitful energy and of some of his
grandfather's genius, conceived the idea of becoming in fact as well as in name
Emperor of Rome. It will be desirable here briefly to retrace the earlier
stages of his career, and at the same time to take up some dropped stitches in
the history of the Popes and Exarchs during the years preceding his invasion of
Italy. Constans II (or, as he is more correctly called, Constantine IV) was
born in the year 631, and in 642, when only a boy of eleven, found himself by
the death of his father, the dethronement of his uncle and the exile of his
grandfather's widow, the ambitious and unscrupulous Martina, sole Emperor of
the Romans. A military pronunciamiento had prepared the way for his accession,
but in the speech which he made to the Senate of Constantinople after the
downfall of his rivals, he expressed his desire that he might have the Senators
as his counsellors, and judges of that which should be for the welfare of his
subjects. This probably means that during the early years of his sovereignty
the government was practically in the hands of a council of regency composed of
the leading members of the Senate. Constans, however, grew up into a strong,
self-willed man, and we may presume that while yet in early manhood he brushed
aside his senatorial counsellors, and governed as well as reigned. He could not
wholly arrest—probably not the strongest of his Imperial predecessors could
have arrested—the onrush of the children of Arabia, who wrested Armenia from
the Empire, and made a temporary conquest of Cyprus and Rhodes. But he fought
in person in the great naval engagement with the Saracens off the coast of
Lycia, in which, though defeated and compelled to fly for his life, he seems to
have inflicted enough damage on the enemy to prevent their fulfilling their intention
of besieging Constantinople. Shortly afterwards came that great schism between
the two rival claimants for the caliphate, Ali and Moawiyah, which still rends
the Moslem world asunder, and which gave a welcome breathing-time to the
hard-pressed champions of the Empire.
In ecclesiastical matters Constans II showed himself a hard-headed,
unsympathetic, indifferent man of the world, determined that his Empire should
not be harassed, if he could help it, by the speculative controversy which his
grandfather had unwisely raised about the divine and human wills of Jesus
Christ. The Ecthesis of his grandfather Heraclius had asserted the Monothelete
doctrine, or as it is now decided to be, the Monothelete heresy, that there was
but one will in the heart of the Saviour, and this doctrine had been eagerly
upheld by successive Patriarchs of Constantinople, and as eagerly denounced by
successive Popes of Rome. Popes and Patriarchs were excommunicating each
other—in one case, to give greater solemnity to the transaction, the Pope
descended to the crypt which contained the body of St. Peter, and dipped his
pen in the consecrated chalice, that he might thus write the damnation of his
enemy in the blood of Christ—and all the miserable wrangle of the Monophysite
controversy seemed about to be renewed with greater bitterness than ever, at a
time when the very existence of Christianity and of the Empire was threatened
by the swords of the followers of Mohammed. Utterly weary of the whole dispute,
and sympathizing apparently neither with his Monothelete grandfather nor with
his Dyothelete father, the young Emperor Constans (he was then but seventeen
years of age) ordered the removal of the Ecthesis from the doors of the great
church at Constantinople, and put forth the famous document called the Type, in
which he attempted the impossible task of imposing silence on warring
theologians. “Inspired by Almighty God”, said Constans, “we have determined to
extinguish the flame of this controversy, and will not allow it any longer to
prey upon the souls of men. The Sacred Scriptures, the works of the Fathers,
the decrees of the Five General Councils are enough for us. Why should men seek
to define beyond these? Therefore no one shall be allowed to speak of one will
and one operation, or of two wills and two operations in the person of Christ.
Any one transgressing this command shall, if a bishop, be deposed from his see;
if a clergyman, from his clerical office; if a monk, he shall be confined, and
banished from his monastery. If he holds any dignity or office, civil or
military, he shall be deprived of it. If he is a nobleman, all his property
shall be confiscated; if not noble, he shall not only be beaten with stripes,
but further punished by perpetual banishment; that all men being restrained by
the fear of God, and dreading the condign punishments with which we thus
threaten them, may keep unmoved and untroubled the peace of the holy Churches
of God”.
Vain hope, by decrees and banishments and chastisements to silence the
subtle ecclesiastical intellect when once engaged in a war of words like that
aroused by the Ecthesis! Bad as that Imperial document had been accounted by
the See of Rome, the impiissimus Typus was soon discovered to be even
worse. Pope Martin, who had just succeeded Theodore 653 (the excommunicator of
Pyrrhus), convened a council of one hundred and five Italian bishops, who met
in the Lateran palace, anathematized the Patriarchs of Alexandria and
Constantinople, “the most impious Ecthesis, the wicked Type lately put forth by
the most serene Emperor Constans”, and all receivers and defenders of the same.
The Pope had the Italian bishops and the general allies sentiment of the
West on his side, but otherwise he stood alone against the Emperor and all the
great Eastern Patriarchates. There are indications of his turning to the
Frankish kings Clovis II and Sigibert II for aid, for moral at least, if not
for physical support. Did he also invoke the assistance of the Arian king of
the Lombards, Rothari, against the author of the Type, and the close
confederate of the heretical Patriarch of Constantinople? This was charged
against him, and in the difficult circumstances of his position it could not be
imputed to him as a crime; but the meagre annals of the period do not allow us
to pronounce on the justice of the accusation. However, whether on religious or
on political grounds a high-spirited young sovereign such as Constans II was
not disposed to tolerate the insubordination of the Pope, who was still in
theory only a subject of the most Serene Emperor. He sent his chamberlain
Olympius as Exarch to Italy with orders to protect and cherish all bishops who
accepted the Type, to sound the disposition of the army, and if he found it favourable,
to bring Pope Martin a prisoner to Constantinople, after which display of power
it was hoped that all the other bishops of Italy would readily subscribe the
Imperial decree. If, however, he found the army hostile, he was to say as
little as possible about the Type, and simply to strengthen his military hold
on Ravenna and Rome. Arriving in the City with these somewhat ambiguous
instructions, the new Exarch found all the bishops and clergy of Rome
enthusiastic in their defence of the Pope and their condemnation of the
Monothelete doctrine. Probably also the army shared the general enthusiasm, for
the Exarch renounced the perilous attempt to seize the Pope in the midst of his
flock. An after generation, however, believed the improbable story that
Olympius ordered the assassination of the Pope in the very act of celebrating
Mass at the church of S. Maria Maggiore but that the soldier who was
commissioned to do the unholy deed was struck by a supernatural blindness which
prevented him from seeing Pope Martin when he was in the very act of handing
the chalice to the Exarch, and thus the murder was prevented.
Whatever the truth may be as to this alleged attempt on the Pope's life,
there is no doubt that Olympius completely renounced the attempt to force the
Imperial Type on the Roman Church. A reconciliation took place between Exarch
and Pope, so complete as to give some colour to the charge that Olympius aimed
at making himself Emperor, and that Martin countenanced him in his treason. But
the next step taken by the Exarch showed no disloyalty to the Empire. He
crossed over with his army into Sicily in order to combat the Saracens, whose
invasions of that island (which were to be continued with more or less
intermission for more than four centuries) had already begun. “For their sins”,
however, as we are told, the greater part of his army perished, apparently by
sickness, not by the sword; and Olympius himself died also, probably a victim
to the same pestilence which had ravaged his camp.
