HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE FROM A.D. 717 TO 1453BOOK ITHE CONTEST WITH THE ICONOCLASTS, A.D. 717-867
CHAPTER I
THE ISAURIAN DYNASTY, A.D. 717-797
Sect. I
CHARACTERISTICS OF BYZANTINE HISTORY
The institutions of Imperial Rome had long thwarted,
the great law of man’s existence which impels him to better his condition,
when the accession of Leo the Isaurian to the throne of Constantinople suddenly
opened a new era in the history of the Eastern Empire. Both the material and
intellectual progress of society had open deliberately opposed by the imperial
legislation. A spirit of conservatism persuaded the legislators of the Roman
Empire that its power could not decline, if each order and profession of its
citizens was fixed irrevocably in the sphere of their own peculiar duties by
hereditary succession. An attempt was really made to divide the population into
castes. But the political laws which were adopted to maintain mankind in a
state of stationary prosperity by these trammels, depopulated and impoverished
the empire, and threatened to dissolve the very elements of society. The
Western Empire, under their operation, fell a prey to small tribes of northern
nations; the Eastern was so depopulated that it was placed on the eve of being
repeopled by Slavonian colonists, and conquered by Saracen invaders.
Leo III mounted the throne, and under his government
the empire not only ceased to decline, but even began to regain much of its
early vigour. Reformed modifications of the old Roman authority developed new
energy in the empire. Great political reforms, and still greater changes in the
condition of the people, mark the eighth century as an epoch of transition in
Roman history, though the improved condition of the mass of the population is
in some degree concealed by the prominence given to the disputes concerning
image-worship in the records of this period. But the increased strength of the
empire, and the energy infused into the administration, are forcibly displayed
by the fact, that the Byzantine armies began from this time to oppose a firm
barrier to the progress of the invaders of the empire.
When Leo III was proclaimed Emperor, it seemed as if
no human power could save Constantinople from falling as Rome had fallen. The
Saracens considered the sovereignty of every land, in which any remains of
Roman civilization survived, as within their grasp. Leo, an Isaurian, and an
Iconoclast, consequently a foreigner and a heretic, ascended the throne of Constantine,
and arrested the victorious career of the Mohammedans. He then reorganized the
whole administration so completely in accordance with the new exigencies of
Eastern society, that the reformed empire outlived for many centuries every
government contemporary with its establishment.
The Eastern Roman Empire, thus reformed, is called by
modern historians the Byzantine Empire, and the term is well devised to mark
the changes effected in the government, after the extinction of the last traces
of the military monarchy of ancient Rome. The social condition of the
inhabitants of the Eastern Empire had already undergone a considerable change
during the century which elapsed from the accession of Heraclius to that of
Leo, from the influence of causes to be noticed in the following pages; and
this change in society created a new phase in the Roman Empire. The gradual
progress of this change has led some writers to date the commencement of the
Byzantine Empire as early as the reigns of Zeno and Anastasius, and others to
descend so late as the times of Maurice and Heraclius. But as the Byzantine
Empire was only a continuation of the Roman government under a reformed system,
it seems most correct to date its commencement from the period when the new
social and political modifications produced a visible effect on the fate of the
Eastern Empire. This period is marked by the accession of Leo the Isaurian.
The administrative system of Rome, as modified by
Constantine, continued in operation, though subjected to frequent reforms,
until Constantinople was stormed by the Crusaders, and the Greek church
enslaved by papal domination. The General Council of Nicaea, and the dedication
of the imperial city, with their concomitant legislative, administrative, and
judicial institutions, engendered a succession of political measures, whose
direct relations were uninterrupted until terminated by foreign conquest. The
government of Great Britain has undergone greater changes during the last three
centuries than that of the Eastern Empire during the nine centuries which
elapsed from the foundation of Constantinople in 330 to its conquest in 1204.
Yet Leo III has strong claims to be regarded as the
first of a new series of emperors. He was the founder of a dynasty, the saviour
of Constantinople, and the reformer of the church and state. He was the first
Christian sovereign who arrested the torrent of Mohammedan conquest; he
improved the condition of his subjects; he attempted to purify their religion
from the superstitious reminiscences of Hellenism, with which it was still
debased, and to stop the development of a quasi-idolatry in the orthodox
church. Nothing can prove more decidedly the right of his empire to assume a
new name than the contrast presented by the condition of its inhabitants to
that of the subjects of the preceding dynasty. Under the successors of
Heraclius, the Roman Empire presents the spectacle of a declining society, and
its thinly-peopled provinces were exposed to the intrusion of foreign colonists
and hostile invaders. But, under Leo, society offers an aspect of improvement
and prosperity; the old population revives from its lethargy, and soon
increases, both in number and strength, to such a degree as to drive back all
intruders on its territories. In the records of human civilization, Leo the
Isaurian must always occupy a high position, as a type of what the central
power in a state can effect even in a declining empire.
Before reviewing the history of Leo’s reign, and
recording his brilliant exploits, it is necessary to sketch the condition to
which the Roman administrative system had reduced the empire. It would be an
instructive lesson to trace the progress of the moral and mental decline of the
Greeks, from the age of Plato and Aristotle to the time of the sixth ecumenical
council, in the reign of Justinian II; for the moral evils nourished in Greek
society degraded the nation, before the oppressive government of the Romans
impoverished and depopulated Greece. When the imperial authority was fully
established, we easily trace the manner in which the intercommunication of
different provinces and orders of society became gradually restricted to the
operations of material interests, and how the limitation of ideas arose from
this want of communication, until at length civilization decayed. Good roads
and commodious passage-boats have a more direct connection with the development
of popular education, as we see it reflected in the worlds of Phidias and the
writings of Sophocles, than is generally believed. Under the jealous
system of the imperial government, the isolation of place and class became so
complete, that even the highest members of the aristocracy received their ideas
from the inferior domestics with whom they habitually associated in their own
households—not from the transitory intercourse they held with able and
experienced men of their own class, or with philosophic and religious teachers.
Nurses and slaves implanted their ignorant superstitions in the households
where the rulers of the empire and the provinces were reared; and no public
assemblies existed, where discussion could efface such prejudices. Family
education became a more influential feature in society than public instruction;
and though family education, from the fourth to the seventh century, appears to
have improved the morality of the population, it certainly increased their
superstition and limited their understandings. Emperors, senators, landlords,
and merchants, were alike educated under these influences; and though the
church and the law opened a more enlarged circle of ideas, from creating a
deeper sense of responsibility, still the prejudices of early education
circumscribed the sense of duty more and more in each successive generation.
The military class, which was the most powerful in society, consisted almost
entirely of mere barbarians. The mental degradation, resulting from
superstition, bigotry, and ignorance, which forms the marked social feature of
the period between the reigns of Justinian I and Leo III, brought the Eastern Empire
to the state of depopulation and weakness that had delivered the Western a prey
to small tribes of invaders.
The fiscal causes of the depopulation of the Roman
Empire have been noticed in a prior volume, as well as the extent to which
immigrants had intruded themselves on the soil of Greece. The corruption of the
ancient language took place at the same time, and arose out of the causes which
disseminated ignorance. At the accession of Leo, the disorder in the central
administration, the anarchy in the provincial government, and the ravages of
the Slavonians and Saracens, had rendered the condition of the people
intolerable. The Roman government seemed incapable of upholding legal order in
society, and its extinction was regarded as a proximate event. All the
provinces between the shores of the Adriatic and the banks of the Danube had
been abandoned to Slavonian tribes. Powerful colonies of Slavonians had been
planted by Justinian II in Macedonia and Bithynia, in the rich valleys of the
Strymon and the Artanas. Greece was filled with
pastoral and agricultural hordes of the same race, who became in many districts
the sole cultivators of the soil, and effaced the memory of the names of
mountains and streams, which will be immortal in the world’s literature. The
Bulgarians plundered all Thrace to the walls of Constantinople. Thessalonica
was repeatedly besieged by Slavonians. The Saracens had inundated Asia Minor
with their armies, and were preparing to extirpate Christianity in the East.
Such was the crisis at which Leo was proclaimed emperor by the army, in Amorium AD 716.
Yet there were peculiar features in the condition of
the surviving population, and an inherent vigour in the principles of the Roman
administration, that still operated powerfully in resisting foreign domination.
The people felt the necessity of defending the administration of the law, and
of upholding commercial intercourse. The ties of interest consequently ranged a
large body of the inhabitants of every province round the central administration
at this hour of difficulty. The very circumstances which weakened the power of
the court of Constantinople, conferred on the people an increase of authority,
and enabled them to take effectual measures for their own defence. This new
energy may be traced in the resistance which Ravenna and Cherson offered to the
tyranny of Justinian II. The Orthodox Church, also, served as an additional
bond of union among the people, and, throughout the wide extent of the imperial
dominions, its influences connected the local feelings of the parish with the
general interests of the church and the empire. These misfortunes, which
brought the state to the verge of ruin, relieved commerce from much fiscal
oppression and many monopolies. Facilities were thus given to trade, which
afforded to the population of the towns additional sources of employment. The
commerce of the Eastern Empire had already gained by the conquests of the
barbarians in the West, for the ruling classes in the countries conquered by
the Goths and Franks rarely engaged in trade or accumulated capital. The
advantage of possessing a systematic administration of justice, enforced by a
fixed legal procedure, attached the commercial classes and the town population
to the person of the emperor, whose authority was considered the fountain of
legal order and judicial impartiality. A fixed legislation, and an
uninterrupted administration of justice, prevented the political anarchy that
prevailed under the successors of Heraclius from ruining society in the Roman
Empire; while the arbitrary judicial power of provincial governors, in the
dominions of the caliphs, rendered property insecure, and undermined national
wealth.
There was likewise another feature in the Eastern
Empire which deserves notice. The number of towns was very great, and they were
generally more populous than the political state of the country would lead us
to expect. Indeed, to estimate the density of the urban population, in
comparison with the extent of territory from which it apparently derived its
supplies, we must compare it with the actual condition of Malta and Guernsey,
or with the state of Lombardy and Tuscany in the middle ages. This density of population,
joined to the great difference in the price of the produce of the soil in
various places, afforded the Roman government the power of collecting from its
subjects an amount of taxation unparalleled in modern times, except in Egypt.
The whole surplus profits of society were annually drawn into the coffers of
the state, leaving the inhabitants only a bare sufficiency for perpetuating the
race of tax-payers. History, indeed, shows that the agricultural classes, from
the labourer to the landlord, were unable to retain possession of the savings
required to replace that depreciation which time is constantly producing in all
vested capital, and that their numbers gradually diminished.
After the accession of Leo III, a new condition of
society is soon apparent; and though many old political evils continued to
exist, it becomes evident that a greater degree of personal liberty, as well as
greater security for property, was henceforth guaranteed to the mass of the
inhabitants of the empire. Indeed, no other government of which history has
preserved the records, unless it be that of China, has secured equal advantages
to its subjects for so long a period. The empires of the caliphs and of
Charlemagne, though historians have celebrated their praises loudly, cannot, in
their best days, compete with the administration organized by Leo on this
point; and both sank into ruin while the Byzantine Empire continued to flourish
in full vigour. It must be confessed that eminent historians present a totally
different picture of Byzantine history to their readers. Voltaire speaks of it
as a worthless repertory of declamation and miracles, disgraceful to the human
mind. Even the sagacious Gibbon, after enumerating with just pride the extent
of his labours, adds, “From these considerations, I should have abandoned
without regret the Greek slaves and their servile historians, had I not
reflected that the fate of the Byzantine monarchy is passively connected with
the most splendid and important revolutions which have changed the state of the
world”. The views of byzantine history, unfolded m the following pages, are
frequently in direct opposition to these great authorities. The defects and
vices of the political system will be carefully noticed, but the splendid
achievements of the emperors, and the great merits of the judicial and
ecclesiastical establishments, will be contrasted with their faults.
The history of the Byzantine Empire divides itself
into three periods, strongly marked by distinct characteristics.
The first period commences with the reign of Leo III
in 716, and terminates with that of Michael III in 867. It comprises the whole
history of the predominance of the Iconoclasts in the established church, and
of the reaction which reinstated the orthodox in power. It opens with the
efforts by which Leo and the people of the empire saved the Roman law and the
Christian religion from the conquering Saracens. It embraces a long and violent
struggle between the government and the people, the emperors seeking to increase
the central power by annihilating every local franchise, and even the right of
private opinion, among their subjects. The contest concerning image-worship,
from the prevalence of ecclesiastical ideas, became the expression of this
struggle. Its object was as much to consolidate the supremacy of the imperial
authority, as to purify the practice of the church. The emperors wished to
constitute themselves the fountains of ecclesiastical as completely as of civil
legislation.
The long and bloody wars of this period, and the
vehement character of the sovereigns who filled the throne, attract the
attention of those who love to dwell on the romantic facts of history.
Unfortunately, the biographical sketches and individual characters of the
heroes of these ages he concealed in the dullest chronicles. But the true
historical feature of this memorable period is the aspect of a declining
empire, saved by the moral vigour developed in society, and of the central
authority struggling to restore national prosperity. Never was such a
succession of able sovereigns seen following one another on any other throne.
The stern Iconoclast, Leo the Isaurian, opens the line as the second founder of
the Eastern Empire. His son, the fiery Constantine, who was said to prefer the
door of the stable to the perfumes of his palaces, replanted the Christian
standards on the banks of the Euphrates. Irene, the beautiful Athenian,
presents a strange combination of talent, heartlessness, and orthodoxy. The
finance minister, Nicephoras, perishes on the field
of battle like an old Roman. The Armenian Leo falls at the altar of his private
chapel, murdered as he is singing psalms with his deep voice, before day-dawn.
Michael the Amorian, who stammered Greek with his native Phrygian accent,
became the founder of an imperial dynasty, destined to be extinguished by a
Slavonian groom. The accomplished Theophilus lived in an age of romance, both
in action and literature. His son, Michael, the last of the Amorian family, was
the only contemptible prince of this period, and he was certainly the most
despicable buffoon that ever occupied a throne.
The second period commences with the reign of Basil I
in 867, and terminates with the deposition of Michael VI in 1057. During these
two centuries the imperial sceptre was retained by members 01 the Basilian
family, or held by those who shared their throne as guardians or husbands. At
this time the Byzantine Empire attained its highest pitch of external power and
internal prosperity. The Saracens were pursued into the plains of Syria.
Antioch and Edessa were reunited to the empire. The Bulgarian monarchy was
conquered, and the Danube became again the northern frontier. The Slavonians in
Greece were almost exterminated. Byzantine commerce filled the whole Mediterranean,
and legitimated the claim of the emperor of Constantinople to the title of
Autocrat of the Mediterranean Sea. But the real glory of this period consists
in the power of the law. Respect for the administration of justice pervaded
society more generally than it had ever done at any preceding period of the
history of the world—a fact which our greatest historians have overlooked,
though it is all-important in the history of human civilization.
The third period extends from the accession of Isaac I
Comnenus in 1057, to the conquest of the Byzantine Empire by the Crusaders, in
1204. This is the true period of the decline and fall of the Eastern Empire. It
commenced by a rebellion of the great nobles of Asia, who effected an internal
revolution in the Byzantine empire by wrenching the administration out of the
hands of well-trained officials, and destroying the responsibility created, by
systematic procedure. A despotism supported by personal influence soon ruined
the scientific fabric which had previously upheld the imperial power. The
people were ground to the earth by a fiscal rapacity, over which the splendour
of the house of Comnenus throws a thin veil. The wealth of the empire was
dissipated, its prosperity destroyed, the administration of justice corrupted,
and the central authority lost all control over the population, when a band of
20,000 adventurers, masked as crusaders, put an end to the Roman empire of the
East.
In the eighth and ninth centuries the Byzantine Empire
continued to embrace many nations differing from the Greeks in language and
manners. Even in religion there was a strong tendency to separation, and many
of the heresies noticed in history assumed a national character, while the
Orthodox Church circumscribed itself more and more within the nationality of
the Greeks, and forfeited its ecumenical characteristics. The empire still
included within its limits Romans, Greeks, Rumenians,
Isaurians, Lycaonians, Phrygians, Syrians, and Gallo-Grecians. But the great
Thracian race, which had once been inferior in number only to the Indian, and
which, in the first century of our era, had excited the attention of Vespasian
by the extent of the territory it occupied, was now exterminated. The country
it had formerly inhabited was peopled by Slavonian tribes, a diminished Roman
and Greek population only retaining possession of the towns, and the
Bulgarians, a Turkish tribe, ruling as the dominant race from Mount Hemus to the Danube. The range of Mount Hemus generally formed the Byzantine frontier to the north, and its mountain passes
were guarded by imperial garrisons. Slavonian colonies had established
themselves over all the European provinces, and had even penetrated into the
Peloponnesus. The military government of Strymon, above the passes in the plain
of Heraclea Sintica, was formed to prevent the
country to the south of Mounts Orbelos and Skomios from becoming an independent Slavonian province.
The provincial divisions of the Roman Empire had
fallen into oblivion. A new geographical arrangement into Themes appears to
have been established by Heraclius, when he recovered the Asiatic provinces
from the Persians: it was reorganized by Leo, and endured as long as the
Byzantine government. The number of themes varied at different periods. The
emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus, writing about the middle of the tenth,
century, counts sixteen in the Asiatic portion of the empire, and twelve in the
European.
Seven great themes are particularly prominent in Asia
Minor, Optimaton, Opsikion, the Thrakesian, the Anatolic, the Bukellarian,
the Kibyrraiot, and the Armeniac. In each of these a large military force was
permanently maintained, under the command of a general of the province, and in
Opsikion, the Thrakesian, and the Kibyrraiot, a naval force was likewise
stationed under its own officers. The commanders of the troops were called
Strategoi, those of the navy Drangarioi. Several
subordinate territorial divisions existed, called Tourms,
and separate military commands were frequently established for the defence of
important passes, traversed by great lines of communication, called Kleisouras. Several of the ancient nations in Asia Minor
still continued to preserve their national peculiarities, and this circumstance
has induced the Byzantine writers frequently to mention their country as
recognized geographical divisions of the empire.
The European provinces were divided into eight
continental and five insular or transmarine themes, until the loss of the
exarchate of Ravenna reduced the number to twelve. Venice and Naples, though
they acknowledged the suzerainty 01 the Eastern Empire, acted generally as
independent cities. Sardinia was lost about the time of Leo’s accession, and
the circumstances attending its conquest by the Saracens are unknown.
