READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE FROMA.D. 717 TO 1453
CHAPTER X.
THE FALL OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE
Sect. I
The Reign of Isaac II (Angelos), A.D. 1185-1195.
The Byzantine Empire was now hurrying rapidly to its end, and little is
left to record except the progress of its dismemberment and destruction. The
despotic power of the emperors was so firmly established, that every executive
act emanated directly from the imperial cabinet. But, in perfecting this system
of centralization, every tie of interest which had once attached the
provincials to the imperial authority had been broken. The adhesion of the
distant countries and various nations which composed the empire was destroyed;
while, at the same time, the vital energy of the Greek population, which had
grown to be the dominant race, was weakened by the immorality which, under the
house of Comnenus, had spread through every rank of society. The defensive powers
of the empire were consequently rapidly diminishing. The lavish expenditure of
the imperial court impelled the government to carry its fiscal exactions so
far, that the whole annual profits of the people’s industry were absorbed by
taxation, and only the inferior classes of the cultivators of the soil and the
day-labourers were able to retain the scanty surplus of wealth necessary to
perpetuate their existence. Indeed, it is evident that encroachments were
constantly made on the vested capital accumulated in past ages; and the funds
appropriated in preceding times to uphold the most indispensable adjuncts of
civilization were either annihilated or diverted from their destination. Ports,
bridges, roads, aqueducts, and fortifications were seen falling to ruin in
every province. Court spectacles and ecclesiastical ceremonies at the capital
absorbed the funds which had been accumulated in distant municipalities for
local improvements, hospitals, and schools. Everything that could inspire the
people with zeal to defend their national independence had disappeared, or was
rapidly disappearing, to aid in increasing the intensity of ecclesiastical
bigotry.
Political despotism, national demoralization, ecclesiastical corruption,
fiscal oppression, and habitual misgovernment, must therefore be considered
responsible for the anarchical and disorderly state of Constantinople at the
accession of Isaac Angelos; and the circumstance that
a man so incapable and worthless was raised to the throne by the popular voice,
fully testifies the degradation of the inhabitants of the capital.
After the people forced their way into the great palace, and established
Isaac there as emperor, they remained for several days in possession of the
greater part of the buildings which were enclosed within the circuit of its
fortified walls. The residence of the emperors of the East was plundered like a
sacked city; the furniture was carried away; the chapel was robbed of its
plate, ornaments, images, and relics; the casket containing the letters said to
have been written by our Saviour to Abgarus, king of
Edessa, was stolen.
The private treasury of the emperor was broken into, and eighty-six
thousand byzants in gold coin, thirty centners in silver coin, and
two hundred of copper, were carried off, besides a considerable quantity of
bullion. The new emperor did not venture to arrest the devastation going on
before his eyes while his rival was still living. He removed to the palace of Blachern before Andronicus was taken; and it was only after
the populace was gratified with the tyrant’s death, and their rapacity
exhausted with plundering the residences of his partisans, that Isaac attempted
to re-establish order.
The family of Comnenus had been distinguished for talent and courage.
Isaac I, Alexius I, John II, and Manuel, were all men of great natural ability.
The family of Angelos affords a strong contrast. The
founder of the house was Constantine Angelos, a noble
of Philadelphia, who married Theodora, the youngest daughter of Alexius I. In
consequence of his incapacity the Byzantine fleet was defeated by the Sicilians
in 1152. His son Andronicus was entrusted by Manuel with a high command in Asia
Minor after the disastrous battle of Myriokephalon,
and he conducted himself with so much cowardice during the campaign of 1178
that the emperor threatened to send him in procession through the streets of
Constantinople clad in a female dress. The Emperors Isaac II and Alexius III
were the children of this cowardly general.