The death of Olympius enabled Constans to resume his plans for the
arrest of the Pope and the forcible promulgation of the Type. Theodore
Calliopas, who arrives in was sent a second time to Ravenna as Exarch, appeared
in Rome with an army on June 15, 653. The position of affairs was not unlike
that which had been seen more than a century before, when Belisarius received
orders for the deportation of Pope Silverius. Now, as then, the ecclesiastical
motive for the coup d'etat and the unslumbering jealousy between the sees of
Rome and Constantinople were veiled by the imputation of political crimes.
Martin was accused of having corresponded with the Saracens (doubtless the
Saracen invaders of Sicily), as well as of being irregularly elected, of
changing the faith delivered to the saints, and of showing insufficient
reverence to the Virgin Mary.
At first the Exarch temporized; professed that he desired to come and
adore his Holiness, but he was wearied with his journey, and he was afraid that
Pope Martin had filled the Lateran with armed men; an insinuation to which the
Pope replied by inviting the Exarch’s soldiers to make a visit of inspection,
and see if they could find a weapon or a stone therein. The Pope, who with
better reason feared violence, and who had been for eight months in weak
health, had his bed placed before the altar in the Lateran Church. Thither came
the soldiers of the Exarch in full armour, with swords and lances, and bows
with the arrow on the string. “They there did unutterable things”, says the
horrified Pope; but though their conduct was doubtless indecorous, its atrocity
seems somewhat diminished when we find that the only recorded detail relates to
the overthrow of the candles, which fell all over the church like leaves in
autumn, and the crash of the stricken candelabra, which filled the church with
a noise like thunder. Desiring to prevent the effusion of Christian blood, the
Pope came from his sanctuary, the people shouting as he emerged from the
church, “Anathema to all who say that Martin has changed a jot or a tittle of
the faith. Anathema to all who do not remain in his orthodox faith even to the
death”. So the Pope wended his way through the City up to the palace of the
Exarch, which apparently still stood where the palace of the Caesars had stood,
on the Palatine Hill. Multitudes of the clergy and laity, who declared that
they would live and die with the Pontiff, on the invitation of the Exarch
swarmed after him into the palace. They had hoped if he were banished that they
would be allowed to share his exile, but soon after midnight on the morning of
Wednesday, the 19th of June, Pope Martin, while all his adherents were kept under
close ward in the palace, was hurried on board a little ship which was lying at
Portus, his only companions being six acolytes and one household servant.
On the 1st of July, the ship, slowly sailing, arrived at Misenum, but
neither at Misenum nor any of the other cities of beautiful Campania (already
called by the equivalent of its modern name, Terra di Lavoro), nor at any of
the islands at which they touched was the exile from the Lateran palace allowed
to leave the bark, which he felt to be indeed his prison. At last they reached
the island of Naxos, where he was detained for more than a year, and there as a
great favour he was permitted to reside in an inn in the city, and was twice or
thrice indulged with the luxury of a bath. Possibly the Imperial Court hoped
that if his courage were not broken as that of Vigilius had been by arrogance
and insult, his sickly frame, known to be enfeebled by gout, would sink beneath
the hardships which he endured. But the spirit and the bodily frame of the
heroic Pope alike disappointed their expectations, and at length, on the 17th
of September (654), he was brought into the harbour of Constantinople. There
for ten hours on his pallet-bed on the deck of the vessel lay the venerable
Pope, racked with gout, wasted by constant diarrhea, and feeling the nausea
consequent on his long voyage. His adoring companions saw him thus “made a spectacle
unto angels and to men”; but the populace of Constantinople, “men with wolfish
faces and evil tongues”, crowded round him, crying out that he was not fit to
live. At sunset a squad of guards came, who placed him in a litter, and carried
him off to a prison called Prandiaria. For ninety-three days he languished in
this dungeon, deprived of all the comforts which were now necessaries to a
high-bred Roman ecclesiastic. On the 19th of December (654) he was brought into
the presence of the Sacellarius or Lord High Treasurer, who had summoned a
meeting of the Senate for his trial. He was ordered to stand in the presence of
his judges, and when the attendants pointed out that he was unable to stand,
the Sacellarius thundered forth, “Then let two of you support him, one on each
side, for he shall not be allowed to sit”.
The examination, which was conducted through the medium of an
interpreter, for the Pope was as ignorant of Greek as his persecutors were of
Latin, turned entirely on political matters. The absurd accusation of
complicity with the Saracens, which only derived colour from the fact that the
Pope had sent money to be distributed as alms among the Sicilian poor, seems
now to have been tacitly abandoned, and the only charge which was vehemently
pressed against him was one of complicity with the treasonable designs of Olympius.
Rough and illiterate soldiers from the Exarch's army were brought to prove this
charge; and the Pope asked in vain that they might be allowed to give their
evidence unsworn, that they might not imperil their souls by perjury. The Pope
began his answer to the charge against him thus :— “When the Type was prepared
and sent to Rome by the Emperor...”— but the Prefect Troilus at once stopped
him—“Do not bring in any questions about the faith. We are Romans and
Christians and Orthodox. It is about the rebellion that we are examining you”.
The Pope's constant answer was that he had no power to resist the Exarch, who
had the whole army of Italy at his disposal. “Was it I who made him Exarch, or
you at Constantinople? But work your will upon me, and do it speedily”. After
this he seems to have tried to give a long harangue, which was faithfully
interpreted by an African nobleman named Innocent; but the Sacellarius roughly
interrupted, “Why do you interpret what he is saying? We do not want to hear
it”. With that he rose up, and all they that were with him, and going into the
Emperor's chamber announced that they were ready to pass sentence upon the
Bishop of Rome.
That sentence appears to have been a capital one, for the Pope was
dragged through the streets of the city with a drawn sword carried before him;
but if such a sentence was pronounced it was commuted into imprisonment and
exile. He was forced to stand for some time in the Hippodrome, as a spectacle
to the people, the guards as before supporting him on either side, and the
young Emperor looking on through the lattice-work of his banqueting-hall at the
humiliation of his great spiritual rival. Little could either persecutor or
victim foresee how cruelly, more than five centuries later the indignities
offered to the Roman Pope would be avenged on the Eastern Emperor by the sack
of his own city of Constantinople.
The Sacellarius then came forth from the banqueting-hall and said, “See
how the Lord has delivered thee into our hands. What hadst thou to hope for
that thou shouldest strive against the Emperor? Thou hast abandoned the Lord,
and He has abandoned thee”. He ordered one of the guards to cut the strap which
bound round his neck the satchel in which the Pontiff was accustomed to carry
the sacred books, and then he handed him over to the Prefect, saying, “Take
him, my lord Prefect, and cut him limb from limb”.