The ecclesiastical divisions of the empire underwent
frequent modifications; but after the provinces of Epirus, Greece,
and Sicily were withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the Pope, and placed
under that of the Patriarch of Constantinople by Leo III, that patriarchate
embraced the whole Byzantine Empire. It was then divided into 52 metropolitan
dioceses, which were subdivided into 649 suffragan bishoprics, and 13
archbishoprics, in which the prelates were independent but without any
suffragans. There were, moreover, 34 titular archbishops.
Sect. II
REIGN OF LEO III THE ISAURIAN, A.D.
717-741
When Leo was raised to the throne, the empire was
threatened with immediate ruin. Six emperors had been dethroned within the
space of twenty-one years. Four perished by the hand of the public executioner,
one died in obscurity, after being deprived of sight, and the other was only
allowed to end his days peacefully in a monastery, because Leo felt the
imperial sceptre firmly fixed in his own grasp. Every army assembled to
encounter the Saracens had broken out into rebellion. The Bulgarians and
Slavonians wasted Europe up to the walls of Constantinople; the Saracens
ravaged the whole of Asia Minor to the shores of the Bosphorus.
Amorium was the principal city of the theme Anatolikon. The
Caliph Suleiman had sent his brother, Moslemah, with a numerous army, to
complete the conquest of the Roman Empire, which appeared to be an enterprise
of no extraordinary difficulty, and Amorium was
besieged by the Saracens. Leo, who commanded the Byzantine troops, required
some time to concert the operations by which he hoped to raise the siege. To
gain the necessary delay, he opened negotiations with the invaders, and, under
the pretext of hastening the conclusion of the treaty, he visited the Saracen
general engaged in the siege with an escort of only 500 horse. The Saracens
were invited to suspend, their attacks until the decision of Moslemah—who was
at the head of another division of the Mohammedan army—could be known. In an
interview which took place with the bishop and principal inhabitants of the Amorium, relating to the proffered terms, Leo contrived to
exhort them to continue their defence, and assured them of speedy succour. The
besiegers, nevertheless, pressed forward their approaches. Leo, after his
interview with the Amorians, proposed that the
Saracen general should accompany him to the headquarters of Moslemah. The
Saracen readily agreed to an arrangement which would enable him to deliver so
important a hostage to the commander-in-chief. The wary Isaurian, who well knew
that he would be closely watched, had made his plan of escape. On reaching a
narrow defile, from which a cross road led to the advanced posts of his own
army, Leo suddenly drew his sabre and attacked the Saracens about his person;
while his guards, who were prepared for the signal, easily opened a way through
the two thousand hostile cavalry of the escort, and all reached the Byzantine
camp in safety. Leo’s subsequent military dispositions and diplomatic
negotiations induced the enemy to raise the siege of Amorium,
and the grateful inhabitants united with the army in saluting him Emperor of
the Romans. But in his arrangements with Moslemah, he is accused by his enemies
of having agreed to conditions which facilitated the further progress of the
Mohammedans, in order to secure his own march to Constantinople. On this march
he was met by the son of Theodosius III, whom he defeated. Theodosius resigned
his crown, and retired into a monastery, while Leo made his triumphal entry
into the capital by the Golden Gate, and was crowned by the Patriarch in the church
of St. Sophia on the 25th of March, 717.
The position of Leo continued to be one of extreme
difficulty. The Caliph Suleiman, who had seen one private adventurer
succeed the other in quick succession on the imperial throne, deemed the moment
favourable for the final conquest of the Christians; and, reinforcing his
brother’s army, he ordered him to lay siege to Constantinople. The Saracen
Empire had now reached its greatest extent. From the banks of the Sihun and the Indus to the shores of the Atlantic in
Mauretania and Spain, the orders of Suleiman were implicitly obeyed. The recent
conquests of Spain in the west, and of Fergana, Cashgar,
and Sind in the East, had animated the confidence of the Mohammedans to such a
degree that no enterprise appeared difficult. The army Moslemah led against
Constantinople was the best appointed that had ever attacked the Christians: it
consisted of eighty thousand fighting men. The caliph announced his intention
of taking the field in person with additional forces, should the capital of the
Christians offer a protracted resistance to the arms of Islam. The whole
expedition is said to have employed one hundred and eighty thousand; and the
number does not appear to be greatly exaggerated, if it be supposed to include
the sailors of the fleet, and the reinforcements which reached the camp before
Constantinople.
Moslemah, after capturing Pergamus,
marched to Abydos, where he was joined by the Saracen fleet. He then
transported his army across the Hellespont, and, marching along the shore of
the Propontis, invested Leo in his capital both by land and sea. The strong
walls of Constantinople, the engines of defence with which Roman and Greek art
had covered the ramparts, and the skill of the Byzantine engineers, rendered
every attempt to carry the place by assault hopeless, so that the Saracens were
compelled to trust to the effect of a strict blockade for gaining possession of
the city. They surrounded their camp with a deep ditch, and strengthened it
with a strong dyke. Moslemah then sent out large detachments to collect forage
and destroy the provisions, which might otherwise find their way into the
besieged city. The presence of an active enemy and a populous city required
constant vigilance on the part of a great portion of his land forces.
The Saracen fleet consisted of eighteen hundred
vessels of war and transports. In order to form the blockade, it was divided
into two squadrons: one was stationed on the Asiatic coast, in the ports of
Eutropius and Anthimus, to prevent supplies arriving
from the Archipelago; the other occupied the bays in the European shore of the
Bosphorus above the point of Galata, in order to cut off all communication with
the Black Sea and the cities of Cherson and Trebizond. The first naval engagement
took place as the fleet was taking up its position within the Bosphorus. The
current, rendered impetuous by a change of wind, threw the heavy ships and
transports into confusion. The besieged directed some fire-ships against the
crowded vessels, and succeeded in burning several, and driving others on shore
under the walls of Constantinople. The Saracen admiral, Suleiman, confident in
the number of his remaining ships of war, resolved to avenge his partial
defeat, by a complete victory. He placed one hundred chosen Arabs, in complete
armour, in each of his best vessels, and, advancing to the walls of
Constantinople, made a vigorous attempt to enter the place by assault, as it
was entered long after by Doge Dandolo. Leo was well prepared to repulse the attack,
and, under his experienced guidance, the Arabs were completely defeated. A
number of the Saracen ships were burned by the Greek fire which the besieged
launched from their walls. After this defeat, Suleiman withdrew the European
squadron of his fleet into the Sosthenian bay.
The besiegers encamped before Constantinople on the
15th August, 717. The Caliph Suleiman died before he was able to send any
reinforcements to his brother. The winter proved unusually severe. The country
all round Constantinople remained covered with deep snow for many weeks. The
greater part of the horses and camels in the camp of Moslemah perished; numbers
of the best soldiers, accustomed to the mild winters of Syria, died from having
neglected to take the requisite precautions against a northern climate. The
difficulty of procuring food ruined the discipline of the troops. These
misfortunes were increased by the untimely death of the admiral, Suleiman. In
the meantime, Leo and the inhabitants of Constantinople, having made the necessary
preparations for a long siege, passed the winter in security. A fleet, fitted
out at Alexandria, brought supplies to Moslemah in spring. Four hundred
transports, escorted by men-of-war, sailed past Constantinople, and, entering
the Bosphorus, took up their station at Kalos Agros. Another fleet, almost equally numerous, arrived soon
after from Africa, and anchored in the bays on the Bithynian coast. These
positions rendered the current a protection against the fire-ships of the
garrison of Constantinople. The crews of the new transports were in great part
composed of Christians, and the weak condition of Moslemah’s army filled them with fear. Many conspired to desert. Seizing the boats of
their respective vessels during the night, numbers escaped to Constantinople,
where they informed the emperor of the exact disposition of the whole Saracen
force. Leo lost no time in taking advantage of the enemy's embarrassments.
Fire-ships were sent with a favourable wind among the transports, while ships
of war, furnished with engines for throwing Greek fire, increased the
confusion. This bold attack was successful, and a part of the naval force of
the Saracens was destroyed. Some ships fell a prey to the flames, some were
driven on shore, and some were captured by the byzantine squadron. The blockade
was now at an end, for Moslemah’s troops were dying
from want, while the besieged were living in plenty; but the Saracen
obstinately persisted in maintaining possession of his camp in Europe. It was
not until his foraging parties were repeatedly cut off, and all the beasts of
burden were consumed as food, that he consented to allow the standard of the
Prophet to retreat before the Christians. The remains of his army were embarked
in the relics of the fleet, and on the 15th August, 718, Moslemah raised the
siege, after ruining one of the finest armies the Saracens ever assembled, by
obstinately persisting in a hopeless undertaking. The troops were landed at Proconnesus, and marched back to Damascus, through Asia
Minor; but the fleet encountered a violent storm in passing through the
Archipelago. The dispersed ships were pursued by the Greeks of the islands, and
so many were lost or captured, that only five of the Syrian squadron returned
home.
Few military details concerning Leo’s defence of
Constantinople have been preserved, but there can be no doubt that it was one
of the most brilliant exploits of a warlike age. The Byzantine army was
superior to every other in the art of defending fortresses. The Roman arsenals,
in their best days, could probably have supplied no scientific or mechanical
contrivance unknown to the corps of engineers of Leo’s army, for we must
recollect that the education, discipline, and practice of these engineers had
been perpetuated in uninterrupted succession from the times of Trajan and
Constantine. We are not to estimate the decline of mechanical science by the
degradation of art, nor by the decay of military power in the field. The
depopulation of Europe rendered soldiers rare and dear, and a considerable part
of the Byzantine armies was composed of foreign mercenaries. The army of Leo,
though far inferior in number to that of Moslemah, was its equal in discipline
and military skill; while the walls of Constantinople were garnished with
engines from the ancient arsenals of the city, far exceeding in power and
number any with which the Arabs had been in the habit of contending. The vanity
of Gallic writers has magnified the success of Charles Martel over a plundering
expedition of the Spanish Arabs into a marvellous victory, and attributed the
deliverance of Europe from the Saracen yoke to the valour of the Franks. A veil
has been thrown over the talents and courage of Leo, a soldier of fortune, just
seated on the imperial throne, who defeated the long-planned schemes of
conquest of the caliphs Walid and Suleiman. It is unfortunate that we have no
Isaurian literature.
The catastrophe of Moslemah’s army, and the state of the caliphate during the reigns of Omar II and Yesid II, relieved the empire from all immediate danger,
and Leo was enabled to pursue his schemes for reorganizing the army and
defending his dominions against future invasions. The war was languidly carried
on for some years, and the Saracens were gradually expelled from most of their conquests
beyond Mount Taurus. In the year 726, Leo was embarrassed by seditions and
rebellions, caused by his decrees against image-worship. Hescham seized the opportunity, and sent two powerful armies to invade the empire.
Caesarea was taken by Moslemah; while another army, under Moawyah,
pushing forward, laid siege to Nicaea. Leo was well pleased to see the Saracens
consume their resources in attacking a distant fortress; but though they were
repulsed before Nicaea, they retreated without serious loss, carrying on
immense plunder. The plundering excursions of the Arabs were frequently renewed
by land and sea. In one of these expeditions, the celebrated Sid-al-Battal carried on an individual who was set up by the
Saracens as a pretender to the Byzantine throne, under the pretext that he was
Tiberius, the son of Justinian II. Two sons of the caliph appeared more than
once at the head of the invading armies. In the year 739, the Saracen forces
poured into Asia Minor in immense numbers, with all their early energy. Leo,
who had taken the command of the Byzantine army, accompanied by his son
Constantine, marched to meet Sid-al-Battal, whose
great fame rendered him the most dangerous enemy. A battle took place at Acroinon, in the Anatolic theme, in which the Saracens were
totally defeated. The valiant Sid, the most renowned champion of Islamism,
perished on the field; but the fame of his exploits has filled many volumes of
Moslem romance, and furnished some of the tales that have adorned the memory of
the Cid of Spain, three hundred years after the victory of Leo. The Western
Christians have robbed the Byzantine empire of its glory in every way. After
this defeat the Saracen power ceased to be formidable to the empire, until the
energy of the caliphate was revived by the vigorous administration of the Abassides.
Leo’s victories over the Mohammedans were an
indispensable step to the establishment of his personal authority. But the
measures of administrative wisdom which rendered his reign a new era in Roman
history are its most important feature in the annals of the human race. His
military exploits were the result of ordinary virtues, and of talents common in
every age; but the ability to reform the internal government of an empire, in
accordance with the exigencies of society, can only be appreciated by those who
have made the causes and the progress of national revolutions the object of
long thought. The intellectual superiority of Leo may be estimated by the
incompetence of sovereigns in the present century to meet new exigencies of
society. Leo judiciously availed himself of many circumstances that favoured
his reforms. The inherent vigour which is nourished by parochial and municipal
responsibilities, bound together the remnants of the free population in the eastern
Roman Empire, and operated powerfully in resisting foreign domination. The
universal respect felt for the administration of justice, and the general
deference paid to the ecclesiastical establishment, inspired the inhabitants
with energies wanting in the West. Civilization was so generally diffused, that
the necessity of upholding the civil and ecclesiastical tribunals, and
defending the channels of commercial intercourse, reunited a powerful body of
the people in every province to the central administration, by the strongest
ties of interest and feeling.
The oppressive authority of the court of
Constantinople had been much weakened by the anarchy that prevailed throughout
the empire in the latter part of the seventh century. The government had
been no longer able to inundate the provinces with those bands of officials who
had previously consumed the wealth of the curia; and the cities had been
everywhere compelled to provide for their own defence by assuming powers
hitherto reserved to the imperial officers. These new duties had inspired the
people with new vigour, and developed unexpected talents. The destructive
responsibility of fiscal guarantees and personal services, imposed by the
administration of imperial Rome as a burden on every class of its subjects,
from the senator to the ticket-porter, was lightened when the Western Empire
fell a prey to foreign conquerors, and when the Eastern was filled with foreign
colonists. The curiales and the corporations at last
relieved themselves from the attempt of the Roman government to fix society in
a stationary condition, and the relief was followed by immediate improvement.
Troubled times had also made the clergy more anxious
to conciliate public opinion than official favour. A better and more popular
class of bishops replaced the worldly priest satirized by Gregory Nazianzenos. The influence of this change was very great,
for the bishop, as the defender of the curia, and the real head of the people
in the municipality, enjoyed extensive authority over the corporations of
artisans and the mass of the labouring population. From a judge he gradually
acquired the power of a civil governor, and the curia became his senate. The
ordinary judicial tribunals being cut off from direct communication with the
supreme courts, peculiar local usages gained force, and a customary law arose
in many provinces restricting the application of the code of Justinian. The
Orthodox Church alone preserved its unity of character, and its priests
continued to be guided by principles of centralization, which preserved their
connection with the seat of the patriarchate at Constantinople, without
injuring the energetic spirit of their local resistance to the progress of the
Mohammedan power. Throughout the wide extent of the Eastern Empire, the
priesthood served as a bond to connect the local feelings of the parish with
the general interests of the Orthodox Church. Its authority was, moreover,
endeared to a large body of the population from its language being Greek, and
from its holy legends embodying national feelings and prejudices. Repulsive as
the lives of the saints now appear to our taste, they were the delight of
millions for many centuries.
From the earnest period to the present hour, the
wealth of most of the cities in the East has been derived from their importance
as points of commercial communication. The insane fury of the Emperor Justinian
II, in devastating the nourishing cities of Ravenna and Cherson, failed to ruin
these places, because they were then the greatest commercial entrepôts of the
trade between India and Europe. But the alarm felt for the ruin of commerce
throughout the Christian world, during the anarchy that existed in the last
years of the seventh, and early years of the eighth centuries, contributed much
to render men contented with the firm government of Leo, even though they may
have considered him a heretic. On the other hand, the prevailing anarchy had
relieved commerce both from much fiscal oppression and many official
monopolies. The moment the financial burdens of the commercial classes were
lightened, they experienced an the advantage of possessing a systematic
administration of justice, enforced by a fixed legal procedure, and
consequently they very naturally became warm partisans of the imperial
authority, as, in their opinion, the personal influence of the emperor
constituted the true fountain of legal order and judicial impartiality. A fixed
legislation saved society from dissolution during many years of anarchy.
The obscure records of the eighth century allow us to
discern through their dim atmosphere a considerable increase of power in
popular feelings, and they even afford some glimpses of the causes of this new
energy. The fermentation which then pervaded Christian society marks the
commencement of modem civilization, as contrasted with ancient times. Its force
arose out of the general diminution of slave labour. The middle classes in the
towns were no longer rich enough to be purchasers of slaves, consequently the
slave population henceforward became a minority in the Eastern Empire; and
those democratic ideas which exist among free labourers replaced the
aristocratic caution, inseparable from the necessity of watching a numerous
population of slaves. The general attention was directed to the equal
administration of justice. The emperor alone appeared to be removed above the
influence of partiality and bribery; under his powerful protection the masses
hoped to escape official and aristocratic oppression, by the systematic
observance of the rules of Roman law. The prosperity of commerce seemed as
directly connected with the imperial supremacy as judicial equity itself, for
the power of the emperor alone could enforce one uniform system of customs from
Cherson to Ravenna. Every trader, and indeed every citizen, felt that the
apparatus of the imperial government was necessary to secure financial and
legal unity. Above all, Leo, the conqueror of the hitherto victorious Saracens,
seemed the only individual who possessed the civil as well as the military
talents necessary for averting the ruin of the empire. Leo converted the strong
attachment to the laws of Rome prevalent in society into a lever of political
power, and rendered the devotion felt for the personal authority of the
sovereign the means of increasing the centralization of power in the reformed
fabric of the Roman administration. The laws of Rome, therefore, saved
Christianity from Saracen domination more than the armies. The victories of Leo
enabled him to consolidate his power, and constitute the Byzantine Empire, in
defiance of the Greek nation and the Orthodox Church; but the law supplied him
with this moral power over society.
As long as Mohammedanism was only placed in collision
with the fiscality of the Roman government and the intolerance of the Orthodox
Church, the Saracens were everywhere victorious, and found everywhere Christian
allies in the provinces they invaded. But when anarchy and misfortune had
destroyed the fiscal power of the state, and weakened the ecclesiastical
intolerance of the clergy, a new point of comparison between the governments of
the emperors and the caliphs presented itself to the attention. The question,
how justice was administered in the ordinary relations of life, became of vital
interest. The code of Justinian was compared with that of the Koran. The courts
presided over by judges and bishops were compared with those of the Moolahs. The convictions which arose in the breasts of the
subjects of the Byzantine emperors changed the current of events. The torrent
of Mohammedan conquest was arrested, and as long as the Roman law was
cultivated in the empire, and administered under proper control in the
provinces, the invaders of the Byzantine territory were everywhere unsuccessful
.The inhabitants boasted with a just pride, that they lived under the
systematic rule of the Roman law, and not under the arbitrary sway of despotic
power.