Isaac Angelos may, nevertheless, be considered
as a fair specimen of the Byzantine nobility in his age; and his government may
be taken as a correct type of the society he ruled. A wise sovereign is as
rarely found in a corrupt people as a virtuous population is seen
groaning for any great length of time under a native tyrant. The vices of Isaac
II were certainly those of his subjects; he was weak and presumptuous, cowardly
and insolent, mean and rapacious, superstitious and vicious. The wonder is, not
that his administration accelerated the ruin of the empire, but that the
inhabitants of so many provinces submitted tamely to his government. No
preceding emperor had paid less attention to public business; he seemed to
consider the throne merely as a means of gratifying his passion for pompous
dresses and unbounded luxury. The court was filled with an innumerable train of
pages, mistresses, clowns, musicians, and comedians. The emperor made himself
contemptible by strutting about publicly in gorgeous robes like a peacock; and
hateful, by sharing the bribes which his courtiers and ministers openly
exacted. The Emperor Isaac II had also a taste for building. New apartments
were added to the old palaces, and new villas were constructed. Churches were
pulled down, not only to rebuild others, but even to strengthen the palace of Blachern with their materials; and new hospitals were
erected. The rapacity of Isaac was so great that it overcame his superstition.
When he was besieged in Constantinople by Branas, he
borrowed large sums of money from the churches, placing the imperial plate and
jewels in deposit as security. But as soon as he was delivered from danger he
sent for the plate, which the clergy were compelled to restore, and never
repaid the money. Yet no emperor ever did more for ornamenting churches or for
filling the public squares and street-corners with gilded pictures of the
Virgin than Isaac. When reproached with his inconsistency, he replied that all
things were permitted to the emperor, who represented the Divine Power; and to
authorize his appropriation of church property to his own use, he quoted the
example of Constantine the Great, who converted one of the nails of the holy
cross into a bit for his charger, and put another in the front of his helmet.
Authorized by this example, he plundered the richest churches in the provinces
of their paintings and mosaics; and among these he carried off from Monemvasia
a celebrated representation of our Saviour led out to be crucified, which was
considered one of the finest works of art embodying Christ’s sufferings. His
exactions and injustice might possibly have affected only some particular
classes of society; but he rendered himself universally unpopular by
adulterating the imperial coinage.
The reign of Isaac opened with victory over the Sicilian invaders. After
the conquest of Thessalonica they had divided their forces; and while the
troops were wasting their time in pillaging the villages of Thrace, the fleet
under the command of Tancred entered the Propontis and advanced within sight of
Constantinople. Weak as Isaac was, he saw that the empire was exposed to
serious danger from the operations of the Sicilians; and he exerted himself to
furnish the Byzantine army with the means of attacking the enemy. To prove the
interest he took in the welfare of the troops, he dispatched a sum of four
thousand pounds’ weight of gold to the military chest, in order to
discharge arrears and furnish a donative. The first successes of the
Sicilians had inspired their generals with unbounded presumption, and they
viewed with contempt the assembly of a Byzantine army in their vicinity. Alexis Branas, who was an experienced officer, availed
himself of their carelessness to drive in their advanced guards, and defeat one
division of their army which had reached Mosynopolis.
The remaining Sicilians concentrated their forces at Amphipolis, where another
battle was fought on the 7th November 1185, at a place called Demerize, in which the Byzantine army was again victorious.
This victory decided the fate of the expedition. The generals of the land
forces, Counts Aldoin and Richard d'Acerra,
were both made prisoners; and the fugitives who gained Thessalonica immediately
embarked and put to sea, without any attempt to defend the place. As soon as
Tancred heard of these disasters he abandoned the Propontis, and, collecting
the shattered remains of the expedition, returned to Sicily. Dyrrachium was the
only conquest retained; but King William II, considering the expense of
guarding that fortress incommensurate with its political importance to Sicily,
soon after ordered his garrison to abandon it. About four thousand Sicilian
prisoners were sent by Branas to Constantinople.
These unfortunate men were treated with the greatest cruelty by the worthless
emperor, who ordered them to be thrown into dungeons, where they were left
destitute of every succour, so that they owed the preservation of their lives
to private charity. Isaac ought now to have directed all his attention, and
devoted the whole force of the empire, to repel the incursions of the Turks,
who were annually extending their ravages farther into the Asiatic provinces.