Loaded with irons, with torn robes, but surrounded by a crowd not now
shouting execrations, but saddened and awestruck at what was being done, the
successor of St. Peter was dragged through the streets of Constantinople to the
prison of Dioniede, in the Praetorian Prefect's palace. As he climbed up the
steps of the prison, which were rough and steep, his swollen feet left upon
them the stain of blood. He was then thrust into a cold and dreary cell, where
the irons clanked upon his shivering limbs. One young ecclesiastic who had
followed him, as Peter followed his Lord was permitted to share his dungeon,
but the keeper of the prison was also always present, bound to the Pope by a
chain, as was the custom in the case of culprits under sentence of death. There
were, however, two kind-hearted women, mother and daughter, related apparently
to the keepers of the prison, who succeeded in removing the chilled and
exhausted Pontiff from the dungeon cell and from the continual presence of the
gaoler. They carried him to their own bedroom, and laid him in a comfortable
bed, where however he lay speechless till the evening. When evening came,
Gregory, a eunuch and Grand Chamberlain, sent his majordomo with some scanty
refreshment, who whispered words of intended comfort, “In all our tribulations
we put our trust in God. Thou shalt not die”. The Pope, however, who was worn
out and longed for speedy martyrdom, only groaned. The heavy iron chains
however were taken off from him and not again imposed.
One cause which led to some alleviation of the Pope's physical
sufferings was the troubled conscience of Paul, the Patriarch of
Constantinople, who had been fiercely anathematized by successive Popes, but
who, being now upon his death-bed, could not endure the thought of the
indignities which the remorseless Emperor was heaping on their common enemy.
When Constans visited him the day after the trial, and told him what had been
done, Paulus turned his face to the wall, and said with a groan, “Ah me! this
too will be added to the number of my sins”. At his earnest request, the
capital sentence passed on the Pope was remitted by Constans, and the rigor of
his confine was somewhat lessened.
Pyrrhus, Patriarch of Constantinople
To the patriarch Paul (who died December 26, 654) succeeded Pyrrhus,
who, as we have seen, had once himself been a fugitive at Rome, had there
renounced the Monothelete heresy, and had then returned, as the orthodox said,
“like a dog to his vomit” when he found himself in the atmosphere of
Monothelete Ravenna. This temporary departure from the ruling creed was however
objected against him now, when he sought to recover the Patriarchal throne on
which he had once before been seated. He declared that he had subscribed to the
Pope’s libellus (1) because he was his guest, and (2) under duresse. On these
two somewhat inconsistent pleas the imprisoned Pope was now examined by an
Assistant-Treasurer who bore the great name of Further Demosthenes. The Court
minion, when he entered the prison, said with an unworthy sneer, “Our lord the
excellent Emperor has sent us to thee, saying. See in what height of glory thou
once wast placed, and to what a depth thou now hast fallen. For all this thou
hast only thyself to thank”. To which the Pope only replied, “Glory and
thanksgiving in all things to the only King, Immortal and Invisible”.
Demosthenes then proceeded to cross-question him about his reception of the
fugitive Patriarch Pyrrhus. “Whence did he draw his subsistence when he was in
Rome?” “From the Roman Patriarchate” [the Lateran Palace]. “What was your
object in thus supplying him with provisions?” “My good lord, you do not
understand the ways of the Roman Church. For I tell you plainly, St. Peter does
not repel any one, however poor and miserable, who comes to claim his
hospitality, but gives them the whitest bread and divers kinds of wine. If then
this is done even to miserable outcasts, in what guise ought we to have
received one who came as the honoured bishop of the great see of
Constantinople?” Then came the question as to duresse, the heavy wooden chains
which were said to have been fastened on the Patriarch's limbs, and the many
grievous things that had been done to him. To which answered the Pontift, “All
this is utterly untrue, and there are men in Constantinople who were then in
Rome, and who know how false is the accusation. There is Plato, once Exarch,
who sent his messengers to Pyrrhus at Rome. Ask him, and if fear does not
prevent him from speaking the truth, he will tell you. But I am in your hands.
Tear me if you will, limb from limb, as the Treasurer said to the Prefect that
he ought to do unto me. Work your own will upon me : but I will not communicate
with the Church of Constantinople”.
After eighty-four days’s confinement in the prison of Diomede, the
unfortunate Pope was again put on ship-board and delivered to the mercies of
the stormy Euxine. What object the guards can have had in keeping their unhappy
prisoner so long exposed to the miseries of seasickness we know not: but it
was not till May 15, two months after his embarkation, that he was permitted to
land at Cherson, a place which was not the same as the modern city of Cherson,
but was situated in the Crimea, then called the Tauric Chersonese. Here he languished
for four months, and then died worn out by disease and hardship. From two
letters which he wrote to his friends at Rome, we receive a most melancholy
impression of his state during these last four months of his life. He complains
bitterly of the lukewarmness and forgetfulness of his Roman friends, who wrote
him no letters, and sent him no alleviations of his distress. Almost the only
news which he did receive from Rome was the unwelcome intelligence that,
yielding to Imperial pressure, the Roman clergy had acquiesced in his
deposition, and elected another Pope, Eugenius I, as his successor. The
inhabitants of the country to which Martin was exiled were, according to his
accounts, barbarians and heathens, and he suffered from want not only of the
comforts, but almost of the necessaries of life. His only chance of buying corn
was in small quantities from vessels which came thither laden with salt from
the southern shores of the Black Sea, and then he had to pay for it at the high
price of one solidus for a bushel.
Pope Martin died on September 17, 655. He was buried in that wild
Crimean land, and miracles, of which there had been some mention during his
life, were believed to be wrought at his tomb. On the whole, he must be
pronounced one of the noblest figures in the long line of Roman Pontiffs. The
querulous tone of the letters of his exile contrasts somewhat unfavourably with
the utterances of that other victim of Imperial persecution, St. Chrysostom.
And, as I have before suggested, it is possible that there may have been some
foundation for the political charges on which ostensibly his condemnation was
based. But on the other hand there can be no doubt that if he had been willing
to strike his flag to the Monotheletes, or to accept that arbitrary 'End of
Controversy', the Type of the worldly-minded Emperor Constans, he might at once
have ended his weary exile and had returned to the comforts and the splendours
of the Lateran Palace. This he refused to do for conscience' sake, and he is
therefore entitled to rank as one of the few martyrs who have sat in the chair
of St. Peter.
Chronological notes
I must remind the reader, in returning to the course of Lombard history,
that all the events with which we have been recently dealing occurred before
the accession of Grimwald. Heraclius published his Ecthesis in 638, two years
after the accession of Rothari. The Ecthesis was taken down, and the Type was
substituted for it by Constans II in 648, four years before the end of Rothari’s
reign. When Rothari died (in 652), Martin had been for three years Pope. Exarch
Olympius died in that year, and his successor's capture of the Pope occurred in
the following year, the date of Aripert's accession to the Lombard throne.
Aripert during his reign must have heard of the death of Martin in exile at
Cherson, of the death of his successor Eugenius (June, 657), and of the
elevation of his successor Vitalian, whose long pontificate (657-672) covers
the whole of the reign of Grimwald. Under the rule of this Pope the Monothelete
dispute seems to have slumbered. Fairly amicable relations existed between the
patriarchates of Rome and Constantinople: Vitalian, though not going as far as
Honorius in acceptance of Monothelete doctrine, was apparently willing to leave
the question undiscussed, and as this was the very result most desired by
Constans, a politician but no theologian, there was peace and the exchange of
outward courtesies between Emperor and Pontiff.