Such was the state of the Roman Empire when Leo
commenced his reforms. We must now proceed to examine what history has recorded
concerning this great reformer. Some fables concerning his life and fortunes
owe their existence to the aversion with which his religious opinions were
regarded by the Greeks, and they supply us with the means of forming a
corrector view of the popular mind than of the emperor’s life. At the same
time, it must be recollected that they embody the opinions of only a portion of
his subjects, adopted towards the close of his reign.
Leo was born at Germanicia, a city of Armenia Minor,
in the mountains near the borders of Cappadocia and Syria. Germanicia was taken
by the Saracens, and the parents of Leo emigrated with their son to Mesembria
in Thrace. They were persons of sufficient wealth to make the Emperor Justinian
II a present of five hundred sheep, as he was advancing to regain possession of
his throne with the assistance of the Bulgarians. This well-timed gift gained
young Leo the rank of spatharios, the personal favour
of the tyrant, and a high command on the Lazian frontier. His prudence and courage raised him, during the reign of Anastasius
II, to the command of the Anatolic theme.
But another history of his life, unknown to the early
historians, Theophanes and Nicephorus, though both these orthodox writers were
his bitter enemies and detractors, became current in after times, and deserves
notice as presenting us with a specimen of the tales which then fed the mental
appetite of the Greeks. Prodigies, prophecies, and miracles were universally
believed. Restricted communications and neglected education were conducting
society to an infantine dotage. Every unusual event was said to have been
predicted by some prophetic revelation; and as the belief in the prescience of
futurity was universal, public deceivers and self-deceivers were always found
acting the part of prophets. It is said to have been foretold to Leontius that
he should ascend the throne, by two monks and an abbot. The restoration of
Justinian II had been announced to him while he was in exile by a hermit of
Cappadocia. Philippicus had it revealed in a dream, that he was to become
emperor; and he was banished by Tiberius II, (Apsimar,) when this vision became
publicly known. It is not, therefore, wonderful that Leo should have been
honoured with communications from the other world; though, as might have been
expected from his heretical opinions, and the orthodoxy of his historians,
these communications are represented to have been made by agents from the lower
rather than the higher regions.
A circumstance which it was believed had happened to
the Caliph Yezid I, proved most satisfactorily to the
Greeks that Satan often transacted business publicly by means of his agents on
earth. Two Jews—for Jews are generally selected by the orthodox as the fittest
agents of the demon—presented themselves to the caliph claiming the gift of
prophecy. They announced that, if he should put an end to the idolatrous
worship of images throughout his dominions, fate had predestined him to reign
for forty years over a rich and flourishing empire. Yezid was a man of pleasure and a bigot, so that the prophecy was peculiarly adapted
to flatter his passions. The images and pictures winch adorned the Christian
churches were torn down and destroyed throughout the caliph’s dominions. But Yezid was occupied carrying his decree into execution when
he died. His son, Moawyah II, sought the Jewish
prophets in vain. The prince of darkness concealed them from his search, and
transported them into the heart of Asia Minor, where they had new services to
perform.
A young man named Conon, who had quitted his native
mountains of Isauria, to gain his living as a pedlar in the wealthier plains,
drove his ass, laden with merchandise, to a grove of evergreen oaks near a
bubbling fountain, to seek rest during the heat of the day, and count his
recent gains. The ass was turned loose to pasture in the little meadow formed
by the stream of the fountain, and Conon sat down in the shade, by the chapel
of St. Theodore, to eat his frugal meal. He soon perceived two travellers
resting like himself, and enjoying their noontide repast. These travellers
entered into conversation with young Conon, who was a lad of remarkable
strength, beauty, and intelligence. They allowed the fact to transpire that
they were Jews, prophets and astrologers, who had recently quitted the court of
the caliph at Damascus, which very naturally awakened in the mind of the young
pedlar a wish to know his future fortune, for he may have aspired at becoming a
great post-contractor or a rich banker. The two Jews readily satisfied his
curiosity, and, to his utter astonishment, informed him that he was destined to
rule the Roman Empire. As a proof of their veracity, the prophets declared that
they sought neither wealth nor honours for themselves, but they conjured Conon
to promise solemnly that, when he ascended the throne, he would put an end to
the idolatry which disgraced Christianity in the East. If he engaged to do
this, they assured him that his fulfilling the will of Heaven would bring
prosperity to himself and to the empire. Young Conon, believing that the
prophets had revealed the will of God, pledged himself to purify the Christian
Church; and he kept this promise, when he ascended the throne as Leo the
Isaurian. But as the prophets had made no stipulation for the free exercise of
their own creed, and their interest in Christianity pointed out the true faith,
Leo did not consider himself guilty of ingratitude, when, as emperor, he
persecuted the Jewish religion with the greatest severity.
Such is the fable by which the later Byzantine
historians explain Leo’s hostility to image-worship. This adventure appeared to
them a probable origin of the ecclesiastical reforms which characterize Leo’s
domestic policy. In the bright days of Hellenic genius, such materials
would have been woven into an immortal tale; the chapel of St Theodore, its
fountain, and its evergreen oaks, Conon driving his ass with the two unearthly
Jews reclining in the shade, would have formed a picture immortal in the minds
of millions; but in the hands of ignorant monks and purblind chroniclers, it
sinks into a dull and improbable narrative. Unfortunately it is almost as
difficult to ascertain the precise legislative and executive acts by which Leo
reformed the military, financial, and legal administration, as it is to obtain
an impartial account of his ecclesiastical measures.
The military establishment of the empire had gradually
lost its national character, from the impossibility of recruiting the army from
among Roman citizens. In vain the soldier’s son was fettered, to his father’s
profession, as the artisan was bound to his corporation, and the proprietor to
his estate. Yet the superiority of the Roman armies seems to have suffered
little from the loss of national spirit, as long as strict discipline was
maintained in their ranks. For many centuries the majority of the imperial
forces consisted of conscripts drawn from the lowest ranks of society, from the
rude mountaineers of almost independent provinces, or from foreigners hired as
mercenaries; yet the armies of all invaders, from the Goths to the Saracens,
were repeatedly defeated in pitched battles. The state maxims which separated
the servants of the emperor from the people, survived in the Eastern provinces
after the loss of the Western, and served as the basis of the military policy
of the Byzantine Empire, when reformed by Leo. The conditions of soldier and
citizen were deemed incompatible. The law prevented the citizen from assuming
the position of a soldier, and watched with jealousy any attempt of the soldier
to acquire the rights and feelings of a citizen. An impassable barrier was
placed between the proprietor of the soil, who was the tax-payer, and the
defender of the state, who was an agent of the imperial power. It is true that,
after the loss of the Western provinces, the Roman armies were recruited from
the native subjects of the empire to a much greater degree than formerly; and
that, after the time of Heraclius, it became impossible to enforce the fiscal
arrangements to which the separation of the citizen from the soldier owed its
origin, at least with the previous strictness. Still the old imperial maxims
were cherished in the reign of Leo, and the numerous colonies of Slavonians,
and other foreigners, established in the empire, owed their foundation to the
supposed necessity of seeking for recruits as little as possible from among the
native population of agriculturists. These colonies were governed by peculiar
regulations, and their most important service was supplying a number of troops
for the imperial army. Isauria and other mountainous districts, where it was
difficult to collect any revenue by a land-tax, also supplied a fixed military
contingent.
Whatever modifications Leo made in the military
system, and however great were the reforms he effected in the organization of
the army and the discipline of the troops, the mass of the population continued
in the Byzantine empire to be excluded from the use of arms, as they had been
in the Roman times; and this circumstance was the cause of that unwarlike
disposition, which is made a standing reproach from the days of the Goths to
those of the Crusaders.
The state of society engendered by this policy opened
the Western Empire to the northern nations, and the empire of Charlemagne to
the Normans. Leo’s great merit was that without any violent political change he
infused new energy into the Byzantine military establishment, and organized a
force that for five centuries defended the empire without acquiring the power
of domineering in the state. As the army was destitute of patriotic feeling, it
was necessary to lessen the influence of its commanders. This was done by
dividing the provinces into themes, appointing a general of division for each
theme, and grouping together in different stations the various corps of
conscripts, subject nations, and hired mercenaries. The adoption likewise of
different arms, armour, and manoeuvres in the various corps, and their seclusion
from close intercommunication with the native legions, guarded against the
danger of those rebellious movements which in reality destroyed the Western
Empire. As much caution was displayed in the Byzantine Empire to prevent the
army from endangering the government by its seditions, as to render it
formidable to the enemy by its strength.
The finances are soon felt to be the basis of
government in all civilized states. Augustus experienced the truth of this as
much as Louis XIV. The progress of society and the accumulation of wealth have
a tendency to sink governments into the position of brokers of human
intelligence, wealth, and labour; and the finances form the symbol indicating
the quantity of these which the central authority can command. The reforms,
therefore, which it was in the power of Leo III to effect in the financial
administration, must have proceeded from the force of circumstances rather than
from the mind of the emperor. To this cause we must attribute the durability of
the fabric he constructed. He confined himself to arranging prudently the
materials accumulated to his hand. But no sovereign, and indeed no central
executive authority, can form a correct estimate of the taxable capacity of the
people. Want of knowledge increases the insatiable covetousness suggested by
their position; and the wisest statesman is as likely to impose ruinous burdens
on the people, if vested with despotic power, as the most rapacious tyrant. The
people alone can find ways of levying on themselves an amount of taxation
exceeding any burdens that the boldest despot could hope to impose; for the
people can perceive what taxes will have the least effect in arresting the
increase of the national wealth.
Leo, who felt the importance of the financial
administration as deeply as Augustus, reserved to himself the immediate
superintendence of the treasury; and this special control over the finances was
retained by his successors, so that, during the whole duration of the Byzantine
empire, the emperors may be regarded as their own ministers of finance. The
grand Logothetes, who was the official minister, was in reality nothing more
than the emperor’s private secretary for the department. Leo unquestionably
improved the central administration, while the invasions of the Saracens and
Bulgarians made him extremely cautious in imposing heavy fiscal burdens on the
distant cities and provinces of his dominions. But his reforms were certainly
intended to circumscribe the authority of municipal and provincial
institutions. The free cities and municipalities which had once been entrusted
with the duty of apportioning their quota of the land-tax, and collecting the
public burdens of their district, were now deprived of this authority. All
fiscal business was transferred to the imperial officers. Each province had its
own collectors of the revenue, its own officials charged to complete the
registers of the public burdens, and to verify all statistical details. The
traditions of imperial Rome still required that this mass of information should
be regularly transmitted to the cabinet of the Byzantine emperors, as at the
birth of our Saviour.
The financial acts of Leo’s reign, though they show
that he increased the direct amount of taxation levied from his subjects, prove
nevertheless, by the general improvement which took place in the condition of
the people, that his reformed system of financial administration really
lightened the weight of the public burdens. Still, there can be no doubt that
the stringency of the measures adopted in Greece and Italy, for rendering the
census more productive, was one of the causes of the rebellions in those
countries, for which his Iconoclastic decrees served as a more honourable
war-cry. In Calabria and Sicily he added one-third to the capitation; he
confiscated to the profit of the treasury a tribute of three talents and a half
of gold which had been remitted annually to Rome, and at the same time he
ordered a correct register to be kept of all the males born in his dominions.
This last regulation excites a burst of indignation from the orthodox historian
and confessor Theophanes, who allows neither his reason nor his memory to
restrain his bigotry when recording the acts of the first Iconoclast emperor.
He likens Leo’s edict to Pharaoh’s conduct to the children of Israel, and adds
that the Saracens, Leo’s teachers in wickedness had never exercised the like
oppression—forgetting, in his zeal against taxation, that the Caliph Abdelmelik had established the haratch or capitation of Christians as early as the commencement of the reign
of Justinian II, AD 692.
An earthquake that ruined the walls of Constantinople,
and many cities in Thrace and Bithynia, induced Leo to adopt measures for
supplying the treasury with a special fund for restoring them, and keeping
their fortifications constantly in a state to resist the Bulgarians and
Saracens. The municipal revenues which had once served for this purpose had
been encroached upon by Justinian I, and the policy of Leo led him to diminish
in every way the sphere of action of all local authorities.
The care of the fortifications was undoubtedly a duty
to which the central government required to give its direct attention; and to
meet the extraordinary expenditure caused by the calamitous earthquake of 740,
an addition of one-twelfth was made to the census. This tax was called the dikeraton because the payment appears to have been
generally made in the silver coins called keratia,
two of which were equal to a miliaresion, the
coin which represented one-twelfth of the nomisma,
or gold Byzant. Thus a calamity which diminished the public resources increased
the public burdens. In such a contingency it seems that a paternal government
and a wise despot ought to have felt the necessity of diminishing the pomp of
the court, of curtailing the expenses of ecclesiastical pageants, and of
reforming the extravagance of the popular amusements of the hippodrome, before
imposing new burdens on the suffering population of the empire. Courtiers,
saints, and charioteers ought to have been shorn of their splendour, before the
groans of the provinces were increased. Yet Leo was neither a luxurious nor an
avaricious prince; but, as has been said, already, no despotic monarch can
wisely measure the burden of taxation.
The influence of the provincial spirit on the
legislation of the empire is strongly marked in the history of jurisprudence
during Leo’s reign. The anarchy which had long interrupted the official
communications between the provinces and the capital lent an increased
authority to local usages, and threw obstacles in the way of the regular
administration of justice, according to the strict letter of the voluminous
laws of Justinian. The consequence was that various local abridgments of the
law were used as guide-books, both by lawyers and judges, in the provincial
tribunals, where the great expense of procuring a copy of the Justinianean collection prevented its use. Leo published a
Greek manual of law, which by its official sanction became the primary
authority in all the courts of the empire. This imperial abridgment is called
the Ecloga: it affords some evidence concerning the
state of society and the classes of the people for which it was prepared.
Little notice is taken of the rights of the agriculturists; the various modes
of acquiring property and constituting servitudes are omitted. The Ecloga has been censured for its imperfections by Basil I,
the founder of a legislative dynasty, who speaks of it as an insult to the
earlier legislators; yet the orthodox lawgiver, while he pretended to reject
every act of the heretical Isaurian, servilely imitated all his political
plans. The brevity and precision of Leo’s Ecloga were
highly appreciated both by the courts of law and the people, in spite of the
heterodox opinions of its promulgator. It so judiciously supplied a want long
felt by a large portion of society, that neither the attempt of Basil I to
supplant it by a new official manual, nor the publication of the great code of
the Basilika in Greek, deprived it of value
among the jurisconsults of the Byzantine Empire.
The legislative labours of Leo were not circumscribed
to the publication of the Ecloga. He seems to have
sanctioned various minor codes, by which the regulations in use relating to
military, agricultural, and maritime law were reduced into systematic order.
The collections which are attached to the copies of the Ecloga,
under the heads of military, agricultural, and Rhodian laws, cannot, however,
be considered as official acts of his reign; still, they are supposed to afford
us a correct idea of the originals he published. Some abstract of the
provisions contained in the Roman legislation on military affairs, was rendered
necessary by the practice of maintaining corps of foreign mercenaries in the
capital. A military code was likewise rendered necessary, in consequence of the
changes that took place in the old system, as the Asiatic provinces were
gradually cleared of the invading bands of Saracens. The agricultural laws
appear to be a tolerably exact copy of the enactments of Leo. The work bears
the impress of the condition of society in his time, and it is not surprising
that the title which perpetuated the merits and the memory of the heterodox Leo
was suppressed by orthodox bigotry. The maritime laws are extremely
interesting, from affording a picture of the state of commercial legislation in
the eighth century, at the time when commerce and law saved the Roman Empire.
The exact date of the collection we possess is not ascertained. That Leo
protected commerce, we may infer from its reviving under his government;
whether he promulgated a code to sanction or enforce his reforms, or whether
the task was completed by one of his successors, is doubtful.
The whole policy of Leo’s reign has been estimated by
his ecclesiastical reforms. These have been severely judged by all historians,
and they appear to have encountered a violent opposition from a large portion
of his subjects. The general dissatisfaction has preserved sufficient authentic
information to allow of a candid examination of the merits and errors of his
policy. Theophanes considers the aversion of Leo to the adoration of images as
originating in an impious attachment to the Unitarianism of the Arabs. His own
pages, however, refute some of his calumnies, for he records that Leo
persecuted the unitarianism of the Jews, and the
tendency to it in the Montanists. Indeed, all those who differed from the
most orthodox acknowledgment of the Trinity, received very little Christian
charity at the hands of the Isaurian, who placed the cross on the reverse of
many of his gold, silver, and copper coins and over the gates of his palace, as
a symbol for universal adoration. In his Iconoclast opinions, Leo is merely a
type of the more enlightened laymen of his age. A strong reaction against the
superstitions introduced into the Christian religion by the increasing
ignorance of the people, pervaded the educated classes, who were anxious to put
a stop to what might be considered a revival of the ideas and feelings of
paganism. The Asiatic Christians, who were brought into frequent collision with
the followers of Mahomet, Zoroaster, and Moses, were compelled to observe that
the worship of the common people among themselves was sensual, when compared
with the devotion of the infidels. The worship of God was neglected, and his
service transferred to some human symbol. The favourite saint was usually one
whose faults were found to bear some analogy to the vices of his worshipper,
and thus pardon was supposed to be obtained for sin on easier terms than
accords with Divine justice, and vice was consequently rendered more prevalent.
The clergy had yielded to the popular ignorance; the walls of churches were
covered with pictures which were reported to have wrought miraculous cures;
their shrines were enriched by paintings not made with hands; the superstitions
of the people were increased, and the doctrines of Christianity were neglected.
Pope Gregory II, in a letter to Leo, mentions the fact, that men expended their
estates to have the sacred histories represented in paintings.
In a time of general reform, and in a government where
ecclesiastics acted as administrative officials of the central authority, it
was impossible for Leo to permit the church to remain quite independent in
ecclesiastical affairs, unless he was prepared for the clergy assuming a
gradual supremacy in the state. The clergy, being the only class in the
administration of public affairs connected with the people by interest and
feelings, was always sure of a powerful popular support. It appeared,
therefore, necessary to the emperor to secure them as sincere instruments in
carrying out all his reforms, otherwise there was some reason to fear that they
might constitute themselves the leaders of the people in Greece and Asia, as
they had already done at Rome, and control the imperial administration
throughout the whole Eastern Empire, as completely as they did m the Byzantine
possessions in central Italy.