Thus we come down to 662, the year of Grimwald's accession. Towards the
close of this year Constans II formed the resolution to quit for ever his
capital by the Bosphorus, and to try his fortune as a re-establisher of the
Empire in the Western lands. To his contemporaries, accustomed to think of the
Roman Augustus as immovably settled in the East, the resolution seemed like a
madman's dream. Even the virtues of this Emperor (for he had some virtues), his
rough energy, his broad view of the needs of the Empire, his abhorrence of
theological disputation, as well as his undoubted vices, made him unpopular
with the enervated, wordy inhabitants of New Rome. Two years previously he had
put to death his brother Theodosius, whom he had before forced into holy orders,
and now it was said that Theodosius continually appeared to him in the visions
of the night, arrayed in the dress of a deacon, and offering him the
sacramental cup, saying, “Drink, my brother!” The Imperial dreamer would take
the cup, see that it was filled with blood, and awake with a cry of anguish.
This story, however, comes from a very late and doubtful source and perhaps
attests only the animosity of Church historians against a Monothelete heretic
and the persecutor of Popes. The cruel tortures inflicted on the Abbot Maximus,
the great champion of orthodoxy, and two of his disciples, who were flogged,
had their tongues and right hands cut off, and were banished to the
inhospitable neighbourhood of Poti, doubtless kindled the resentment of many of
the Emperor's subjects against him. But after all it was perhaps statesmanship
quite as much as passion which determined Constans to quit his native city and
seek his fortune in the West. His grandfather Heraclius had come from Carthage
to found his dynasty. He was himself called Emperor of Rome, yet Rome and
Italy, were daily slipping from his grasp, the city to the Pope, the country to
the Lombards. Constans would revive the great projects of Justinian, and be in
fact as well as in name Emperor of Rome. We need not therefore believe the late
and legendary story that when Constans was standing on the deck of his cutter,
he turned round to look at the receding towers and domes of Constantinople, and
spat at the Imperial City. Better vouched for, however, is the fact that he was
obliged to take his departure alone, and that when he sent from Sicily for his
wife and his three sons, the citizens (perhaps represented by the Senate)
refused to allow them to depart.
Constans went first to Athens, where he apparently sojourned for some
time, and then, probably in early part of 663, crossed over into Italy, landing
at Tarentum. Both by his landing place and in various other ways his
expedition reminds us of that other attempt which Greece made 944 years before,
under Pyrrhus king of Epirus, to conquer Italy. Like that Aeacid prince,
Constans sought to ascertain by supernatural means the event of his enterprise.
He asked, not the priestess at Delphi, but a certain recluse who was believed
to have the spirit of prophecy. “Shall I vanquish and hold down the nation of
the Lombards which now dwells in Italy?” The holy man's answer, vouchsafed
after a night of prayer, was less ambiguous than the response of the oracle to
Pyrrhus. “The nation of the Lombards cannot be overcome, forasmuch as a pious
queen, coming from another land, has built a basilica in their territory to the
blessed John the Baptist, who therefore pleads without ceasing for that people.
But the time will come when that sanctuary shall be held in contempt, and then
the nation itself shall perish”. The historian who records this prediction
considered that he saw its fulfilment when the fall of the Lombard monarchy
followed the simoniacal ordination of unworthy and adulterous ecclesiastics in
the great basilica of Monza.
Undismayed by this unfavourable answer—if he ever received it—the
Emperor pressed on from the region round Tarentum, where he still found
subjects loyal to the Empire, and invaded the duchy of Benevento where Romwald
the son of King Grimwald ruled. “The high nest of Acherontia”, as Horace called
it, a frontier fortress on one of the outlying buttresses of Monte Vulture,
resisted all his attacks, but Luceria, “a wealthy city of Apulia”, was
captured, sacked and levelled with the ground. Certainly the Emperor of Rome
practiced a strange method of delivering Italy. He then marched to Benevento,
which he surrounded and tried hard to carry by storm. Young Romwald, sore
pressed, sent his tutor Seswald to entreat his father's aid. On receipt of this
message King Grimwald at once set out with a large army to the help of his son.
Many of the Northern Lombards, however, deserted on the march. The jealousy or
suspicion between Pavia and Benevento was too strong to be overcome even by the
presence of the Roman Emperor on the soil of Italy: and the men of the northern
provinces said to one another, with self-gratulations on their own superior
wisdom, “The southern duke has helped himself to all that was best worth having
in the palace at Pavia, and now he is going to Benevento to help his son. You
will see that he will never return”.
Meanwhile the Imperial army was pressing the siege of the city with all
those engines of war the use of which the dexterous Greek understood so much
better than the barbarian. By frequent sallies the gallant defenders inflicted
grievous losses on the enemy, but the straitness of the siege was great, and
day by day they looked for tidings of the approach of the Lombard king. At
length they saw the messenger Seswald drawing near to the walls, but, alas! as
a prisoner led by the Imperial generals. For while he was hovering near to the
city seeking how he might enter, he had been captured by the enemy's scouts,
who had brought him into the Emperor's presence. From him Constans learned of
the near advent of Grimwald with a large army, and these tidings decided him to
end the siege by all means as speedily as possible. Seswald was therefore
allowed to approach the walls, having promised that he would assure the
garrison that Grimwald could not help them. If he failed in this he was told
that death awaited him. When the captive tutor was close to the walls, he asked
to see his pupil, and as soon as Romwald came to the battlements he cried with
a loud voice, “Stand firm, lord Romwald : thy father is at hand and will soon
bring thee help. He is already at the river Sangro (about fifty miles from
Benevento), and pitches his camp there tonight with a strong army. Have pity, I
pray thee, on my wife and children, for I know that this perfidious race will
not suffer me to live”. As soon as he had finished his speech, the Emperor bade
that they should cut off his head, and hurl it into the city from a catapult:
an ungenerous revenge, and one in which a Teutonic warrior would have hardly
permitted himself to indulge. The well-known features were kissed by the
grateful lips of Romwald, and the head was deposited in a worthy shrine.
After all, no battle was fought under the walls of Benevento. Constans
was now anxious to depart, and Romwald, whose troops were probably already
suffering severely from famine, made “a bridge of gold for a retreating foe”,
handed over his sister Gisa to him as a hostage, and made peace on some terms,
the nature of which is not recorded. Constans then started for Naples, where he
was secure of a friendly reception, as that city belonged to the Empire; but on
his way he was attacked by Mitola, count of Capua, at a place by the banks of
the Galore (which a hundred years after was still called Pugna), and was
defeated there with much slaughter. This skirmish (for it was probably nothing
more) apparently broke the truce concluded under the walls of Benevento. One of
the Byzantine nobles, named Saburrus, asked the Emperor to entrust him with the
command of 20,000 men with whom he made no doubt that he should vanquish the
young duke of Benevento. He set forth, and pitched his camp at Forino, about
twenty-five miles east of Naples, which city was now the Emperor's
headquarters. When Grimwald, who had by this time joined his son, heard the tidings
of the Imperial general’s approach he thought to go forth also and fight with
him, but with something of the spirit of a young knight of later days, Romwald
begged that he, with only a portion of his father's army, might have the glory
of this day's encounter. Accordingly Romwald and Saburrus with their small
selected armies met on the field of battle. From four different sides sounded
the trumpets of Saburrus, as the Imperial forces rushed to the fray.
But in the thick of the battle, a stalwart Lombard named Amalong, who
bore “the king's wand” (probably a spear from which fluttered the royal
banner), struck one of the little Greek soldiers through the body with his
weapon, which he held stoutly with both hands, and lifting him from his saddle,
held the spear high in air, with his victim writhing upon it. The sight of this
deed so disheartened the Greeks that they turned to flight, and in that flight
the army was cut to pieces. Romwald returned to his father with the glory of
victory, and the boaster Saburrus brought back few of his 20,000 men to his
master.
“Constans”, says the Lombard historian, “seeing Rome that he could avail
nothing against the Lombards, turned all his threats and all his harshness upon
his own partisans, that is, the Romans”. This may have been the secret
reflection of the trembling clergy and citizens when the stern Monothelete
Emperor came among them, but the outward signs of mutual amity were observed on
the visit which Constans now paid to Rome. It was certainly a memorable event.
Three hundred and seven years had elapsed since the awe-stricken Constantius
gazed on the glories of yet unruined Rome : nearly two centuries since any
person calling himself Emperor had stood upon the Palatine Hill : one hundred
and thirty-seven years were yet to elapse ere a barbarian king was to be acclaimed
with shouts of Carolus Imperator in the streets of Rome. Meanwhile here is this
successor of Augustus, who bears by full right the title of Emperor of the
Romans, but who is Greek by language, Greek by education, and who, it is to be
feared, “does not hold the Catholic verity in his heart, since by that arrogant
Type of his he forbids us even to make mention of the Two Wills in Christ. He
has accomplished but little against the terrible Saracens : he has done nothing
to deliver Italy from the unspeakable Lombards: we must receive him as our
rightful lord, but our hearts fail us when we ask ourselves what he will do in
Rome”. Such were probably the feelings of Pope Vitalian and his clergy as they
went forth along the Appian Way six miles from the gates of the City to meet
the Emperor Constans. But his first devout behaviour probably somewhat allayed
their terrors. It was Wednesday, the 5th of July (663), when he entered the
Eternal City, and he at once proceeded to worship at the great basilica of St.
Peter, leaving there a gift upon the altar. On Saturday he went to the church
of S. Maria Maggiore, and there, too, he offered his gift. On Sunday the church
of St. Peter's was filled with the Greek soldiers. All the clergy went forth
with due pomp of lighted tapers to meet the master of that glittering host who
was present at the celebration of Mass—doubtless receiving the consecrated
elements from St. Peter's successor—and again offered his gift upon the altar;
this time a pallium stiff with gold. On the next Saturday he visited in equal
state the Lateran Church, the home of the great Western patriarchate; he bathed
in the porphyry font, which legend, then or at a later day, declared to have
been used for the baptism of Constantine the Great, and he dined in the
spacious banqueting-hall which was known as the Basilica of Vigilius. Lastly,
on the second Sunday of his visit, he again attended High Mass at St. Peter's,
and took a solemn farewell of Pope Vitalian on this the last day of his sojourn
in Rome.
Twelve days was the length of the Emperor's visit, but his time was not
wholly occupied in hearing Mass and offering gifts on the altars of the
churches. Gold and silver had apparently long vanished from all places but the
sacristies of the churches, but there was still much copper on the buildings
and in the statues of the City. Between his visits to the basilicas the Emperor
usefully employed his leisure in stripping the City of all these copper
adornments, even proceeding so far as to strip off the copper tiles which
covered the dome of the Pantheon, now the church of St. Mary of the Martyrs.
These spoils, and much else, probably some works of art, possibly some of the
treasures of the libraries, were put on shipboard and consigned to
Constantinople, at which city however, as we shall shortly discover, they never
arrived. It was certainly an unworthy mode of celebrating the Roman Emperor's
visit to the City which gave him his title; and the abstraction of the roof of
the Pantheon must have reminded Romans who knew anything of the history of
their City of the similar procedure of Gaiseric and his Vandals upon the gilt
roof of the temple of Jupiter Capitolinus. But the necessities of the Empire
were great : some of its richest provinces were in the hands of the Saracens;
and the robberies of Constans were probably not for himself but for the State.
Had there been any blood spilled or any sacred vessels abstracted during the
Imperial visit to Rome, we should assuredly have heard of such atrocities. Upon
the whole, we may presume that when, on the 17th of July, Constans finally
turned his back on the Imperial City, Pontiff and people alike congratulated
themselves that they had not suffered greater evils at the hands of their stern
sovereign.
From Rome he went to Naples, and from Naples by land to Reggio. He must
have remained some weeks in Southern Italy, for it was in September (if not
later) that he crossed over from Reggio into Sicily. He remained in that island
for five years, 663-668, making Syracuse his headquarters. The object of this
long sojourn in Sicily evidently was that he might use it as his base of
operations against the Saracens, who were overrunning the provinces of Northern
Africa. He did indeed temporarily recover Carthage, but this success was
counterbalanced by a severe defeat which his troops sustained at Tripoli. In
Sicily as elsewhere he showed himself grasping and impecunious. The cultivators
of Sicily and Sardinia, of Calabria and of the province of Africa, long remembered
the oppressive procedure of the tax gatherers of Constans. So inexorable were
their demands that, to satisfy them, husbands were sold into slavery away from
their wives, and children from their parents, and, under this intolerable
tyranny, life seemed not worth the living. Now too, if we may believe the papal
biographer, who writes in great bitterness of spirit against the Monothelete
Emperor, Constans exceeded even his Roman exploits by his sacrilegious
spoliation of the churches. All over the two islands, and the two provinces
which have been named, sacred vessels and other precious ornaments dedicated to
the worship of the sanctuary were carried off by the command of the Emperor and
by the avarice of the Greeks
At length the hard and oppressive reign came to an end, but that end
seems to have come rather from the sudden rage of an insulted menial, than from
any deep-laid popular conspiracy. One day when Constans entered the bath which
was called Daphne, at Syracuse, the valet who attended him, a certain Andreas,
son of Troilus, while the Emperor was scrubbing himself with Gallic soap,
lifted high the box in which the soap was kept, smote his master on the head
with it, and ran away. As the doors of the bath-house remained long unopened,
the attendants who stood without at length burst them open, and found their
master lying dead upon the floor. If there had been, as seems probable, no
conspiracy, it was nevertheless easy to foresee that the existence of a conspiracy
against so harsh and unpopular a monarch would be easily suspected. It was
probably in order to guard themselves against the certain vengeance of the
Heraclian house that the courtiers determined to raise a new Emperor to the
throne. Their choice fell on a certain Armenian named Mizizius, who much
against his will accepted the dangerous diadem. He had calculated the chances
of success more truly than those who forced the honour upon him. From all parts
of Italy, from Istria and Campania, from Africa (the old home of the
Heraclians), even from the island of Sardinia, soldiers flocked to Syracuse to
suppress this ridiculous rebellion. When the young Constantine, the son of
Constans, arrived in Sicily with a great fleet, he found the work already done,
and the rival Emperor Mizizius slain. The pretender's head was taken to
Constantinople, and with it many of the civil servants of the Empire who had
taken part in the rebellion, and who, according to the cruel fashion of
Byzantium, were mutilated before they were placed on board the ships which were
to convey them to the place of execution.
Events such as these naturally weakened the resisting power of the
Empire. We hear without surprise that the Saracens suddenly appeared with a
large fleet in the Sicilian waters, entered Syracuse, made great slaughter
among the people (a remnant of whom fled to fortified camps and the tops of the
mountains), and then returned to Alexandria, bearing with them immense booty,
including the brazen ornaments, and all the other precious things which
Constans Augustus had carried off from Rome.