Leo commenced his ecclesiastical reforms in the year
726 by an edict ordering all pictures in churches to be placed so high as to
prevent the people from kissing them, and prohibiting prostration before these
symbols, or any act of public worship being addressed to them. Against this
moderate edict of the emperor, the Patriarch Germanos and the Pope Gregory II made strong representations. The opposition of interest
which reigned between the church and the state impelled the two bodies to a
contest for supremacy which it required centuries to decide, and both Germanos and Gregory were sincere supporters of
image-worship. To the ablest writer of the time,—the celebrated John Damascenus, who dwelt under the protection of the caliph at
Damascus, among Mohammedans and Jews,—this edict seemed to mark a relapse to
Judaism, or a tendency to Islamism. He felt himself called upon to combat such
feelings with all the eloquence and power of argument he possessed, the empire
was thrown into a ferment; the lower clergy and the whole Greek nation declared
in favour of image-worship. The professors of the university of Constantinople,
an institution of a Greek character, likewise declared their opposition to the
edict. Liberty of conscience was the watchword against the imperial authority.
The Pope and the Patriarch denied the right of the civil power to interfere
with the doctrines of the church; the monks everywhere echoed the words of John Damascenus: “It is not the business of the emperor to
make laws for the church. Apostles preached the gospel; the welfare of the
state is the monarch’s care; pastors and teachers attend to that of the
church”. The despotic principles of Leo’s administration, and the severe
measures of centralization which he enforced as the means of reorganizing the
public service, created many additional enemies to his government.
The rebellion of the inhabitants of Greece, which
occurred in the year 727, seems to have originated in a dissatisfaction with
the fiscal and administrative reforms of Leo, to which local circumstances,
unnoticed by historians, gave peculiar violence, and which the edict against
image-worship fanned into a flame. The unanimity of all classes, and the
violence of the popular zeal in favour of their local privileges and
superstitions, suggested the hope of dethroning Leo, and placing a Greek on the
throne of Constantinople. A naval expedition, composed of the imperial fleet in
the Cyclades, and attended by an army from the continent, was fitted out to
attack the capital. Agallianos, who commanded the
imperial forces destined to watch the Slavonians settled in Greece, was placed
at the head of the army destined to assail the conqueror of the Saracens. The
name of the new emperor was Kosmas. In the month of April the Greek fleet
appeared before Constantinople. It soon appeared that the Greeks, confiding in
the goodness of their cause, had greatly overrated their own valour and
strength, or strangely overlooked the resources of the Iconoclasts. Leo met
the fleet as it approached his capital, and completely defeated it. Agallianos, with the spirit of a hero, when he saw the
utter ruin of the enterprise, plunged fully armed into the sea rather than
surrender. Kosmas was taken prisoner, with another leader, and immediately
beheaded. Leo, however, treated the mass of the prisoners with mildness.
Even if we admit that the Greeks displayed
considerable presumption in attacking the Isaurian emperor, still we must
accept the fact as a proof of the populous condition of the cities and islands
of Greece, and of the flourishing condition of their trade, at a period
generally represented as one of wretchedness and poverty. Though the
Peloponnesus was filled with Slavonian emigrants, and the Greek peasantry were
in many districts excluded from the cultivation of the land in the seats of
their ancestors, nevertheless their cities then contained the mercantile wealth
and influence, which passed some centuries later into the possession of Venice,
Amalfi, Genoa, and Pisa.
The opposition Leo encountered only confirmed him in
his persuasion that it was indispensably necessary to increase the power of the
central government in the provinces. As he was sincerely attached to the
opinions of the Iconoclasts, he was led to connect his ecclesiastical reforms
with his political measures, and to pursue both with additional zeal. In order
to secure the active support of all the officers of the administration, and
exclude all image-worshippers from power, he convoked an assembly, called a silention, consisting of the senators and the
highest functionaries in the church and state. In this solemn manner it was
decreed that images were to be removed from all the churches throughout the
empire. In the capital the change met with no serious opposition. The
population of Constantinople of every period of its history has consisted of a
mixed multitude of different nations; nor has the majority ever been purely
Greek for any great length of time. Nicetas, speaking
of a time when the Byzantine Empire was at the height of its power, and when
the capital was more a Greek city than at any preceding or subsequent period,
declares that its population was composed of various races. The cause of
image-worship was, however, generally the popular cause, and the Patriarch Germanos steadily resisted every change in the actual
practice of the church until that change should be sanctioned by a general
council.
The turn now given to the dispute put an end to the
power of the Eastern emperors in central Italy. The Latin provinces of the
Roman Empire, even before their conquest by the barbarians, had sunk into
deeper ignorance than the Eastern. Civilization had penetrated farther into
society among the Greeks, Armenians, and Syrians, than among the Italians, Gauls, and Spaniards. Italy was already dissatisfied with
the Constantinopolitan domination, when Leo’s fiscal and religious reforms
roused local interests and national prejudices to unite in opposing his
government. The Pope of Rome had long been regarded by orthodox Christians as
the head of the church; even the Greeks admitted his right of inspection over
the whole body of the clergy, in virtue of the superior dignity of the Roman
see. From being the heads of the church, the popes became the defenders of the
liberties of the people. In this character, as leaders of a lawful opposition
to the tyranny of the imperial administration, they grew up to the possession of
immense influence in the state. This power, having its basis in democratic
feelings and energies, alarmed the emperors, and many attempts were made to
circumscribe the papal authority. But the popes themselves did more to diminish
their own influence than their enemies, for instead of remaining the protectors
of the people, they aimed at making themselves their masters. Gregory II, who
occupied the papal chair at the commencement of the contest with Leo, was a man
of sound judgment, as well as an able and zealous priest. He availed himself of
all the advantages of his position, as political chief of the Latin race, with
prudence and moderation; nor did he neglect the power he derived from the
circumstance that Rome was the fountain of religious instruction for all
western Europe. Both his political and ecclesiastical position entitled him to
make a direct opposition to any oppressive measure of the emperor of
Constantinople, when the edicts of Leo III concerning image-worship prompted
him to commence the contest, which soon ended in separating central Italy from
the Byzantine Empire.
The possessions of the Eastern emperors in Italy were
still considerable. Venice, Rome, Ravenna, Naples, Bari, and Tarentum were all
capitals of well-peopled and wealthy districts. The province embracing Venice
and Rome was governed by an imperial viceroy or exarch who resided at Ravenna,
and hence the Byzantine possessions in central Italy were called the Exarchate
of Ravenna. Under the orders of the exarch, three governors or dukes commanded
the troops in Ravenna, Rome, and Venice. As the native militia enrolled to
defend the province from the Lombards formed a considerable portion of the
military force, the popular feelings of the Italians exercised some influence
over the soldiery. The Constantinopolitan governor was generally disliked, on
account of the fiscal rapacity of which he was the agent; and nothing but the
dread of greater oppression on the part of the Lombards, whom the Italians had
not the courage to encounter without the assistance of the Byzantine troops,
preserved the people of central Italy in their allegiance. They hated the
Greeks, but they feared the Lombards.
Gregory II sent Leo strong representations against his
first edicts on the subject of image-worship, and after the silention he repeated these representations, and entered on a more decided course of
opposition to the emperor’s ecclesiastical reforms, being then convinced that
there was no hope of Leo abandoning his heretical opinions. It seems that Italy,
like the rest of the empire, had escaped in some degree from the oppressive
burden of imperial taxation during the anarchy that preceded Leo’s election.
But the defeat of the Saracens before Constantinople had been followed by the
establishment of the fiscal system. To overcome the opposition made to the
financial and ecclesiastical reforms, the exarch Paul was ordered to march to
Rome and support Marinus, the duke, who found himself unable to contend against
the papal influence. The whole of central Italy burst into rebellion at this
demonstration against its civil and religious interests. The exarch was
compelled to shut himself up m Ravenna; for the cities of Italy, instead of
obeying the imperial officers, elected magistrates of their own, on whom they
conferred, in some cases, the title of duke. Assemblies were held, and the
project of electing an emperor of the West was adopted; but the unfortunate
result of the rebellion of Greece damped the courage of the Italians; and
though a rebel, named Tiberius Petasius, really
assumed the purple in Tuscany, he was easily defeated and slain by Eutychius, who succeeded Paul as exarch of Ravenna. Luitprand, king of the Lombards, taking advantage of these
dissensions, invaded the imperial territory, and gained possession of Ravenna;
but Gregory, who saw the necessity of saving the country from the Lombards and
from anarchy, wrote to Ursus, the duke of Venice, one of his warm partisans,
and persuaded him to join Eutychius. The Lombards
were defeated by the Byzantine troops, Ravenna was recovered, and Eutychius entered Rome with a victorious army. Gregory died
in 731. Though he excited the Italian cities to resist the imperial power, and
approved of the measures they adopted for stopping the remittance of their
taxes to Constantinople, he does not appear to have adopted any measures for
declaring Rome independent. That he contemplated the possibility of events
taking a turn that might ultimately lead him to throw off his allegiance to the
Emperor Leo, is nevertheless evident, from one of his letters to that emperor,
in which he boasts very significantly that the eyes of the West were fixed on
his humility, and that if Leo attempted to injure the Pope, he would find the
West ready to defend him, and even to attack Constantinople. The allusion to
the protection of the king of the Lombards and Charles Martel was certainly, in
this case, a treasonable threat on the part of the Bishop of Rome to his
sovereign. Besides this, Gregory II excommunicated the exarch Paul, and all the
enemies of image-worship who were acting under the orders of the emperor,
pretending to avoid the guilt of treason by not expressly naming the Emperor
Leo in his anathema. On the other hand, when we consider that Leo was striving
to extend the bounds of the imperial authority in an arbitrary manner, and that
his object was to sweep away every barrier against the exercise of despotism in
the church and the state, we must acknowledge that the opposition of Gregory
was founded in justice, and that he was entitled to defend the municipal
institutions and local usages of Italy, and the constitution of the Romish
church, even at the price of declaring himself a rebel. The election of Gregory
III to the papal chair was confirmed by the Emperor Leo in the usual form; nor
was that pope consecrated until the mandate from Constantinople reached Rome.
This was the last time the emperors of the East were solicited to confirm the
election of a pope. Meanwhile Leo steadily pursued his schemes of
ecclesiastical reform, and the opposition to his measures gathered strength.
Gregory III assembled a council in Rome, at which the municipal authorities,
whose power Leo was endeavouring to circumscribe, were present along with the
nobles; and in this council the whole body of the Iconoclasts were
excommunicated. Leo now felt that force alone could maintain Rome and its
bishops in their allegiance. With his usual energy, he despatched an expedition
under the command of Manes, the general of the Kibyrraiot theme, with orders to
send the pope a prisoner to Constantinople, to be tried for his treasonable
conduct. A storm in the Adriatic, the lukewarm conduct of the Greeks in the
imperial service, and the courage of the people of Ravenna, whose municipal
institutions enabled them to act in an organized manner, caused the complete
overthrow of Manes. Leo revenged himself for this loss by confiscating all the
estates of the papal see in the eastern provinces of his empire, and by
separating the ecclesiastical government of southern Italy, Sicily, Greece,
Illyria, and Macedonia, from the papal jurisdiction, and placing these
countries under the immediate authority of the Patriarch of Constantinople.
From this time, AD 733, the city of Rome enjoyed
political independence under the guidance and protection of the popes; but the
officers of the Byzantine emperors were allowed, to reside in the city, justice
was publicly administered by Byzantine judges, and the supremacy of the Eastern
Empire was still recognized. So completely, however, had Gregory III thrown off
his allegiance, that he entered into negotiations with Charles Martel, in order
to induce that powerful prince to take an active part in the affairs of Italy.
The pope was now a much more powerful personage than the Exarch of Ravenna, for
the cities of central Italy, which had assumed the control of their local
government, entrusted the conduct of their external political relations to the
care of Gregory, who thus held the balance of power between the Eastern emperor
and the Lombard king. In the year 742, while Constantine V, the son of Leo, was
engaged with a civil war, the Lombards were on the eve of conquering Ravenna,
but Pope Zacharias threw the whole of the Latin influence into the Byzantine
scale, and enabled the exarch to maintain his position until the year 751, when Astolph, king of the Lombards, captured Ravenna. The
exarch retired to Naples, and the authority of the Byzantine emperors in
central Italy ended.
The physical history of our globe is so intimately
connected with the condition of its inhabitants, that it is well to record
those remarkable variations from the ordinary course of nature which strongly
affected the minds of contemporaries. The influence of famine and pestilence,
during the tenth and eleventh centuries, in accelerating the extinction of
slavery, has been pointed out by several recent writers on the subject, though
that effect was not observed by the people who lived at the time. The importance
of the late famine in Ireland, as a political cause, must be felt by anyone who
attempts to trace the origin of that course of social improvement on which the
Irish seem about to enter. The seventy of the winter of 717 aided Leo in
defeating the Saracens at Constantinople. In the year 726, a terrific irruption
of the dormant submarine volcano at the island of Thera (Santorini) in the
Archipelago, was regarded by the bigoted image-worshippers as a manifestation
of divine wrath against Leo’s reforms. For several days the sea between Thera
and Therasia boiled up with great violence, vomiting
forth flames, and enveloping the neighbouring islands in clouds of vapour and
smoke. The flames were followed by showers of dust and pumice-stone, which
covered the surface of the sea, and were carried by the waves to the shores of
Asia Minor and Macedonia. At last a new island rose out of the sea, and
gradually extended itself until it joined the older rocky islet called Hieron.
In the year 740 a terrible earthquake destroyed great
part of the walls of Constantinople. The statue of Arcadius, on the Theodosian
column in Xerolophon, and the statue of Theodosius
over the golden gate, were both thrown down. Churches, monasteries, and private
buildings were ruined: the walls of many cities in Thrace and Bithynia,
particularly Nicomedia, Praenetus, and Nicaea, were
so injured as to require immediate restoration. This great earthquake caused
the imposition of the tax already alluded to, termed the dikeration.
Leo has been accused as a persecutor of learning. It
is by no means impossible that his Asiatic education and puritanical opinions
rendered him hostile to the legendary literature and ecclesiastical art then
cultivated by the Greeks; but the circumstance usually brought forward in
support of his barbarism is one of the calumnies invented by his enemies, and
re-echoed by orthodox bigotry. He is said to have ordered a library consisting
of 33,000 volumes, in the neighbourhood of St. Sophia’s, to be burned, and the
professors of the university to be thrown into the flames. A valuable
collection of books seems to have fallen accidentally a prey to the flames
during his reign, and neither his liberality nor the public spirit of the
Greeks induced them to display any activity in replacing the loss.
Leo III died in the year 741. He had crowned his son
Constantine emperor in the year 720, and married him to Irene, the daughter of
the Khan of the Khazars, in 733.
Sect. III
CONSTANTINE V COPRONYMUS, A.D.
741-775
Constantine V, called Copronymus,
ascended the throne at the age of twenty-two, but he had already borne the
title of emperor as his father’s colleague one and twenty years, for the
Byzantine empire preserved so strictly the elective type of the Roman imperial
dignity, that the only mode of securing the hereditary transmission of the
empire was for the reigning emperor to obtain his son’s election during his own
lifetime. Historians tell us that Constantine was a man possessing every vice
disgraceful to humanity, combined with habits and tastes which must have
rendered his company disgusting and his person contemptible. Yet they record
facts proving that he possessed great talents, and that, even when his fortunes
appeared desperate, he found many devoted friends. The obloquy heaped on his
name must therefore he ascribed to the blind passion inspired by religious
bigotry. The age was not one of forbearance and charity. The wisest generally
considered freedom of opinion a species of anarchy incompatible with religious
feeling, moral duty, and good government; consequently, both iconoclasts and
image-worshippers approved of persecution, and practised calumny in favour of
what each considered the good cause. Constantine tortured the
image-worshippers—they revenged themselves by defaming the emperor. But the
persecutions which rendered Constantine a monster in the eyes of the Greeks and
Italians, elevated him to the rank of a saint in the opinion of a large body of
the population of the empire, who regarded the worship of pictures as a species
of idolatry abhorrent to Christianity. His religious zeal, political success,
courage, military talents, together with the prosperity that attended his
government, all conspired to make him the idol of the Iconoclasts, who regarded
his tomb as a sacred shrine until it was destroyed by Michael the orthodox
drunkard.
Constantine was able, prudent, active, and brave; but
he was not more tender of human suffering than monarchs generally are. The
Patriarch Nicephorus justly accuses him of driving monks from their
monasteries, and converting sacred buildings into barracks. In modern times,
orthodox papist sovereigns have frequently done the same thing, without
exciting much ecclesiastical indignation. But when the Patriarch assures us that
the emperor’s mind was as filthy as his name, we may be allowed to suspect that
his pen is guided by orthodoxy instead of truth; and when we find grave
historians recording that he loved the odour of horse-dung, and carried on
amours with old maids, we are reminded of the Byzantine love of calumny which
could delight in the anecdotes of Procopius, and believe that the Emperor
Justinian was a man of such diabolical principles, that he was not ashamed to
walk about his palace for many hours of the night without his head. An account
of the reign of Constantine by an intelligent Iconoclast, even if he
represented the emperor as a saint, would be one of the most valuable
illustrations of the history of the eighth century which time could have
spared. He was accused of rejecting the practice of invoking the intercession
of the Virgin Mary, though it is admitted he called her the Mother of God. He
was also said to have denied the right of any man to be called a saint; and he
had even the audacity to maintain, that though the martyrs benefited themselves
by their sufferings, their merit, however great it might be, was not a quality
that could be transferred to others. His enemies regarded these opinions as
damnable crimes. Few reputations, however, have passed through such an ordeal
of malice as that of Constantine, and preserved so many undeniable virtues.
Shortly after his succession, Constantine lost
possession of Constantinople through the treachery of his brother-in-law
Artavasdos, who assumed the title of emperor, and kept possession of the throne
for two years. Artavasdos was an Armenian noble who had commanded the troops of
the Armeniac theme in the reign of Theodosius III, and aided Leo to mount the
throne. He was rewarded with the hand of Anna, the Isaurian’s only daughter,
and with the dignity of curopalates, second, only to
that of Caesar, a rank then usually reserved, for the imperial blood.
Artavasdos had increased his influence by favouring the orthodox; his long
services in the highest administrative offices had enabled him to attach many
partisans to his personal cause in every branch of the public service. The
manner in which Constantine was engaged in a civil war with his brother-in-law
reflected no dishonour on the character of the young emperor.
The Saracens had pushed their incursions into the Opsikian theme, where the imperial guards, under the
command of Artavasdos, were stationed. Constantine took the field in person to
oppose the enemy, and advanced to the plains of Krasos.
Here he ordered Artavasdos, who was at Dorylaeum, to
join him with the troops of the Opsikian theme. The
order alarmed Artavasdos, who seems to have been already engaged in treasonable
intrigues. Instead of obeying, he assumed the title of emperor, and attacked
Constantine so unexpectedly, that the imperial army was easily dispersed, and
the young emperor could only avoid being taken prisoner by galloping off alone.
When his own horse sank from fatigue Constantine was compelled to seize a
post-horse, which he happened to find ready saddled, in order to continue his
flight. He was fortunate enough to reach Amorium in
safety.
Artavasdos marched to Constantinople, where, it
appears from coins, he affected for some time to act as the colleague of
Constantine; and it is possible that some treaty may have been concluded
between the brothers-in-law. The usurper, however, soon considered himself
strong enough, with the support of the orthodox, to set Constantine aside. The
pope acknowledged him as emperor, pictures were replaced in the churches, a
strong body of Armenian troops was collected, and Nicephorus, the eldest son of
Artavasdos, was crowned as his father's colleague; while Niketas,
the second, took the command of the Armeniac theme, where the family possessed
great influence. All persons suspected of favouring Constantine were persecuted
as heretics hostile to picture-worship.
In the following year (742) Constantine assembled an
army composed chiefly of the troops of the Thrakesian and Anatolic themes. With
this force he marched to Chrysopolis, (Scutari),
hoping that a party in Constantinople would declare in his favour; but, being
disappointed, he was compelled to withdraw to Amorium,
where he passed the winter. In spring, Artavasdos marched to dislodge him,
ordering his son Niketas to bring up the Armenian
troops to operate on the right flank of the young emperor. All the country in
the usurpers line of march was ravaged, as if it was a territory he never hoped
to govern. Constantine, whose military genius had been cultivated by his
father, formed a daring plan of campaign, and executed it in the most brilliant
manner. While his enemies believed that they were advancing to attack him with
superior forces, he resolved to move forward with such celerity as to become
the attacking party, before they could approach near enough to combine any
simultaneous movements. His first attack was directed against Artavasdos, whose
numerous army was inferior in discipline to that of Niketas,
and over which he expected an easier victory. A general engagement took place
near Sardis, on quitting the Kelvian plain, watered
by the Kaister. The victory was complete. The usurper
was closely pursued to Cyzicus, from whence he escaped by sea to
Constantinople. Constantine then moved forward to meet Niketas,
who was defeated in a bloody battle fought at Modrina,
in the Boukellarian theme, to the east of the Sangarius. The Armenian auxiliaries and the troops of the
Armeniac theme sustained their high reputation, and long disputed the victory.
The emperor then marched to invest Constantinople,
crossing the Bosphorus with one division of his army, and sending another,
under the command of Sisinnios, the general of the
Thrakesian theme, to cross the Hellespont at Abydos, and reduce the cities on the
shores of the Propontis. The fleet of the Kibyrraiot theme was ordered to
blockade the capital by sea. All communications with Greece, one of the
strongholds of the image-worshippers, were thus cut off. Constantine repulsed
every sally by land, and famine quickly made frightful ravages in the dense
population of the capital, where no preparations had been made for a siege.
Constantine acted on this occasion in a very different manner from Artavasdos
during the campaign in Asia Minor. He felt that the people suddenly besieged
were his own subjects; and his enemies record that he allowed all the starving
population to seek refuge in his camp.
Niketas quickly reassembled the fugitives of his own and his father’s army, and made an
attempt to cut off Constantine’s communications in Bithynia; but the emperor
left the camp before Constantinople, and, putting himself at the head of the
troops in Asia, again defeated Niketas near
Nicomedia. Niketas and the orthodox archbishop of Gangra were both prisoners. The belligerent prelate was
immediately beheaded as a traitor; but Niketas was
carried to Constantinople, where he was exhibited before the walls laden with
fetters. Artavasdos still rejected all terms of capitulation, and Constantine
at last ordered a general assault, by which he captured the city on the 2nd
November, 743. Artavasdos escaped by sea to a fortress called Pyzanitis, in the Opsikian theme,
where he was soon after taken prisoner. His eyes, and those of his sons,
Nicephorus and Niketas, were put out; and in this
condition they were exhibited as a triumphal spectacle to the inhabitants of
Constantinople, at the chariot races given by the emperor to celebrate his
re-establishment on the throne. His brother-in-law and nephews were then
immured in a monastery. Some of their principal adherents were beheaded. The
head of Vaktageios, the principal minister of the
usurper, was exhibited for three days in the Augusteon—a
custom perpetuated by the Ottoman emperors in similar circumstances until our
own times, the heads of rebel viziers having adorned the gate of the Serail during the reign of the late sultan. The Patriarch
Anastasios was pardoned, and allowed to remain in possession of his dignity;
yet Theophanes says that his eyes were put out, and he was exhibited in the
circus, mounted on an ass, and exposed to the scorn of the mob. Sisinnios, who had commanded one division of the emperor’s
army, was soon found to be engaged in treasonable intrigues, and lost his eyes
forty days after he entered the capital in triumph with his sovereign.
Constantine no sooner found himself firmly established
on the throne, than he devoted his attention to completing the organization of
the empire traced out by his father. The constant attacks of the Saracens and
Bulgarians called him frequently to the head of his armies, for the state of
society rendered it dangerous to entrust large forces to the command of a
subject. In the Byzantine Empire few individuals had any scruple of violating
the political constitution of their country, if by so doing they could increase
their own power.
The incursions of the Saracens first required to be
repressed. The empire of the caliphs was already distracted by the civil wars
which preceded the fall of the Ommiad dynasty. Constantine took advantage of
these troubles. He reconquered Germanicia and Doliche,
and occupied for a time a considerable part of Commagene;
but as he found it impossible to retain possession of the country, he removed
the Christian population to Thrace, where he founded several flourishing
colonies, long distinguished by their religious opinions from the surrounding
population, AD 746.
The Saracens attempted to indemnify themselves for
these losses by the conquest of Cyprus. This island appears to have been
reconquered by Leo III, for it had been abandoned to the Mohammedans by
Justinian II. The fleet of the caliph sailed from Alexandria, and landed an
army at the port of Kerameia; but the fleet of the
Kibyrraiot theme arrived in time to blockade the enemy’s ships, and of a
thousand Mohammedan vessels three only escaped, AD 748. The war was continued.
In 752 the imperial armies took the cities of Melitene
and Theodosiopolis, but some years later the caliph
Mansour recovered Melitene and Germanicia: he seems, however, to have
considered the tenure of the last so insecure, that he transported the
inhabitants into Palestine. The Saracens invaded the empire almost every
summer, but these incursions led to no permanent conquests. The agricultural
population along the frontiers of the two empires must have been greatly
diminished during these successive ravages; for farm-buildings and fruit-trees
were constantly destroyed, and slaves formed the most valuable booty of the
soldiers. The mildness and tolerant government of the emperor of Romania (for
that name began now to be applied to the part of Asia Minor belonging to the
Byzantine empire) was so celebrated in the East, in spite of his persecution of
the image-worshippers at Constantinople, that many Christians escaped by sea from
the dominions of the Caliph Al Mansour to settle in those of
Constantine. In the year 769 an exchange of prisoners took place, but
without interrupting the course of hostilities, which were continued, almost
incessantly on the frontiers of the two empires.
The vicinity of the Bulgarians to Constantinople
rendered them more dangerous enemies than the Saracens, though their power was
much inferior. The Bulgarians were a people who looked on war as the most
honourable means of acquiring wealth, and they had long pursued it with profit:
for as long as the Byzantine frontiers were populous, they obtained booty and
slaves by their incursions: while, as soon as it became depopulated by their
ravages, they were enabled to occupy new districts with their own pastoral
hordes, and thus increase their numbers and strength. To resist their
incursions, Constantine gradually repaired all the fortifications of the towns
on the northern frontier, and then commenced fortifying the passes, until the
Bulgarians found their predatory incursions attended with loss instead of gain.
Their king was now compelled to make the cause of the predatory bands a
national question, and an embassy was sent to Constantinople to demand payment
of an annual tribute, under the pretext that some of the fortifications erected
to guard the passes were situated in the Bulgarian territory, but, in reality,
to replace the loss of the plunder which had enabled many of the warlike
Bulgarians to live in idleness and luxury. The demands of the king were
rejected, and he immediately invaded the empire with a powerful army. The
Bulgarians carried their ravages up to the long wall; but though they derived
assistance from the numerous Slavonian colonies settled in Thrace, they were
defeated, and driven back into their own territory with great slaughter, AD
757.
Constantine carried on a series of campaigns,
systematically planned, for the purpose of weakening the Bulgarian power.
Instead of allowing his enemy to make any incursions into the empire, he was
always ready to carry the war into their territory. The difficulties of his
enterprise were great, and he suffered several defeats; but his military
talents and persevering energy prevented the Bulgarians from profiting by any
partial success they obtained, and he soon regained the superiority. In the
campaigns of 760, 763, and 765, Constantine marched far into Bulgaria, and
carried off immense booty. In the year 766 he intended to complete the conquest
of the country, by opening the campaign at the commencement of spring. His
fleet, which consisted of two thousand six hundred vessels, in which he had
embarked a considerable body of infantry in order to enter the Danube, was
assailed by one of those furious storms that often sweep the Euxine. The force
which the emperor expected would soon render him master of Bulgaria was
suddenly ruined. The shores of the Black Sea were covered with the wrecks of
his ships and the bodies of his soldiers. Constantine immediately abandoned the
thought of continuing the campaign, and employed his whole army in alleviating
the calamity to the survivors, and in securing Christian burial and funeral
honours to the dead. A truce was concluded with the enemy, and the Roman army
beheld the emperor as eager to employ their services in the cause of humanity
and religion, as he had ever been to lead them to the field of glory and
conquest. His conduct on this occasion gained him as much popularity with the
people of Constantinople as with me troops.
In the year 774 he again assembled an army of eighty
thousand men, accompanied by a fleet of two thousand transports, and invaded
Bulgaria. The Bulgarian monarch concluded a treaty of peace—which, however, was
broken as soon as Constantine returned to his capital. But the emperor was not unprepared,
and the moment he heard that the enemy had laid siege to Verzetia,
one of the fortresses he had constructed to defend the frontier, he quitted
Constantinople in the month of October, and, falling suddenly on the besiegers,
routed their army with great slaughter. The following year his army was again
ready to take the field; but as Constantine was on his way to join it he was
attacked by a mortal illness, which compelled him to retrace his steps. Having
embarked at Selymbria, in order to reach Constantinople
with as little fatigue as possible, he died on board the vessel at the castle
of Strongyle, just as he reached the walls of his capital, on the 23rd
September, 775.
The long war with the Bulgarians was carried on rather
with the object of securing tranquillity to the northern provinces of the
empire, than from any desire of a barren conquest. The necessity of reducing
the Slavonian colonies in Thrace and Macedonia to complete obedience to the
central administration, and of secluding them from all political communication
with one another, or with their countrymen in Bulgaria, Serbia, and Dalmatia,
imposed on the emperor the necessity of maintaining strong bodies of troops,
and suggested the policy of forming a line of Greek towns and Asiatic colonies
along the northern frontier of the empire. When this was done, Constantine
began to root out the brigandage, which had greatly extended itself during the
anarchy which preceded his father’s election, and which Leo had never been able
to exterminate.
Numerous bands lived by plunder, in a state of
independence, within the bounds of the empire. They were called Skamars, and, like the Bagauds of
Gaul, formed organized confederacies of outlaws, originally consisting of men
driven to despair by the intolerable burden of taxation, and the severity of
the fiscal legislation. When the incursions of the Bulgarians had wasted the
fields of the cultivator, the government still called upon him to pay the full
amount of taxation imposed on his estate in prosperous times: his produce, his
cattle, his slaves, and his seed-corn were carried away by the imperial
officers. He could then only live by plundering his fellow-subjects, who had
hitherto escaped the calamities by which he had been ruined, and thus the
oppression of the imperial government was avenged on the society that submitted
to it without striving to reform its evils. Constantine rooted out these bands.
A celebrated chief of the Skamars was publicly executed at Constantinople with the greatest barbarity, his living
body being dissected by surgeons after the amputation of his hands and feet.
The habitual barbarity of legal punishments in the Byzantine empire can hardly
relieve the memory of Constantine from the reproach of cruelty, which this
punishment proves he was ready to employ against the enemies of his authority,
whether brigands or image-worshippers. His error, therefore, was not only
passing laws against liberty of conscience—which was a fault in accordance with
the spirit of the age—but in carrying these laws into execution with a cruelty
offensive to human feelings. Yet on many occasions Constantine gave proofs of
humanity, as well as of a desire to protect his subjects.
The Slavonians on the coast of Thrace, having fitted
out some piratical vessels, carried off many of the inhabitants of Tenedos,
Imbros, and Samothrace, to sell them as slaves. The emperor on this occasion
ransomed two thousand five hundred of his subjects, preferring to lower his own
dignity, by paying a tribute to the pirates, rather than allow those who looked
to him for protection to pine away their lives in hopeless misery. No act of
his reign shows so much real greatness of mind as this. He also concluded the
convention with the Saracens for an exchange of prisoners, which has been
already mentioned—one of the earliest examples of the exchanges between the
Mohammedans and the Christians, which afterwards became frequent on the
Byzantine frontiers. Man was exchanged for man, woman for woman, and child for
child. These conventions tended to save the lives of innumerable prisoners, and
rendered the future wars between the Saracens and Romans less barbarous.
Constantine was active in his internal administration,
and his schemes for improving the condition of the inhabitants of his empire
were carried out on a far more gigantic scale than modern governments have
considered practicable. One of his plans for reviving agriculture in
uncultivated districts was by re-peopling them with colonies of emigrants, to
whom he secured favourable conditions and efficient protection. On the banks of
the Artanas in Bithynia, a colony of two hundred
thousand Slavonians was formed. The Christian population of Germanicia, Doliche, Melitene, and Theodosiopolis was established in Thrace, to watch and restrain the rude Slavonians settled in
that province; and these Asiatic colonists long continued to flourish and
multiply. They are even accused of spreading the heretical opinions which they
had brought from the East throughout great part of Western Europe, by the
extent of their commercial relations and the example of their prosperity and
honesty.
It is not to be supposed that the measures of
Constantine's administration, however great his political abilities might be,
were competent to remove many of the social evils of his age. Agriculture was
still carried on in the rudest manner; and as communications were difficult and
insecure, and transport expensive, capital could hardly be laid out on land to
any extent with much profit. As usual under such circumstances we find years of
famine and plenty alternating in close succession. Yet the bitterest enemy of
Constantine, the abbot Theophanes, confesses that his reign was one of general
abundance. It is true, he reproaches him with loading the husbandmen with
taxes; but he also accuses him of being a new Midas, who made gold so common in
the hands of all that it became cheap. The abbot’s political economy, it must
be confessed, is not so orthodox as his calumny. If the Patriarch Nicephorus,
another enemy of Constantine, is to be believed, grain was so abundant, or gold
so rare, that sixty measures of wheat, or seventy measures of barley, were sold
for a nomisma, or gold Byzant. To guard against
severe drought in the capital, and supply the gardens in its immediate vicinity
with water, Constantine repaired the great aqueduct of Valens. The flourishing
condition of the towns in Greece at the time is attested by the fact, that the
best workmen in cement were sought in the Hellenic cities and the islands of
the Archipelago.
The time and attention of Constantine, during his
whole reign, were principally engaged m military occupations. In the eyes of
his contemporaries, he was judged by his military conduct. His strategic
abilities and indefatigable activity were the most striking characteristics of
his administration. His campaigns, his financial measures, and the abundance
they created, were known to all; but his ecclesiastical policy affected
comparatively few. Yet by that policy his reign has been exclusively judged and
condemned in modern times. The grounds of the condemnation are unjust. He has
not, like his father, the merit of having saved an empire from ruin; but he may
claim the honour of perfecting the reforms planned by his father, and of
re-establishing the military power of the Roman Empire on a basis that
perpetuated Byzantine supremacy for several centuries. Hitherto historians have
treated the events of his reign as an accidental assemblage of facts; but
surely, if he is to be rendered responsible for the persecution of the
image-worshippers, in which he took comparatively little part, he deserves credit
for his military successes and prosperous administration, since these were the
result of his constant personal occupation. The history of his ecclesiastical
measures, however, really possesses a deep interest, for they reflect with
accuracy the feelings and ideas of millions of his subjects, as well as of the
emperor.
Constantine was a sincere enemy of image-worship, and
in his age sincerity implied bigotry, for persecution was considered both
lawful and meritorious. Yet with all his energy, he was prudent in his first
attempts to carry out his father’s policy. While he was struggling with
Artavasdos, and labouring to restore the discipline of his troops, and
re-establish the military superiority of the Byzantine arms, he left the
religious controversy concerning image-worship to the two parties of the clergy
who then disputed for pre-eminence in the church. But when his power was
consolidated, he steadily pursued his father’s plans for centralizing the
ecclesiastical administration of the empire. To prepare for the final decision
of the question, which probably, in his mind, related as much to the right of
the emperor to govern the church, as to the question whether pictures were to
be worshipped or not, he ordered the metropolitans and archbishops to hold
provincial synods, in order to discipline the people for the execution of the
edicts he proposed to carry in a general council of the Eastern church.
This general council was convoked at Constantinople in
the year 754. It was attended by 338 bishops, forming the most numerous
assembly of the Christian clergy which had ever been collected together for
ecclesiastical legislation. Theodosius, metropolitan of Ephesus, son o the Emperor Tiberius III, presided, for the patriarchal
chair had been kept vacant since the death of Anastasius in the preceding year.
Neither the Pope nor the patriarchs of Antioch, Alexandria, and Jerusalem sent
representatives to this council, which was solely composed of the Byzantine
clergy, so that it had no right to assume the rank of an ecumenical council.