As for King Grimwald's daughter Gisa, whom the Emperor had borne off
from Benevento as a hostage, she too was taken by him to Sicily, and died
there. The way in which Paulus mentions her fate inclines us to suppose that it
was in some way connected with the troubles of the Saracen invasion.
The remaining events of the reign of Grimwald may be briefly told, and
all relate to three out of the four great duchies, whose history in an earlier
chapter was brought down to this point. The duchy of Trent is not noticed here.
In SPOLETO, on the death of Duke Atto (663), Grimwald conferred the
duchy on his old ally Transamund, count of Capua, to whom he was largely
indebted for his success in winning the Lombard crown. Transamund, who married
a daughter of Grimwald, appears to have governed the Umbrian duchy for about
forty years, and his descendants, to the third generation, sat on his throne.
At BENEVENTO, young Romwald seems to have remained ever in cordial love
and loyalty to his the duchy father, and we may conjecture that the kingdom and
the duchy were more closely confederate together during the reign of Grimwald
than at any other period of their joint existence. The chief event of the young
duke's reign seems to have been the arrival of a colony of Bulgarians in Italy
under their duke Alzeco, who, “with all the army of his duchy”, came to King
Grimwald, and promised faithful service on condition of being allowed to reside
in his land. Him Grimwald passed on to his son, desiring the latter to provide
suitable habitations for him and his people. They were heartily welcomed by the
young duke, who assigned to them for their residence a spacious region to the
north of his capital, which had lain desert until that time, and which included
the cities of Bovianum, Sepinum, and Aesernia. The fact that this broad reach
of territory (situated, it is true, among the highlands of Samnium) should have
remained desert till these Bulgarians from the Danube country came to occupy
it, tells its own sad story of the desolation of Italy. The Bulgarian Alzeco
coming thus into the territory of Duke Romwald, in a relation which in a later
century would have been described as that of vassalage, had to forego the title
of duke which he had hitherto borne, and be content with that of gastald, a
title which, as we shall hereafter see, expressed more of personal dependence
on the sovereign than the title of duke. Even down to the days of Paulus, that
is, for a full century after the settlement, though the descendants of these
settlers had learned the Latin tongue, the rude Bulgarian speech was still
heard in these cities and villages round the skirts of Monte Matese.
Meanwhile in the duchy of FRIULI, the old home of Grimwald, disastrous
events were occurring. Grasulf, Grimwald's uncle, after apparently a long
reign, had been succeeded by Ago, of whom Paulus has only to tell us that a
certain house called Domus Agonis was still visible at Forum Julii.
Duke Ago was followed by Lupus, an ambitious Duke and untrustworthy man.
Instigated possibly by the patriarch of Aquileia, he led a band of horsemen by
a highway cast up in old time across the sands to Grado, plundered that island
city, and carried off the treasures of its church. Whether he deposited any of
these treasures in the mother and rival church of Aquileia we are not informed.
After this came the invasion of Italy by Constans, Romwald’s cry for help to
his father, Griniwald’s rapid march to succour him. Before setting out the king
committed his palace and all its treasures to Lupus of Friuli, perhaps an old
Companion of his boyhood. But Lupus shared the general opinion of the northern
Italians, that the Beneventan interloper, having once set his face towards the
south, would never return to Pavia. He carried himself insolently in his
delegated office; and perhaps—though this is not expressly told us—aimed at
winning the kingdom for himself. When he learned that Grimwald was returning,
Lupus, conscious of his misdeeds, retreated to his duchy of Friuli, and there
openly raised the standard of rebellion.
On receipt of these evil tidings, Grimwald, unwilling to stir up a civil
war between Lombards and Lombards, resorted to the strange and desperate
expedient of inviting the Avars, the savages who, fifty years before, had slain
his father and ravaged his home, to come and attack the rebel duke. The Chagan
came with a great army, and was met by Lupus apparently on the old
battle-ground of Theodosius by the Cold River below the pass of the Pear-tree.
For three days Lupus kept the savage horde at bay, at first with
brilliant success, winning decided victories, and carrying great spoil out of
their camp. But each day the number of his killed and wounded soldiers rose
higher and higher, and still the apparently undiminished Avar horde rolled on
towards him. On the fourth day Lupus was slain, and the remnant of his array
scarcely succeeded in saving themselves by flight.
The surviving Lombards shut themselves up in the fortified cities, while
the Avars as aforetime roamed over the duchy, carrying fire and sword through
the wasted land. To Grimwald's ambassadors who came with a gentle suggestion
that it was now time to cease from ravage, they replied that they had won Forum
Julii by their arms, and did not mean to quit it. Hereupon Grimwald saw himself
compelled to assemble an army for the expulsion of the Avars from Italian soil.
But according to the saga, he effected his purpose not by force but by guile.
The Chagan's ambassadors came and feasted at his board ere all his army was yet
collected, but he dressed up the same squadrons in different attire on each
succeeding day, and made them defile before the eyes of the ambassadors,
leading them to suppose that each day fresh reinforcements were coming to his
standard. “With all these multitudes”, said he, “shall I burst upon the Avars
and their Chagan, unless they speedily vanish from the territory of Forum
Julii”. The message carried back by the deluded ambassadors struck such terror
into the heart of the Chagan that he made all haste to return to his own land.
The daughter of Lupus, Theuderada, was given in marriage to Romwald of
Benevento, and in her new home, as we learn from the life of St. Barbatus, she
played a part like that of Theudelinda in winning over the still half heathen,
and wholly irreligious, Lombards of Benevento to the Christian faith.
His son Arnefrit sought to win his father's duchy, but fled at the
approach of Grimwald, and took refuge with the Slovenes of Carinthia.
Afterwards seeking by the help of these barbarians to recover possession of his
duchy, he was slain by a sudden onset of the men of Friuli at a place called
Nemae (now Nimis), about fifteen miles northwest of Cividale.
As the new duke of Friuli, Grimwald appointed Wechtari, a native of
Vicenza, a man who had evidently already reached middle life, and who was, we
are told, “a kind man, gently ruling the people”. Though Arnefrit was dead, his
Slavonic allies still troubled the duchy, and hearing that Duke Wechtari, of
whom they stood in great awe, had gone to Pavia—doubtless in order to concert
measures of defence with King Grimwald—they came with a strong body of men, and
pitched their camp at a place called Broxae, not far from the capital. It
happened providentially that Wechtari had on the previous evening returned from
Pavia, and hearing of this insolent advance of the Slovenes, he went forth with
twenty of his followers to attack them. Seeing so small a troop issue from the
city, the Slovenes said with jeers, “Lo, here come the patriarch and his
clergy”. But when they came to the bridge over the Natiso, on the other side of
whose deep gorge the invaders had pitched their camp, Wechtari took off his
helmet and showed his bald head and his well-known countenance to the foe. A
despairing cry of “Wechtari! Wechtari!” ran through their ranks, and they all
began to think of flight rather than of battle. Then Wechtari, perceiving their
panic, charged upon them with his scanty band, and inflicted such slaughter,
that out of 5000 Slovenes, few returned to tell the tale in Carinthia. So runs
the Saga of Wechtari.
Death of Grimwald, 671.
Throughout the long life of Grimwald he seems never to have forgotten
the treachery practiced by the Patrician Gregory against his brothers Taso and
Cacco. The Avars, as we have seen, he could forgive, he could even welcome as
allies, but the Romans never. Especially did his anger burn against the city of
Opitergium, in which the foul murder was committed. Not satisfied with the
partial demolition of that city which had been accomplished some twenty or
thirty years before by order of Rothari, he now utterly destroyed it, and parcelled
out the citizens who were left in it among the three neighbouring cities of
Forum Julii, Ceneta, and Tarvisium (Cividale, Ceneda, and Treviso). To this day
the low estate of the little town, scarcely more than a village, of Oderzo,
testifies to the vengeance of the Lombard king.
Equally hard was the fate of the city on the Emilian Way, twenty miles
south of Ravenna, which still, in a slightly altered form preserves its
classical name of Forum Populi. Many times had its inhabitants harassed his
messengers going and coming in time of peace between Pavia and Benevento.
Watching his opportunity, he burst, in the days of Lent, through the unguarded
passages of the Apennines, came upon the city on Easter Sunday itself, when the
children were being baptized, and slew the citizens with wide and
indiscriminate slaughter, not sparing even the deacons who were officiating in
the baptistery, and whose blood was mingled with the water of ablution. Then he
beat down the chief buildings of the city, and left therein but a very few of
its former inhabitants. Certainly the Lombard, even after a century’s sojourn
in Italy, fell far below the Visigoth in capacity for civilization. Alaric at
Pollentia well-nigh ruined his cause by his unwillingness to fight on
Easter-Day, the same day which Grimwald chose for a treacherous revenge and a
cruel massacre.
At length the strong, hard, self-reliant man came to a characteristic
end. He had been bled, probably for some trifling ailment, by the royal
surgeons, and was resting in his palace on the ninth day after the operation. A
dove flew past; he longed to reach it with his arrow; he took the bow and shot,
but in doing so opened again the imperfectly closed vein, and died of the
ensuing haemorrhage. The suggestion that his doctors had mingled poison in
their drugs seems unnecessary to explain the death of so self-willed and
impetuous a convalescent. He was buried in the basilica of St. Ambrose which he
himself (evidently an orthodox Catholic by profession) had reared in the royal
city of Ticinum.
It should be mentioned that in July 668, in the sixth year of his reign,
Grimwald made a short addition to the code of Rothari. It will not be necessary
here to examine this additional code minutely. It may be sufficient to say that
it shows a general disposition to uphold the prescription of thirty years,
whether against a slave claiming pardon, or against a free man resisting the
attempt to reduce him to slavery; that wager of battle is discouraged, and
trial by sacramentum as much as possible substituted for it; and that there are
some stringent provisions against the offence, then evidently increasing, of
bigamy. The law of Grimwald also imports from the Roman law the principle of
representation of a father by his children in the event of his having died
before the ancestor whose property is being divided. From the stress laid on
this principle by Grimwald we must suppose that it had been imperfectly
recognized by the tribunals of Rothari.
THE STORY OF ST. BARBATUS.
THE life of St. Barbatus, the most eminent apostle of Catholic
Christianity in Southern Italy, has an important bearing on the history of the
duchy of Benevento in the seventh century, and especially on the invasion of
Constans; but hagiology has a character of its own, and refuses to be wrought
in harmoniously with secular history, even in that picturesque and sagalike
form which that history assumes in the pages of Paulus. I have decided
therefore to relegate to a note the condensed narrative of the saint's life and
works.
This narrative is derived from two documents published in the great
Bollandist collection of the Acta Sanctorum under the date 19th of February.
One of these lives, we are told, is extracted from an ancient codex written in
Lombard characters belonging to the Benedictine monastery of St. John at Capua.
The other, an expanded and paraphrastic copy of the first, comes from the
archives of the church at Benevento. Waitz, who has edited the life of the
saint in Scriptores Rerum Langobardicarum (M. G. H.), mentions eleven MSS.,
most of which he has consulted, and three of which are “litteris Beneventanis
exarati”. He considers that even the earlier form of the history cannot have
been written before the ninth century, and follows Bethmann in rejecting as
valueless the later and paraphrastic form which he attributes to the tenth or
eleventh century. From some slight indications (chiefly the description of the
invading Emperor as “Constantinus qui et Constans appellatur”), I should be
disposed to believe that there is a foundation of contemporary tradition for
the earlier document. The following is a greatly condensed translation of the
Life :
Barbatus (who was born in the year 602) became famous when Grimwald held
the reins of the Lombard kingdom, and his son Romwald ruled the Samnites.
The Lombards, though baptized, worshipped the image of a viper; and
moreover, they devoutly paid homage in most absurd fashion to a certain
“sacrilegious” tree not far from the walls of their city. From the branches of
this tree was hung a piece of leather; and all those who were to take part in
the ceremony, turning their backs to the tree, rode away from it at a gallop,
urging on their horses with bloody spurs. Then suddenly turning round, they
hurled their lances at the leather, which quivered under their strokes; and
each one cut out a little piece thereof, and ate it in a superstitious manner
for the good of his soul. And as they paid their vows at this place, they gave
it the name Votum, which [says the scribe] it still bears.
All these superstitious practices greatly distressed the soul of
Barbatus, who told the people that it was vain for them thus to try to serve
two masters. But they, in their blind and beastlike madness, refused to abandon
this equestrian form of worship, saying that it was an excellent custom, and
had been handed down to them by their ancestors, whom they mentioned by name,
and declared to have been the bravest warriors upon earth.
However, by his miracles, Barbatus began to soften the hearts of the
rude people, who even by drinking the water in which he had washed his hands
after celebration of the Mass, found themselves healed of their diseases.
Then “Constantius, who is also called Constans”, desiring to restore the
kingdom of Italy to his obedience, collected an innumerable multitude of ships,
arrived at Tarentum, and ravaged nearly all the cities of Apulia. He took the
very wealthy city of Luceria after severe fighting, and by the labour of his
robber-bands levelled it to the earth. Then he went on to Beneventum, where
Romwald abode, having a few very brave Lombards with him, and the holy father
Barbatus remained there with them. Terrible was the attack of Constans, who
harassed the defenders with ever-fresh bands of assailants. This lasted long,
but Romwald, magnanimous and unterrified, made a brave resistance, now fighting
from the walls, now making a sudden sally and hasty return into the city, for
he was not strong enough to fight in the open plain. Still, though he had slain
many of the assailants, his own ranks were thinned, and the inhabitants began
to weep and wail, thinking that they would soon be destroyed by the
robber-bands of Constans. As for Romwald, he, growing weary of fighting, gave a
counsel of despair to his soldiers :—“It is better for us to die in battle than
to fall alive into the hands of the Greeks, and so perish ignominiously. Let us
open the gates of the city, and give them the hardest battle that we can”.
Perceiving this discussion, St. Barbatus said, “Never let so many brave young
men be given over to destruction, lest they perish everlastingly. Good were the
boldness of your hearts, if your minds were not so empty, and your souls so
weak”. Said Romwald, “What dost thou mean by emptiness of mind, and weakness of
soul? Prithee, tell us”. Thereupon Barbatus, promising them the palm of
victory, if they would follow his counsels, preached a long sermon against
idolatry, and exhorted his hearers to the steady and serious worship of Christ.