Its decisions were all against image-worship, which it declared to be contrary
to scripture. It proclaimed the use of images and pictures in churches to be a
pagan and antichristian practice, the abolition of which was necessary to avoid
leading Christians into temptation. Even the use of the crucifix was condemned,
on the ground chat the only true symbol of the incarnation was the bread and
wine which Christ had commanded to be received for the remission of sins. In
its opposition to the worship of pictures, the council was led into the display
of some animosity against painting itself; and every attempt at embodying
sacred subjects by what it styled the dead and accursed art, foolishly invented
by the pagans, was strongly condemned. The common people were thus deprived of
a source of ideas, which, though liable to abuse, tended in general to civilize
their minds, and might awaken noble thoughts and religious aspirations. We may
fully agree with the Iconoclasts in the religious importance of not worshipping
images, and not allowing the people to prostrate themselves on the pavements of
churches before pictures of saints, whether said to be painted by human artists
or miraculous agency; while at the same time we think that the walls of the
vestibules or porticoes of sacred edifices may with propriety be adorned with
pictures representing those sacred subjects most likely to awaken feelings of
Christian charity. It is by embodying and ennobling the expression of feelings
common to all mankind, that modern artists can alone unite in their works that
combination of truth with the glow of creative imagination which gives a divine
stamp to many pagan works. There is nothing in the circle of human affairs so
democratic as art. The council of 754, however, deemed that it was necessary to
sacrifice art to the purity of religion. “The godless art of painting” was
proscribed. All who manufactured crucifixes or sacred paintings for worship, in
public or private, whether laymen or monks, were ordered to be excommunicated
by the church and punished by the state. At the same time, in order to guard
against the indiscriminate destruction of sacred buildings and shrines
possessing valuable ornaments and rich plate and jewels, by Iconoclastic zeal,
or under its pretext, the council commanded that no alteration was to be made
in existing churches, without the special permission of the patriarch and the
emperor—a regulation bearing strong marks of the fiscal rapacity of the central
treasury of the Roman empire. The bigotry of the age was displayed in the
anathema which this council pronounced against three of the most distinguished
and virtuous advocates of image-worship, Germanos,
the Patriarch of Constantinople, George of Cyprus, and John Damascenus,
the last of the fathers of the Greek church.
The ecclesiastical decisions of the council served as
the basis for penal enactments by the civil power. The success of the emperor
in restoring prosperity to the empire, many of his subjects to believe that he
was destined to reform the church as well as the state, and few thinking men
could doubt that corruption had entered deep into both. In many minds there was
a contest between the superstitions of picture-worship and the feeling of
respect for the emperors administration; but there were still in the Roman
empire many persons of education, unconnected with the church, who regarded the
superstitions of the people with aversion. To them the reverence paid by the
ignorant to images said to have fallen from heaven, to pictures painted by St.
Luke, to virgins who wept, and to saints who supplied the lamps burning before
their effigies with a perpetual fountain of oil, appeared rank idolatry. There
were also still a few men of philosophic minds who exercised the right of
private judgment on public questions, both civil and ecclesiastical, and who
felt that the emperor was making popular superstition the pretext for rendering
his power despotic in the church as in the state. His conduct appeared to these
men a violation of those principles of Roman law and ecclesiastical legislation
which tendered the systematic government of society in the Roman Empire
superior to the arbitrary rule of Mohammedan despotism, or the wild license of
Gothic anarchy. The Greek Church had not hitherto made it imperative on its
members to worship images;—it had only tolerated popular abuse in the reverence
paid to these symbols—so that the ignorant monks who resisted the enlightened
Iconoclasts might, by liberal-minded men, be considered as the true defenders
of the right of private judgment, and as benefactors of mankind. There is
positive evidence that such feelings really existed, and they could not exist
without producing some influence on society generally. Less than forty years
after the death of Constantine, the tolerant party was so numerous that it
could struggle in the imperial cabinet to save heretics from persecution, on
the ground that the church had no authority to ask that men should be condemned
to death for matters of belief, as God may always turn the mind of the sinner
to repentance. Theophanes has recorded the existence of these humane sentiments
in his eagerness to blame them.
Many of the clergy boldly resisted the edicts of
Constantine to enforce the new ecclesiastical legislation against images and
pictures. They held that all the acts of the council of Constantinople were
void, for a general council could only be convoked by an orthodox emperor; and
they took upon themselves to declare the opinions of Constantine heterodox. The
monks engaged with eagerness in the controversy which arose. The Pope, the
patriarchs of Antioch, Alexandria, and Jerusalem, replied to the
excommunications of the council by condemning all its supporters to eternal
perdition. The emperor, enraged at the opposition he met with, enforced the
execution of his edicts with all the activity and energy of his character; his
political as well as his religious views urged him to be a persecutor. It is
evident that policy and passion were as much connected with his violence
against the image-worshippers as religious feeling, for he treated many
heretics with toleration who appeared to be quiet and inoffensive subjects,
incapable of offering any opposition to his political and ecclesiastical
schemes. The Theopaschites, the Paulicians, and the Monophysites enjoyed
religious toleration during his whole reign.
In the year 766 the edicts against image-worship were
extended in their application, and enforced with additional rigor. The use of
relics and the practice of praying to saints were prohibited. Many monks, and
several members of the dignified clergy, were banished; stripes, loss of the
eyes and of the tongue, were inflicted as legal punishments for prostration
before a picture, or praying before a relic. Yet, even at this period of the
greatest excitement, the emperor at times displayed great personal forbearance;
when, however, either policy or passion prompted him to order punishment to be
inflicted, it was done with fearful severity.
Two cases may be mentioned as affording a correct
elucidation of the personal conduct of Constantine. A hermit, named Andreas the Kalybite, presented himself before the emperor, and
upbraided him for causing dissension in the church. “If you are a Christian,
why dost you persecute Christians?” shouted the monk to his prince, with
audacious orthodoxy. Constantine ordered him to be carried off to prison for
insulting the imperial authority. He was then called upon to submit to the
decisions of the general council; and when he refused to admit the validity of
its canons, and to obey the edicts of the emperor, he was tried and condemned
to death. After being scourged in the hippodrome, he was beheaded, and his
body, according to the practice of the age, was cast into the sea.
Stephen, the abbot of a monastery near Nicomedia, was
banished to the island of Proconnesus, on account of
his firm opposition to the emperor’s edicts; but his fame for piety drew
numerous votaries to his place of banishment, who flocked thither to hear him
preach. This assembly of seditious and pious persons roused the anger of the
civil authorities, and Stephen was brought to Constantinople to be more
strictly watched. His eloquence still drew crowds to the door of his prison;
and the reverence shown to him by his followers vexed the emperor so much, that
he gave vent to his mortification by exclaiming—“It seems, in truth, that this
monk is really emperor, and I am nothing in the empire”. This speech was heard
by some of the officers of the imperial guard. Like that of Henry II concerning
Thomas a Becket, it caused the death of Stephen. He was dragged from his prison
by some of the emperor's guard, and cruelly murdered. The soldiery and the
people joined in dragging his body through the streets, and his unburied
remains were left exposed in the place destined to receive those of the lowest
criminals. Both Stephen and Andreas were declared martyrs, and rewarded with a
place in the calendar of Greek saints.
Orthodox zeal and party ambition combined to form a
dangerous conspiracy against Constantine. Men of the highest rank engaged in
the plot, and even the Patriarch Constantinos, though
himself an Iconoclast, appears to have joined the conspirators. He was removed
from the patriarchate, and the dignity was conferred on a Slavonian prelate,
named Niketas. The deposed Patriarch was brought to
trial and condemned to death. Constantinos, after his
condemnation, and apparently with the hope of having his life spared, signed a
declaration that he believed the worship of images to be idolatry, that the
decrees of the council of Constantinople contained the true doctrines of the
orthodox church, and that the faith of the emperor was pure. This last article
was added because the patriarch was accused of having countenanced reports
charging the emperor with heterodox opinions concerning the Virgin. If Constantinos expected mercy by his pliancy, he was
mistaken. His sentence was carried into execution in the cruellest manner. The
head of the Greek Church was placed on an ass, with his face towards the tail,
and conducted through the streets of the capital, while the mob treated him
with every insult. On reaching the amphitheatre his head was struck off. It may
easily be supposed that, when the highest ecclesiastic in the empire was
treated in this manner in the capital, the severity of the imperial agents in
the distant provinces was often fearfully tyrannical.
The spirit of ecclesiastical bigotry which has so
often led popes, princes, and Protestants to burn those who differed from them
in matters of opinion, gave the image-worshippers as much fortitude to resist
as it gave their opponents cruelty to persecute. The religious and political
reforms of the Isaurian emperors were equally a subject of aversion to the Pope
and the Italians; and all the possessions of the emperors in central Italy had
been rendered virtually independent, even before Constantine convoked the
council of Constantinople. His struggle with the Saracens and Bulgarians had
prevented his making any effort in Italy. At Rome, however, the Popes continued
to acknowledge the civil and judicial supremacy of the emperor of the East,
even after the Lombards had conquered the exarchate of Ravenna. But the
impossibility of receiving any support from Constantine against the
encroachments of the Lombards, induced Pope Stephen to apply to Pepin of France
for assistance. Pope Paul afterwards carried his eagerness to create a quarrel
between Pepin and Constantine so far, that he accused the emperor of hostile
designs against Italy, which he was well aware Constantine had little time or
power to execute. Pepin, who was anxious to gain the aid of papal authority in
his projects of usurpation, made a donation of the exarchate of Ravenna to the
papal see in the year 755, though he had not the smallest right to dispose of
it. The donation, however, supplied the Pope with a pretext for laying claim to
the sovereignty over the country; and there can be no doubt that the papal
government was at this very popular among the Italians, for it secured them the
administration of justice according to the Roman law, guaranteed to them a
considerable degree of municipal independence, and permitted them to maintain
their commercial relations with the Byzantine Empire. The political dependence
of many of the cities in central Italy, which escaped the Lombard domination,
was not absolutely withdrawn from the empire of the East until a new emperor of
the West was created, on the assumption of the imperial crown by Charlemagne,
to whom the allegiance of the Italians, who threw off Constantine's authority,
was at last transferred.
Some remarkable physical phenomena occurred during the
reign of Constantine. An unnatural darkness obscured the sun from the 10th to
the 15th of August in the year 746. It terrified the inhabitants of
Constantinople at the time it occurred; and when the great pestilence broke out
in the following year, it was regarded as a prognostic of that calamity. In the
year 750, violent earthquakes destroyed whole towns in Syria. In the month of
October, 763, a winter of singular severity commenced long before severe cold
generally sets in at Constantinople. The Bosphorus was frozen over, and men
passed on foot between Europe and Asia in several places. The Black Sea was
covered with ice from the Palus Maeotic to Mesembria. When the thaw began in the month of February, 764, immense
mountains of ice were driven through the Bosphorus, and dashed with such
violence against the walls of Constantinople as to threaten them with ruin.
These icebergs were seventy feet in thickness; and Theophanes mentions that,
when a boy, he mounted on one of them with thirty of his young companions.
One great calamity in the age of Constantine appears
to have travelled over the whole habitable world; this was the great
pestilence, which made its appearance in the Byzantine Empire as early as 745.
It had previously carried off a considerable portion of the population of
Syria, and the Caliph Yezid III perished of the
disease in 744. From Syria it visited Egypt and Africa, from whence it passed
into Sicily. After making great ravages in Sicily and Calabria, it spread to
Greece; and at last, in the year 749, broke out with terrible violence in
Constantinople, then probably the most populous city in the universe. It was
supposed to have been introduced, and dispersed through Christian countries, by
the Venetian and Greek ships employed in carrying on a contraband trade in
slaves with the Mohammedan nations, and it spread wherever commerce extended.
Monemvasia, one of the commercial cities at the time, received the contagion
with the return of its trading vessels, and disseminated the disease over all
Greece, and the islands of the Archipelago. On the continent, this plague
threatened to exterminate the Hellenic race.
Historians have left us a vivid picture of the horrors
of this fearful visitation, which show us that the terror it inspired disturbed
the fabric of society. Strange superstitions preoccupied men’s minds, and
annihilated every sense of duty. Some appeared to be urged by a demoniacal
impulse to commit heinous but useless crime, with the wildest recklessness.
Small crosses of unctuous matter were supposed to appear suddenly, traced by an
invisible hand on the clothes of persons as they were engaged in their ordinary
pursuits; examples were narrated of their having appeared suddenly visible to
the eyes of the assembled congregation on the vestments of the priest as he
officiated at the altar. The individual thus marked out was invariably assailed
by the disease on his return home, and soon died. Crosses were constantly found
traced on the doors and outer walls of buildings; houses, palaces, huts, and
monasteries were alike marked. This was considered as an intimation that some
of the inmates were ordered to prepare for immediate death. In the delirium of
fear and the first paroxysms of the plague, many declared that they beheld
hideous spectres wandering about; these apparitions were seen flitting through
the crowded streets of the city, at times questioning the passengers, at times
walking into houses before the inmates, and then driving the proprietors from
the door. At times it was said that these spectres had even attacked the
citizens with naked swords. That these things were not reported solely on the
delusion of the fancy of persons rendered insane by attacks of disease, is
asserted by a historian who was born about ten years later, and who certainly
passed his youth at Constantinople.
The testimony of Theophanes is confirmed by the
records of similar diseases in other populous cities. The uncertainty of life
offers additional chances of impunity to crime, and thus relaxes the power of
the law, and weakens the bonds of moral restraint. Danger is generally what man
fears little, when there are several chances of escape. The bold and wicked,
deriding the general panic, frequently made periods of pestilence times of
revelry and plunder; the very individuals charged as policemen to preserve
order in society, finding themselves free from control, have been known to
assume the disguise of demons, in order to plunder the terrified and
superstitious with impunity. The predominant passions of all find full scope
when the feeling of responsibility is removed; shame is thrown aside, the most
unfeeling avarice and the wildest debauchery are displayed. But, at the same
time, it is on such fearful occasions that we see examples of the noblest
courage, the most devoted self-sacrifice and the purest charity. Boccaccio and
Defoe, in describing the scenes which occurred at Florence in 1348, and at
London in 1665, afford a correct picture of what happened at
Constantinople in 747.
The number of dead was so great, that when the
ordinary means of transporting the bodies to interment were insufficient, boxes
were slung over the pack-saddles of mules, into which the dead were cast
without distinction of rank. When the mules became insufficient, low chariots
were constructed to receive piles of human bodies, and these frightful hearses
were drawn through the streets to receive their loads, by a crowd of men who
received a fixed sum of money with each body. Long trenches were prepared without
the walls to serve as graves for hundreds of bodies, and into these the aged
beggar and the youthful noble were precipitated side by side. When all the
cemeteries around the capital were filled, and the panic kept the mass of the
population shut up in their dwellings, bodies were interred in the fields and
vineyards nearest to the city gates, or they were cast into vacant houses and
empty cisterns. The disease prevailed for a year, and left whole houses
tenantless, having exterminated many families. We possess no record of the
number of deaths it caused, but if we suppose the population of Constantinople
at the time to have exceeded a million, we may form an estimate of the probable
loss it sustained, by observing that, during the great plague at Milan, in
1630, about eighty-six thousand persons perished in the course of a year, in a
population hardly exceeding one hundred and fifty thousand souls.
After the plague had completely disappeared, the
capital required an immense influx of new inhabitants. To fill up the void
caused by the scourge, Constantine induced many Greek families from the
continent and the islands to emigrate to Constantinople. These new citizens
immediately occupied a well-defined social position; for whether artisans,
tradesmen, merchants, or householders, they became members of established
corporations, and knew how to act in their new relations of life without
embarrassment. It was by the perfection of its corporate societies and police
regulations, that the Byzantine Empire effected the translocation of the
inhabitants of whole cities and provinces, without misfortune or discontent. By
modifying the fiscal severity of the Roman government, by relieving the members
of the municipality from the ruinous obligation of mutual responsibility for
the total amount of the land-tax, and by relaxing the laws that fettered
children to the profession or handicraft of their parents, the Byzantine
administration infused new energy into an enfeebled social system. It still
preserved, as an inheritance from Rome, an intimate knowledge of the practical
methods of regulating the relative supplies of labour, food, and population in
the manner least likely to inconvenience the government, though undoubtedly
with little reference to the measures best calculated to advance the happiness
of the people.
This memorable pestilence produced as great changes in
the provinces as in the capital. While the population of Constantinople lost
much of its Roman character and traditions by the infusion of a large number of
Greek emigrants, Greece itself lost also much of its Hellenic character and
ancient traditions, by the departure of a considerable portion of its native
middle classes for Constantinople, and the destruction of a large part by the
plague itself. The middle classes of the Hellenic cities flocked to
Constantinople, while an inferior class from the villages crowded to supply
their place, and thus a general translocation of the population was effected;
and though this emigration may have been confined principally to the Greek
race, it must have tended greatly to separate the future traditions of the
people from those of an earlier period. The Athenian or the Lacedemonian who settled at Constantinople, lost all local characteristics; and the
emigrants from the islands, who supplied their place at Athens and Lacedemon, mingled their traditions and dialect with the
Attic and Doric prejudices of their new homes; ancient traditions were thus
consigned to oblivion. The depopulation on the continent and in the Peloponnesus
was also so great that the Slavonian population extended their settlements over
the greater part of the open country; the Greeks crowded into the towns, or
into the districts immediately under the protection of their walls. The
Slavonian colonies, which had been gradually increasing ever since the reign of
Heraclius, attained at this time their greatest extension; and the depopulation
caused by this pestilence is said by the Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus,
who wrote two centuries later, to have been so great, that the Slavonians
occupied the whole of the open country in Greece and the Peloponnesus, and
reduced it to a state of barbarism. The emperor perhaps confounded in some
degree the general translocation of the Greek population itself with the
occupation of extensive districts, then abandoned to Slavonian cultivators and
herdsmen. It is certain, however, that from this time the oblivion of the
ancient Hellenic names of villages, districts, rivers, and mountains became
general; and the final extinction of those dialects, which marked a direct
affiliation of the inhabitants of particular spots with the ancient Hellenic
population of the same districts, was consummated. The new names which came
into use, whether Slavonian or Greek, equally mark the loss of ancient
traditions.
In closing the history of the reign of Constantine V
it is necessary to observe that he deserves praise for the care with which he
educated his family. The most bigoted image-worshippers inform us that he was
so mild in his domestic circle that he permitted his third wife to protect a
nun named Anthusa, who was a most devoted worshipper
of images; and one of the emperor’s daughters received from this nun both her
name and education. The Princess Anthusa was
distinguished for her benevolence and piety; she is said to have founded one of
the first orphan asylums established in the Christian world; and her orthodox
devotion, to pictures obtained for her a place among the saints of the Greek
Church, an honour granted also to her godmother and teacher.