Hereupon Romwald said, “Only let us be delivered from our foes, and we
will do all that thou biddest us, will make thee bishop of this place, and in
all the cities under our rule will enrich thee with farms and colonies”.
Barbatus answered, “Know for certain that Christ, to whom ye have now
turned in penitence, will set you free, and the assaults of Caesar and his
people shall not penetrate the streets of Beneventum, but with changed purpose
they shall return to their own borders. And that thou mayest know that I am
telling thee the very truth, which shall shortly come to pass, let us come
together under the wall. There will I show thee the Virgin Mary, the most pious
Mother of God, who has offered up her health-giving prayers to God for you, and
now, having been heard, comes to your deliverance”.
After public prayers and solemn litanies, and after earnest private
prayer offered up by Barbatus in the Church of the Virgin, the people, with
Romwald at their head, assembled at the gate which is still called Summa. Then
Barbatus desired them all to bow down to the dust, for God loveth a contrite
heart, and went, in conversation with Romwald, close under the wall. Then
suddenly appeared the Mother of God, at sight of whom the Prince fell to the
earth and lay like one dead, till the holy man lifted him from the ground and
spoke words of comfort to him who had been permitted to see so great a mystery.
On the following day the besieger, who had refused to be turned from his
hostile purpose by an immense weight of silver and gold and a countless
quantity of pearls and precious stones, now, receiving only the sister of
Romwald, turned his back on Beneventum and entered the city of Neapolis. The
blessed Barbatus at once took a hatchet, and going forth to Votum, with his own
hands hewed down that unutterable tree in which for so long the Lombards had
wrought their deadly sacrilege: he tore up its roots and piled earth over it,
so that no one thereafter should be able to say where it had stood.
And now was Barbatus solemnly chosen bishop of Beneventum. Of all the
farms and coloniae wherewith Prince and people offered to endow him, he would
receive nothing, but he consented to have the house of the Archangel Michael on
Mount Garganus, and all the district that had been under the rule of the bishop
of Sipontum transferred to the See of the Mother of God over which he presided.
Still Romwald and his henchmen, though in public they appeared to
worship God in accordance with the teaching of Barbatus, in the secret recesses
of the palace adored the image of the Viper to their souls' destruction;
wherefore the man of God, with prayers and tears, besought that they might be
turned from the error of their way.
Meanwhile Romwald’s wife, Theuderada, had forsaken the way of error, and
was worshipping Christ according to the holy canons. Often when Romwald went
forth to hunt, Barbatus would come to visit her, and discourse with her
concerning her husband's wickedness. In one of these interviews she, heaving a
deep sigh, said, “Oh! that thou wouldest pray for him to Almighty God. I know
that it is only by thine intercession that he can he brought to walk in the
path of virtue”.
Barbatus.—“If thou hast, as I believe, true faith in the Lord, hand over
to me the Viper's image, that thy husband may be saved”.
Theuderada.—“If I should do this, I know of a surety that I should die”.
Barbatus.—“Remember the rewards of eternal life. Such death would not be
death, but a great gain. For the faith of Christ thou shalt be withdrawn from
this unstable world, and shalt attain unto that world where Christ reigneth
with His saints, where shall be neither frost nor parching heat, nor poverty
nor sadness, nor weariness nor envy, but all shall be joy and glory without
end”.
Moved by such promises she speedily brought him the image of the Viper.
Having received it, the bishop at once melted it in the fire, and by the help
of many goldsmiths made of it during the prince's absence a paten and chalice
of great size and beauty, for the offering up of the body and blood of Jesus
Christ.
When all was prepared, on the sacred day of the Resurrection, Romwald,
returning from hunting, was about to enter Beneventum, but Barbatus met him,
and persuaded him first to come and assist in celebration of the Mass in the
church of the Mother of God. This he did, receiving the communion in the golden
vessels made, though he knew it not, from the image of the Viper. When all was
done, the man of God approached the prince, and rebuked him sharply for
tempting God by keeping the Viper's image in his palace. Should the terrible
day of the Divine vengeance come, in vain would he flee to that idol for
protection. Hearing these words, Romwald humbly confessed his sin, and promised
to give up the image into the bishop's hands. “That thou needest not do”, said
the saint, “since it has already been changed into the vessels from which thou
hast received the body and blood of the Lord. Thus what the Devil had prepared
for thy destruction is now the instrument through which God works thy
salvation”.
Romwald.—“Prithee tell me, dearest father, by whose orders the idol was
brought to thee”.
Barbatus.—“I confess that I, speaking in much sorrow to thy wife
concerning thy spiritual death, asked her for the image, and received it at her
hands”.
Thereat one of the bystanders burst in, saying, “If my wife had done
such a thing as that, I would without a moment's delay cut off her head”. But
Barbatus turned to him and said : “Since thou longest to help the Devil, thou
shalt be the Devil's slave”. Thereupon the man was at once seized by the Devil
and began to be grievously tormented by him. And that this might be a token and
a warning to the Lombard nation in after times, the saint predicted that for so
many generations [the biographer is not certain of the exact number] there
should always be one of his descendants possessed by the Devil, a prophecy
which, down to the date of the composition of the biography, had been exactly
fulfilled.
Struck with terror, all the other Beneventans abandoned their
superstitions practices, and were fully instructed by the man of God in the
Catholic faith, which they still keep by God’s favour.
Barbatus spent eighteen years and eleven mouths in his bishopric, and
died on the eleventh day before the Kalends of March (19th of February, 682),
in the eightieth year of his age.
This curious narrative, however little worthy of credence as a statement
of facts, is a valuable piece of evidence as to the spiritual condition of the
Lombards of South Italy in the seventh century. We may safely infer from it
that conversion to Christianity was a much more gradual process in the south
than in the north of Italy. Lupus of Friuli is neither saint nor hero in the
pages of Paulus, but his daughter Theuderada is like another Clotilda or
Theudelinda to the barbarous, half-heathen rulers of Benevento.
In another Life, contained in the Acta Sanctorum, that of St. Sabinus,
we have a slight notice of Theuderada as a widow. After the death of her
husband she ruled the Samnites in the name of her young son [Grimwald II], and
during her regency a certain Spaniard named Gregory came to Spoleto in order to
find the tomb of St. Sabinus, who had died more than a century before (in 566).
Not finding the sepulcher there, he persuaded the Princess Theuderada to go and
seek for it at Canusium. She found the tomb, and on opening it perceived that
pleasant odor which often pervaded the sepulchers of the saints. She also found
in it a considerable weight of gold, which the biographer thinks had been
stored there in anticipation of that invasion of the barbarians which St.
Sabinus had foretold. Unmindful of the commission which Gregory had given her
to build a church over the saint’s tomb, she carried off the gold and returned
in haste to Benevento. But when she arrived at Trajan's Bridge over the
Anfidus, by the judgment of God her horse slipped and fell. She was raised from
the ground by her attendants, but recognized in the accident the vengeance of
the saint for her forgetfulness. She hastened back to the holy man’s sepulcher,
built a church with all speed, roared over his body a beautiful marble altar,
and made chalice and paten out of the gold found in the tomb. To the end of his
life Gregory the Spaniard ministered in the church of St. Sabinus.
CHAPTER VII.THE BAVARIAN LINE RESTORED
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