Sect. IV
REIGNS OF LEO IV THE KHAZAR,
CONSTANTINE VI AND IRENE
A.D. 775-802
Leo IV succeeded his father at the age of twenty-five.
His mother, Irene, was the daughter of the emperor or chagan of the Khazars, then a powerful people, through whose territories the
greater part of the commercial intercourse between the Christians and the rich
countries in eastern Asia was carried on. Leo inherited from his mother a mild
and amiable disposition; nor does he appear to have been destitute of some
portion of his father’s talents, but the state of his health prevented him from
displaying the same activity. His reign lasted four years and a half, and his
administration was conducted in strict accordance with the policy of his father
and grandfather; but the weak state of his health kept the public attention
fixed on the question of the imperial succession. Constantine V had selected an
Athenian lady, of great beauty and accomplishments, named Irene, to be his
son’s wife, and Leo had a son named Constantine, who was born in the year 771.
The indefinite nature of the imperial succession, and the infancy of Leo's
child, gave the two half-brothers of the emperor, who had been invested by
their father with the rank of Caesar, some hope of ascending the throne on
their brother’s death. Leo conferred on his infant son the title of Emperor, in
order to secure his succession; and this was done in a more popular manner than
usual, at the express desire of the senate, in order to give the ceremony all
the character of a popular election. The young emperor’s five uncles—the two
Caesars, and the three who tore the title of Nobilissimi—were
compelled to take the same oath of allegiance as the other subjects. Yet,
shortly after this, the Caesar Nicephorus formed a conspiracy to render himself
master of the government. Leo, who felt that he was rapidly sinking into the
grave, referred the decision of his brother’s guilt to a Silention,
which condemned all the conspirators to death. Nicephorus was pardoned, but his
partisans were scourged and banished to Cherson. The death of Leo IV happened
on the 8th of September, 780.
Constantine was ten years old when his father died, so
that the whole direction of the empire devolved on his mother, Irene, who had received
the imperial crown from Constantine V; for that emperor seems to have felt that
the weak state of Leo’s health would require the assistance of Irene’s
talents. The virtues Irene had displayed in a private station were
insufficient to resist the corrupting influence of irresponsible power.
Ambition took possession of her own soul, and it was the ambition of reigning
alone, not of reigning well. The education of her son was neglected—perhaps as
a means of securing her power; favour was avowedly a surer road to preferment
than long service, so that the court became a scene of political intrigue, and
personal motives decided most public acts. As no organ of public opinion
possessed the power of awakening a sense of moral responsibility among the
officers of state, the intrigues of the court ended in conspiracies, murder,
and treason.
The parties struggling for power soon ranged
themselves under the banners of the ecclesiastical factions that had long
divided the empire. Little, probably, did many of the leaders care what party
they espoused in the religious question; but it was necessary to proclaim
themselves members of an ecclesiastical faction in order to secure a popular
following. The Empress Irene was known to favour image-worship; as a woman and
a Greek, this was natural; yet policy would have dictated to her to adopt that
party as the most certain manner of securing support powerful enough to
counterbalance the family influence of the Isaurian dynasty, which was now
wielded by the uncles of the young emperor. The conflict between the
image-worshippers and the Iconoclasts soon commenced. The Caesar Nicephorus,
who was as ambitious as his sister-in-law, was eager to drive her from the
regency. He organized a conspiracy, in which several ministers and members of
the senate took part. Irene obtained full proof of all its ramifications before
the conspirators were prepared to act, seized her five brothers-in-law, and
compelled them to enter the priesthood. In order to make it generally known
that they had assumed the sacerdotal character, they were obliged to officiate
during the Christmas ceremonies at the high altar of St Sophia's, while the
young emperor and his mother restored to the church the rich jewels of which it
had been deprived by the Iconoclast emperors. The intendant-general of posts,
the general of the Armeniac theme, the commander of the imperial guard, and the
admiral of the Archipelago, who had all taken part in the conspiracy, were
scourged, and immured as monks in distant monasteries. Helpidioss the governor of Sicily, assumed the title of emperor as soon as he found that
his participation in the plot was known at court; but he was compelled to seek
shelter among the Saracens, in whose armies he afterwards served. Nicephorus Doukas, another conspirator, fled also to the Mohammedans.
Some years later, when Constantine VI had assumed the government into his own
hands, a new conspiracy was formed by the partisans of his uncles (AD 792). The
princes were then treated with great severity. The Caesar Nicephorus was
deprived of sight; and the tongues of the others were cut out, by the order of
their nephew, not long before he lost his own eyes by the order of his mother.
The influence of the clergy in the ordinary
administration of justice, and the great extent to which ecclesiastical
legislation regulated civil rights, rendered councils of the church an
important feature in those forms and usages that practically circumscribed the
despotic power of the emperor by a framework of customs, opinions, and
convictions which he could with difficulty alter, and rarely oppose without
danger. The political ambition of Irene, the national vanity of the Greeks, and
the religious feelings of the orthodox, required the sanction of a
constitutional public authority, before the laws against image-worship could be
openly repealed. The Byzantine Empire had at this time an ecclesiastical,
though not a political constitution. The will of the sovereign was alone
insufficient to change an organic law, forming part of the ecclesiastical
administration of the empire. It was necessary to convoke a general council to
legalize image-worship; and to render such a council a fit instrument for the
proposed revolution, much arrangement was necessary. No person was ever endued
with greater talents for removing opposition and conciliating personal support
than the empress. The Patriarch Paul, a decided Iconoclast, was induced to
resign, and declare that he repented of his hostility to image-worship, because
it had cut off the church of Constantinople from communion with the rest of the
Christian world. This declaration pointed out the necessity of holding a
general council, in order to establish that communion. The crisis required a
new Patriarch, of stainless character, great ability, and perfect acquaintance
with the party connections and individual characters of the leading bishops. No
person could be selected from among the dignitaries of the church, who had been
generally appointed by Iconoclast emperors. The choice of Irene fell on a
civilian. Tarasios, the chief secretary of the imperial cabinet—a man of noble
birth, considerable popularity, and a high reputation for learning and
probity—was suddenly elevated to be the head of the Greek church, and allowed
to be not unworthy of the high rank. The orthodox would probably have raised a
question concerning the legality of nominating a layman, had it not been
evident that the objection would favour the interests of their opponents. The
empress and her advisers were not bold enough to venture on an irretrievable
declaration in favour of image-worship, until they had obtained a public
assurance of popular support. An assembly of the inhabitants of the capital was
convoked in the palace of Magnaura, in order to
secure a majority pledged to the cause of Tarasios. The fact that such an
assembly was considered necessary is a strong proof that the strength of the
rival parties was very nearly balanced, and that this manifestation of public
opinion was required in order to relieve the empress from personal
responsibility. Irene proposed to the assembly that Tarasios should be elected,
Patriarch, and the proposal was received with general acclamation. Tarasios,
however, refused the dignity, declaring that he would not accept the Patriarchate
unless a general council should be convoked, for restoring unity to the church.
The convocation of a council was adopted, and the nomination of Tarasios
ratified. Though great care had been taken to fill this assembly with
image-worshippers, nevertheless several dissentient voices made themselves
heard, protesting against the proceedings as an attack on the existing
legislation of the empire.
The Iconoclasts were still strong in the capital, and
the opposition of the soldiery was excited by the determination of Tarasios to
re-establish image-worship. They openly declared that they would not allow a
council of the church to be held, nor permit the ecclesiastics of their party
to be unjustly treated by the court. More than one tumult warned the empress that
no council could be held at Constantinople. It was found necessary to disperse
the Iconoclastic soldiery in distant provinces, and form new cohorts of guards
devoted to the court, before any steps could be publicly taken to change the
laws of the church. The experience of Tarasios as a minister of state was more
useful to Irene during the first period of his patriarchate than his
theological learning. It required nearly three years to smooth the way for the
meeting of the council, which was at length held at Nicaea, in September, 787.
Three hundred and sixty-seven members attended, of whom, however, not a few
were abbots and monks, who assumed the title of confessors from having been
ejected from their monasteries by the decrees of the Iconoclast sovereigns.
Some of the persons present deserve to be particularly mentioned, for they have
individually conferred greater benefits on mankind by their learned labours,
than they rendered to Christianity by their zealous advocacy of image-worship
in this council. The secretary of the two commissioners who represented the
imperial authority was Nicephorus the historian, subsequently Patriarch of
Constantinople. His sketch of the history of the empire, from the year 602 to
770, is a valuable work, and indicates that he was a man of judgment, whenever
his perceptions were not obscured by theological and ecclesiastical prejudices.
Two other eminent Byzantine writers were also present. George, called
Syncellus, from the office he held, under the Patriarch Tarasios. He has left
us a chronological work, which has preserved the knowledge of many important
facts recorded by no other ancient authority. Theophanes, the friend and
companion of the Syncellus, has continued this work; and his chronography of
Roman and Byzantine history, with all its faults, forms the best picture of the
condition of the empire that we possess for a long period. Theophanes enjoyed
the honour of becoming, at a later day, a confessor in the cause of
image-worship; he was exiled from a monastery which he had founded, and died in
the island of Samothrace, AD 817.
The second council of Nicaea had no better title than
the Iconoclast council of Constantinople to be regarded as a general council of
the church. The Pope Hadrian, indeed, sent deputies from the Latin Church; but
the churches of Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Antioch, whose patriarchs were
groaning under the government of the caliphs, did not dare to communicate with
foreign authorities. An attempt was nevertheless made to deceive the world into
a belief that they were represented, by allowing two monks from Palestine to
present themselves as the syncelli of these patriarchs, without scrutinizing
the validity of their credentials. Pope Hadrian, though he sent deputies, wrote
at the same time to Tarasios, making several demands tending to establish the
ecclesiastical supremacy of the papal See, and complaining in strong terms that
the Patriarch of Constantinople had no right to assume the title of ecumenic.
The hope of recovering the estates of the patrimony of St. Peter in the
Byzantine provinces, which had been sequestrated by Leo III, and of
re-establishing the supremacy of the See of Rome made Hadrian overlook much
that was offensive to papal pride.
The second council of Nicaea authorized the worship of
images as an orthodox practice. Forged passages, pretending to be extracts from
the earlier fathers, and genuine from the more modern, were quoted in favour of
the practice. Simony was already a prevailing evil in the Greek Church. Many of
the bishops had purchased their sees, and most of these naturally preferred
doing violence to their opinions rather than lose their revenues. From this
cause, unanimity was easily obtained by court influence. The council decided,
that not only was the cross an object of reverence, but also that the images of
Christ, and the pictures of the Virgin Mary—of angels, and holy men, whether
painted in colours, or worked in embroidery in sacred ornaments, or formed in
mosaic in the walls of churches—were all lawful objects of worship. At the same
time, in order to guard against the accusation of idolatry, it was declared
that the worship of an image, which is merely a sign of reverence, must not be
confounded with the adoration due only to God. The council of Constantinople
held in 754 was declared heretical, and all who maintained its doctrines, and
condemned the use of images, were anathematized. The patriarchs Anastasius, Constantinos, and Niketas were
especially doomed to eternal condemnation.
The Pope adopted the decrees of this council, but he
refused to confirm them officially, because the empress delayed restoring the
estates of St. Peter’s patrimony. In the countries of Western Europe which had
formed parts of the Western Empire, the superstitions of the image-worshippers
were viewed with as much dissatisfaction as the fanaticism of the Iconoclasts;
and the council of Nicaea was as much condemned as that of Constantinople by a
large body of enlightened ecclesiastics. The public mind in the West was almost
as much divided as in the East; and if a general council of the Latin Church
had been assembled, its unbiassed decisions would probably have been at
variance with those supported by the Pope and the council of Nicaea.
Charlemagne published a refutation of the doctrines of
this council on the subject of image-worship. His work, called the Caroline
Books, consists of four parts, and was certainly composed under his immediate
personal superintendence, though he was doubtless incapable of writing it
himself. At all events, it was published as his composition. This work condemns
the superstitious bigotry of the Greek image-worshippers in a decided manner,
while at the same time it only blames the misguided zeal of the Iconoclasts.
Altogether it is a very remarkable production, and gives a more correct idea of
the extent to which Roman civilization still survived, in Western society, and
counterbalanced ecclesiastical influence, than any other contemporary document.
In 794 Charlemagne assembled a council of three hundred bishops at Frankfort;
and, in the presence of the papal legates, this council maintained that
pictures ought to be placed in churches, but that they should not be
worshipped, but only regarded with respect, as recalling more vividly to the
mind the subjects represented. The similarity existing at this time in the opinions
of enlightened men throughout the whole Christian world must be noted as a
proof that general communications and commercial intercourse still pervaded
society with common sentiments. The dark night of medieval ignorance and local
prejudices had not yet settled on the West; nor had feudal anarchy confined the
ideas and wants of society to the narrow sphere of provincial interests. The
aspect of public opinion alarmed Pope Hadrian, whose interests required that
the relations of the West and East should not become friendly. His position,
however, rendered him more suspicious of Constantine and Irene, in spite of
their orthodoxy, than of Charlemagne, with all his heterodox ideas. The Frank
monarch, though he differed in ecclesiastical opinions, was sure to be a
political protector. The Pope consequently laboured to foment the jealousy that
reigned between the Frank and Byzantine governments concerning Italy, where the
commercial relations of the Greeks still counterbalanced the military influence
of the Franks. When writing to Charlemagne, he accused the Greeks and their
Italian partisans of every crime likely to arouse the hostility of the Franks.
They were reproached, and not unjustly, with carrying on an extensive trade in
slaves, who were purchased in Western Europe, and sold, to the Saracens. The
Pope knew well that this commerce was carried on in all the trading cities of
the West, both by Greeks and Latins; for slaves then constituted the principal
article of European export to Africa, Syria, and Egypt, in payment of the
produce of the East, which was brought from those countries. The Pope seized
and burned some Greek vessels at Centumcellae, (Civita-Vecchia), because the crews were accused of
kidnapping the people of the neighbourhood. The violent expressions of Hadrian,
in speaking of the Greeks, could not fail to produce a great effect in Western
Europe, where the letters of the Popes formed the literary productions most
generally read and studied by all ranks. His calumnies must have sunk deep into
the public mind, and tended to impress on Western nations that aversion to the
Greeks, which was subsequently increased by mercantile jealousy and religious
strife.
The extinction of the last traces of the supremacy of
the Eastern Empire at Rome was the most gratifying result of their machinations
to the Popes. On Christmas-day, A.D. 800, Charlemagne revived the existence of
the Western Empire, and received the imperial crown from Pope Leo III in the
church of St. Peter’s. Hitherto the Frank monarch had acknowledged a titular
supremacy in the Eastern Empire, and had borne the title of Patrician of the
Roman Empire, as a mark of dignity conferred on him by the emperors of
Constantinople; but he now raised himself to an equality with the emperors of
the East, by assuming the title of Emperor of the West. The assumption of the
title of emperor of the Romans was not an act of idle vanity. Roman usages,
Roman prejudices, and Roman law still exercised a powerful influence over the
minds of the most numerous body of Charlemagne’s subjects; and by all the
clergy and lawyers throughout his dominions the rights and prerogatives of the
Roman emperors of the West were held to be legally vested in his person by the
fact of his election, such as it was, and his coronation by the Pope. The
political allegiance of the Pope to the emperor, which was then undisputed,
became thus transferred from the emperor of the East to the emperor of the West
as a matter of course; while the papal rights of administration over the former
exarchate of Ravenna, the Pentapolis, and the dukedom of Rome, acquired, under
the protection of the Franks, the character of a decided sovereignty. Many
towns of Italy at this time acquired a degree of municipal independence which
made them almost independent republics. The influence of Roman law in binding
society together, the military weakness of the papal power, and the rapid
decline of the central authority in the empire of the Franks, enabled these
towns to perpetuate their peculiar constitutions and independent jurisdictions
down to the French Revolution.
A female regency in an absolute government must always
render the conduct of public affairs liable to be directed by court intrigues.
When Irene wished to gain Charlemagne as an ally, in order to deprive the
Iconoclasts of any hope of foreign assistance, she had negotiated a treaty of
marriage between her son and Rotrud, the eldest
daughter of the Frank monarch, AD 781. But when the question of image-worship
was settled, she began to fear that this alliance might become the means of
excluding her from power, and she then broke off the treaty, and compelled her
son to marry a Paphlagonian lady of the court named
Maria, whom the young emperor soon regarded with aversion. Constantine,
however, submitted quietly to his mother's domination until his twentieth year.
He then began to display dissatisfaction at the state of tutelage in which he
was held, and at his complete seclusion from public business. A plan was formed
by many leading men in the administration to place him at the head of affairs,
but it was discovered before it was ripe for execution. Irene on this occasion
displayed unseemly violence, in her eagerness to retain a power she ought
immediately to have resigned. The conspirators were seized, scourged, and
banished. When her son was conducted into her presence, she struck him, and
overwhelmed him with reproaches and insults. The young emperor was then
confined so strictly in the palace that all communication with his friends was
cut off.
This unprincipled conduct of the regent-mother became
the object of general reprobation. The troops of the Armeniac theme refused to
obey her orders, and marched to the capital to deliver Constantine. On the way
they were joined by other legions, and Irene found herself compelled to release
her son, who immediately hastened to the advancing army. A total revolution was
effected at court. The ministers and creatures of Irene were removed from
office, and some who had displayed particular animosity against Constantine
were scourged and beheaded. Constantine ruled the empire for about six years,
(790-797). But his education had been neglected, in a disgraceful manner, and
his mind was perhaps naturally fickle. Though he displayed the courage of his
family at the head of his army, his incapacity for business, and his
inconstancy in his friendships, soon lost him the support of his most devoted
partisans. He lost his popularity by putting out the eyes of his uncle,
Nicephorus, and cutting out the tongues of his four uncles, who were accused of
having taken part in the plots of their brother. He alienated the attachment of
the Armenian troops by putting out the eyes of their general, Alexis Mouselen, who had been the means of delivering him from
confinement. The folly of this last act was even greater than the ingratitude,
for it was done to gratify the revengeful feelings of his mother. These acts of
folly, cruelty, and ingratitude destroyed his influence, and induced his
sincerest friends to make their peace with Irene, whom it was evident her son
would ultimately allow to rule the empire.
The unhappy marriage into which Constantine had been
forced by his mother, she at last converted into the cause of his ruin. The
emperor fell in love with Theodota, one of his
mother’s maids of honour, and determined to divorce Maria in order to marry
her. Irene, whose ambition induced her to stoop to the basest intrigues,
flattered him in this project, as it seemed likely to increase her influence
and ruin his reputation. The Empress Maria was induced to retire into a
monastery, and the emperor expected to be able to celebrate his marriage with Theodota without difficulty. But the usage of the Byzantine
Empire required that the Patriarch should pronounce the sentence of divorce,
and this Tarasios, who was a devoted partisan and active political agent of
Irene, long refused to do. The imprudence of Constantine, and the insidious
advice of Irene, soon involved the emperor in a dispute with the whole body of
monks, who had an overwhelming influence in society. The Patriarch at last
yielded to the influence of Irene, so far as to allow his catechist to give the
veil to the Empress Maria, whom he pronounced divorced, and then to permit the
celebration of the emperors marriage with Theodota by
Joseph, one of the principal clergy of the patriarchal chapter, and abbot of a
monastery in the capital.
In the Byzantine Empire, at this time, constant
religious discussions and pretensions to superior sanctity, had introduced a
profound religious spirit into the highest ranks of society. Numbers of the
wealthiest nobles founded monasteries, into which they retired. The manners,
the extensive charity, and the pure morality of these abbots, secured them the
love and admiration of the people, and tended to disseminate a higher standard
of morality than had previously prevailed in Constantinople. This fact must not
be overlooked in estimating the various causes which led to the regeneration of
the Eastern Empire under the Iconoclast emperors. Security of life and
property, and all the foundations of national prosperity, are more closely
connected with moral purity than the ruling classes are inclined to allow. It
may not be quite useless, as an illustration of the state of the Byzantine
empire, to remind the reader of the violence, injustice, and debauchery which
prevailed at the courts of the west of Europe, including that of Charlemagne.
While the Pope winked at the disorders in the palace of Charlemagne, the monks
of the East prepared the public mind for the dethronement of Constantine,
because he obtained an illegal divorce, and formed a second marriage. The
corruption of morals and the irregularities prevalent in the monasteries of the
West contrast strongly with the condition of the Eastern monks.
The habit of building monasteries as a place of
retreat, from motives of piety, was also adopted by some as a mode of securing
a portion of their wealth from confiscation, in case of their condemnation for
political crimes, peculiar privileges being reserved in the monasteries so
founded for members of the founder’s family. At this time Plato, abbot of the
monastery of Sakkoudion, on Mount Olympus in Bythinia, and his nephew Theodore, who was a relation of
the new empress Theodota, were the leaders of a
powerful party of monks possessing great influence in the church. Theodore (who
is known by the name Studita, from having been
afterwards appointed abbot of the celebrated monastery of Studion) had founded
a monastery on his own property, in which he assembled his father, two
brothers, and a young sister, and, emancipating all his household and
agricultural slaves, established them as lay brethren on the farms. Most of the
abbots round Constantinople were men of family and wealth, as well as learning
and piety; but they repaid the sincere respect with which they were regarded by
the people, by participating in popular prejudices, so that we cannot be
surprised to find them constantly acting the part of demagogues. Plato
separated himself from all spiritual communion with the Patriarch Tarasios,
whom he declared to have violated the principles of Christianity in permitting
the adulterous marriage of the emperor. His views were warmly supported by his
nephew Theodore, and many monks began openly to preach both against the
Patriarch and the emperor. Irene now saw that the movement was taking a turn
favourable to her ambition. She encouraged the monks, and prepared Tarasios for
quitting the party of his sovereign. Plato and Theodore were dangerous enemies,
from their great reputation and extensive political and ecclesiastical
connections, and into a personal contest with these men Constantine rashly
plunged.
Plato was arrested at his monastery, and placed in
confinement under the wardship of the abbot Joseph, who had celebrated the
imperial marriage. Theodore was banished to Thessalonica, whither he was
conveyed by a detachment of police soldiers. He has left us an account of his
journey, which proves that the orders of the emperor were not carried into
execution with undue severity. Theodore and his attendant monks were seized by
the imperial officers at a distance from the monastery, and compelled to
commence their journey on the first horses their escort could, procure, instead
of being permitted to send for their ambling mules. They were hurried forward
for three days, resting during the night at Kathara in Liviana, Lefka, and Phyraion. At the last place they encountered a melancholy
array of monks, driven from the great monastery of Sakkoudion after the arrest of Plato; but with these fellow-sufferers, though ranged along
the road, Theodore was not allowed to communicate, except by bestowing on them
his blessing as he rode past. He was then carried to Paula, from whence he
wrote to Plato that he had seen his sister, with the venerable Sabas, abbot of the monastery of Studion. They had visited
him secretly, but had been allowed by the guards to pass the evening in his
society. Next night they reached Loupadion, where the
exiles were kindly treated by their host. At Tilin they
were joined by two abbots, Zacharias and Pionios, but
they were not allowed to travel in company. The journey was continued by Alberiza, Anagegrammenos, Perperina, Parium, and Horkos, to Lampsacus. On the
road, the bishops expressed the greatest sympathy and eagerness to serve them;
but the bigoted Theodore declared that his conscience would not permit him to
hold any communication with those who were so unchristian as to continue in
communion with Tarasios and the emperor.
From Lampsacus the journey
was prosecuted by sea. A pious governor received them at Abydos with great
kindness, and they rested there eight days. At Eleaus there was again a detention of seven days, and from thence they sailed to
Lemnos, where the bishop treated Theodore with so much attention that his
bigotry was laid asleep. The passage from Lemnos to Thessalonica was not
without danger from the piratical boats of the Slavonians who dwelt on the
coast of Thrace, and exercised the trades of robbers and pirates as well as
herdsmen and shepherds. A favourable wind carried the exiles without accident
to Kanastron, from whence they touched at Pallene
before entering the harbour of Thessalonica, which they reached on the 25th
March, 797. Here they were received by a guard, and conducted through the city
to the residence of the governor. The people assembled in crowds to view the
pious opponents of their emperor; while the governor received them with marks
of personal respect, which showed him more anxious to conciliate the powerful
monks than to uphold the dignity of the weak emperor. He conducted. Theodore to
the cathedral, that he might return thanks to God publicly for his safe
arrival; he then waited on him to the palace of the archbishop, where he was
treated to a bath, and entertained most hospitably. The exiles were, however,
according to the tenor of the imperial orders, placed in separate places of
confinement; and even Theodore and his brother were not permitted to dwell
together. The day of their triumph was not far distant, and their banishment
does not appear to have subjected them to much inconvenience. They were martyrs
at a small cost.
As soon as Irene thought that her son had rendered
himself unpopular throughout the empire, she formed her plot for dethroning
him. The support of the principal officers in the palace was secured by liberal
promises of wealth and advancement: a band of conspirators was then appointed
to seize Constantine, but a timely warning enabled him to escape to Triton on
the Propontis. He might easily have recovered possession of the capital, had he
not wasted two months in idleness and folly. Abandoned at last by every friend,
he was seized by his mother’s emissaries and dragged to Constantinople. After
being detained some time a prisoner in the porphyry apartment in which he was
born, his eyes were put out on the 19th August, 797. Constantine had given his
cruel mother public marks of that affection which he appears really to have
felt for her, and to which he had sacrificed his best friends. He had erected a
statue of bronze to her honour, which long adorned the hippodrome of
Constantinople.
Irene was now publicly proclaimed sovereign of the
empire. She had for some time been allowed by her careless son to direct the
whole administration, and it was his confidence in her maternal affection which
enabled her to work his ruin. She of course immediately released all the
ecclesiastical opponents of her son from confinement, and restored them to
their honours and offices. The Patriarch Tarasios was ordered to make his peace
with the monks by excommunicating his creature, the abbot Joseph; and the
closest alliance was formed between him and his former opponents, Plato and
Theodore, the latter of whom was shortly after rewarded for his sufferings by
being elevated to the dignity of abbot of the great monastery of Studion,
The Empress Irene reigned five years, during which her
peace was disturbed by the political intrigues of her ministers. Her life
offers a more interesting subject for biography than for history, for it is
more striking by its personal details, than important in its political effects.
But the records of private life in the age in which she lived, and of the state
of society at Athens, among which she was educated, are so few, that it would
require to be written by a novelist, who could combine the strange vicissitudes
of her fortunes with a true portraiture of human feelings, collared with a
train of thought, and enriched with facts gleaned from contemporary lives and
letters of Greek saints and monks. Born in a private in a provincial, though a
wealthy and populous city, it must have required a rare combination of personal
beauty, native grace, and mental superiority, to fill the rank of empress of
the Romans, to which she was suddenly raised, at the court of a haughty
sovereign like her father-in-law Constantine V, not only without embarrassment,
but even with universal praise. Again, when vested with the regency, as widow
of an iconoclast emperor, it required no trifling talent, firmness of purpose,
and conciliation of manner, to overthrow an ecclesiastical party which had
ruled the church for more than half a century. On the other hand, the
deliberate way in which she undermined the authority of her son, whose
character she had corrupted by a bad education, and the callousness with which
she gained his confidence in order to deprive him of his throne, and send him
to pass his life as a blind monk in a secluded cell, proves that the beautiful
empress, whose memory was cherished as an orthodox saint, was endowed with the
thoughts and feelings of a demon. Strange to say, when the object of Irene's
crimes was reached, she soon felt all the satiety of gratified ambition. She no
longer took the interest she had previously taken in conducting the public
business of the empire, and abandoned the exercise of her power to seven
eunuchs, whom she selected to perform the duties of ministers of state. She
forgot that her own elevation to the throne offered a tempting premium to
successful treason. Nicephorus, the grand treasurer, cajoled her favourite
eunuchs to join a plot, by which she was dethroned, and exiled to a monastery
she had founded in Prince’s Island; but she was soon after removed to Lesbos,
where she died in a few months, almost forgotten. Her fate after her death was
as singular as during her life. The unnatural mother was canonized by the
Greeks as an orthodox saint, and at her native Athens several churches are
still pointed out which she is said to have founded, though not on any certain
authority.
Under the government of Constantine VI and Irene, the
imperial policy, both in the civil administration and external relations,
followed the course traced out by Leo the Isaurian. To reduce all the Slavonian
colonists who had formed settlements within the bounds of the empire to
complete submission was the first object of Irene’s regency. The extension of
these settlements, after the great plague in 747, began to alarm the
government. Extensive districts in Thrace, Macedonia, and the Peloponnesus, had
assumed the form of independent communities, and hardly acknowledged allegiance
to the central administration at Constantinople. Irene naturally took more than
ordinary interest in the state of Greece. She kept up the closest
communications with her family at Athens, and shared the desire of every Greek
to repress the presumption of the Slavonians and restore the ascendancy of the
Greek population in the rural districts. In the year 783 she sent Stavrakios at the head of a well-appointed army to
Thessalonica, to reduce the Slavonian tribes in Macedonia to direct dependence,
and enforce the regular payment of tribute. From Thessalonica, Stavrakios marched through Macedonia and Greece to the
Peloponnesus, punishing the Slavonians for the disorders they had committed,
and carrying off a number of their able-bodied men to serve as soldiers or to
be sold as slaves. In the following year Irene led the young Emperor
Constantine to visit the Slavonian settlements in the vicinity of Thessalonica,
which had been reduced to absolute submission. Berrhoea,
like several Greek cities, had fallen into ruins; it was now rebuilt, and
received the name of Irenopolis. Strong garrisons
were placed in Philippopolis and Auchialos, to cut
off all communication between the Slavonians in the empire, and their
countrymen under the Bulgarian government. The Slavonians in Thrace and
Macedonia, though unable to maintain their provincial independence, still took
advantage of their position, when removed from the eye of the local
administration, to form bands of robbers and pirates, which rendered the communications
with Constantinople and Thessalonica at times insecure both by land and sea.
After Irene had dethroned her son, the Slavonian
population gave proofs of dangerous activity. A conspiracy was formed to place
one of the sons of Constantine V on the throne. Irene had banished her
brothers-in-law to Athens, where they were sure of being carefully watched by
her relations, who were strongly interested in supporting her cause. The
project of the partisans of the exiled princes to seize Constantinople was
discovered, and it was found that the chief reliance of the Isaurian party in
Greece was placed in the assistance they expected to derive from the Slavonian
population. The chief of Velzetia was to have carried
off the sons of Constantine V from Athens, when the plan was discovered and
frustrated by the vigilance of Irene's friends. The four unfortunate
princes, who had already lost their tongues, were now deprived of their sight,
and exiled with their brother Nicephorus to Panormus, where they were again
made tools of a conspiracy in the reign of Michael I.
The war with the Saracens was carried on with varied
success during the reigns of Leo IV, Constantine VI, and Irene. The military
talents of Leo III and Constantine V had formed an army that resisted the
forces of the caliphs under the powerful government of Mansur; and even after
the veterans had been disbanded by Irene, the celebrated Haroun Al Rashid was
unable to make any permanent conquests, though the empire was engaged in war
with the Saracens, the Bulgarians, and the troops of Charlemagne at the same
time.
In the year 782, Haroun was sent by his father, the
Caliph Mahdy, to invade the empire, at the head of
one hundred thousand men, attended by Rabia and Jahja the Barmecid.
The object of the Mohammedan prince was, however, rather directed to pillaging
the country and carrying off prisoners to supply the slave-markets of his
father's dominions, than to effect permanent conquests. The absence of a
considerable part of the Byzantine army, which was engaged in Sicily
suppressing the rebellion of Helpidios, enabled
Haroun to march through all Asia Minor to the shores of the Bosphorus, and from
the hill above Sutari to gaze on Constantinople,
which must then have presented a more imposing aspect than Bagdad. Irene was
compelled to purchase peace, or rather to conclude a truce for three years, by
paying an annual tribute of seventy thousand pieces of gold, and stipulating to
allow the Saracen army to retire unmolested with all its plunder; for Haroun
and his generals found that their advance had involved them in many
difficulties, of which an active enemy might have taken advantage. Haroun Al
Rashid is said to have commanded in person against the Byzantine Empire in
eight campaigns. Experience taught him to respect the valour and discipline of
the Christian armies, whenever able officers enjoyed the confidence of the
court of Constantinople; and when he ascended the throne, he deemed it
necessary to form a permanent army along the Mesopotamian frontier, to
strengthen the fortifications of the towns with additional works, and add to
their means of defence by planting in them new colonies of Mohammedan
inhabitants. During the time Constantine VI ruled the empire, he appeared
several times at the head of the Byzantine armies, and his fickle character did
not prevent his displaying firmness in the field. His popularity with the
soldiers was viewed with jealousy by his mother, who laboured to retard his
movements, and prevent him from obtaining any decided success. The Saracens
acknowledged that the Greeks were their superiors in naval affairs; but in the
year 792 they defeated the Byzantine fleet in the gulf of Attalia with great loss. The admiral, Theophilos, was taken
prisoner, and solicited by the caliph to abjure Christianity and enter his
service. The admiral refused to forsake his religion or serve against his
country, and Haroun Al Rashid was mean enough to order him to be put to death.
When the Saracens heard that Constantine had been
dethroned, and the empire was again ruled by a woman whom they had already
compelled to pay tribute, they again plundered Asia Minor up to the walls of
Ephesus. Irene, whose ministers were occupied with court intrigues, took no
measures to resist the enemy, and was once more obliged to pay tribute to the
caliph. The annual incursions of the Saracens into the Christian territory were
made in great part for the purpose of carrying away slaves; and great numbers
of Christians were sold throughout the caliph’s dominions into hopeless
slavery. Haroun, therefore, took the field in his wars with the Byzantine
Empire more as a slave-merchant than a conqueror. But this very circumstance,
which made war a commercial speculation, introduced humanity into the hostile
operations of the Christians and Mohammedans: the lower classes were spared, as
they were immediately sold for the price they would bring in the first
slave-market; while prisoners of the better class were retained, in order to
draw from them a higher ransom than their value as slaves, or to exchange them
for men of equal rank who had fallen into the hands of the enemy. This
circumstance had at last brought about a regular exchange of prisoners as early
as the reign of Constantine V, A.D. 769. In the year 797, a new clause was
inserted in a treaty for the exchange of prisoners, binding the contracting
parties to release all supernumerary captives, on the payment of a fixed sum
for each individual. This arrangement enabled the Christians, who were
generally the greatest sufferers, to save their friends from death or perpetual
slavery, but it added to the inducements of the Saracens to invade the empire.
The Byzantine, or, as they were still called, the Roman armies, were placed at
a disadvantage in this species of warfare. Their discipline was adapted to
defensive military operations, or to meet the enemy on the field of battle, but
not to act with rapidity in plundering and carrying off slaves; while the state
of society in Christian countries rendered the demand for slaves less constant
than in countries where polygamy prevailed, and women were excluded from many
of the duties of domestic service.
The war on the Bulgarian frontier was carried on
simultaneously with that against the Mohammedans. In the year 788, a Bulgarian army
surprised the general of Thrace, who had encamped carelessly on the banks of
the Strymon, and destroyed him, with the greater part of the troops. In 791
Constantine VI took the field in person against Cardam,
king of the Bulgarians, but the campaign was without any result: in the
following year, however, the Emperor was defeated in a pitched battle, in which
several of the ablest generals of the Roman armies were slain. Yet, in 796,
Constantine again led his troops against the Bulgarians: though victorious, he
obtained no success sufficient to compensate his former defeat. The effects of
the military organization of the frontier by Constantine V are visible in the
superiority which the Byzantine armies assumed, even after the loss of a
battle, and the confidence with which they carried the war into the Bulgarian
territory.
The Byzantine Empire was at this period the country in
which there reigned a higher degree of order, and more justice, than in any
other. This is shown by the extensive emigration of Armenian Christians which
took place in the year 787. The Caliph Haroun Al Rashid, whose reputation among
the Mohammedans has arisen rather from his orthodoxy than his virtues,
persecuted his Christian subjects with great cruelty, and at last his oppression
induced twelve thousand Armenians to quit their native country, and settle in
the Byzantine Empire. Some years later, in the reign of Michael III the
drunkard, orthodoxy became the great feature in the Byzantine administration;
and, unfortunately, Christian orthodoxy strongly resembled Mohammedanism in the
spirit of persecution. The Paulicians were then persecuted by the emperors, as
the Armenians had previously been by the caliphs, and fled for toleration to
the Mohammedans.
THE REIGNS OF NICEPHORUS I, MICHAEL I,
AND LEO V THE ARMENIAN.
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