Kilidy-Arslan II, though
more than seventy years of age, took advantage of the disorders that attended
the death of Andronicus to send the Emir Sami into the Thrakesian theme, where
he laid waste the district of Celbiane and the plain
of the Caister, from whence he carried off an immense booty in slaves and
cattle, leaving whole villages desolate. The emperor, instead of forming
garrisons on the frontier, and establishing squadrons of light cavalry to
protect the exposed districts by vigorous opposition, considered that he should
be able to retain more money for his private pleasures by paying an annual
tribute to the sultan, and distributing presents among the chiefs of the
nomadic hordes. The reign of Isaac II is filled with a series of revolts,
caused by his incapable administration and financial rapacity. The most
important of these was the great rebellion of the Vallachian and Bulgarian
population which occupied the country between Mount Haemus and the Danube. The
immense population of this extensive country now separated itself finally from
the government of the Eastern Empire, and its political destinies ceased to be
united with those of the Greeks. A new European monarchy, called the
Vallachian, or second Bulgarian kingdom, was formed, which for some time acted
an important part in the affairs of the Byzantine Empire, and contributed
powerfully to the depression of the Greek race. The sudden importance assumed
by the Vallachian population in tins revolution, and the great extent of
country then occupied by a people who had previously acted no prominent part in
the political events of the East, render it necessary to give some account of
their previous history. Four different countries are spoken of under the name
of Wallachia by the Byzantine writers: Great Wallachia, which was the country
round the plain of Thessaly, particularly the southern and south-western part;
White Wallachia, or the modern Bulgaria, which formed the Wallacho-Bulgarian
kingdom that revolted from Isaac II; Black Wallachia, Mavrowallachia,
or Kara-bogdon, which is Moldavia; and Hungarowallachia, or the Wallachia of the present day,
comprising a part of Transylvania.
There is no subject connected with the decline and fall of the Roman
Empire, both in the East and West, of greater importance for tracing accurately
the political and social progress of the inhabitants of Europe, than the
history of the diminution, extinction, and modification of the population in
the various nations subjected to the Roman domination. In the preceding pages I
have pointed out that every class of society raised somewhat above the ranks of
poverty was exposed to such constant fiscal extortion, and bound with so many
local and social fetters, that in the latter days of the empire the middling
classes lost the means of perpetuating their existence; and, consequently, the
bulk of the inhabitants actually disappeared in many provinces, which were then
easily occupied and colonized by the northern nations—as happened in the case
of Serbia and Bulgaria. But it is more difficult to trace the modifications
which gradually change a nation than to note the final extinction of a numerous
class, though, in truth, we can rarely be assured that the extinction of any
race of mankind is anything more than a modification of its elements. It is
therefore necessary to distinguish accurately how far the causes which tended
to extinguish the population operated on the different classes of society,
without reference to their ethnological differences; and to inquire whether the
causes which modified the civilization and language of the races that have
survived the Roman domination had any direct connection with the increase or
decrease of their numbers. No historical facts seem more evident than these
two, that the Thracian race—which during the first century of the Christian era
formed the most numerous ethnological division of the inhabitants of the
eastern part of the Roman empire—has long ceased to exist; nor, on the other
hand, that the modern Greeks are a modification of the ancient Achaian, Dorian,
Ionian, Aeolian, and Hellenic population. And yet there are those who consider
that the Albanians and Wallachians have quite as much right to be considered as
the descendants of the ancient Thracians, who instructed the Greeks in the
first elements of civilization, as the modern Greeks have to be regarded as the
progeny of the Hellenes who were conquered by the Romans.
The universality of the causes which operated under the iron sway of
Rome, both in diminishing the numbers of mankind, and in modifying national
elements, renders it difficult to determine the limits of their separate
effects. There is no doubt, however, that the inhabitants of the extensive
plains and pastoral mountains of Thrace were more exposed to the material
oppression of the Roman administration than the inhabitants of the narrow
coasts and rocky mountains of Greece. While fiscal extortion and military
operations exterminated the majority of the free Thracians, moral influences
only modified the customs and language of Greece. In every province of her
empire Rome planted colonies in which her usages, laws, and language were as
completely national as they were in Rome itself. In Greece, Corinth, Patras,
and Nicopolis were Latin cities; and for many ages
they were almost the only flourishing cities in the country. The provincial
administration, and particularly the fiscal, was everywhere carried on in Latin;
the proconsular tribunals acknowledged the existence of no other language, and
thus even the Greeks were bent from their original ideas, and compelled to
adopt new habits, new thoughts, and new expressions. In the West, Gaul and
Spain were modified according to a Roman type, of which they bear the impress
to the present day; in the East, the same causes produced an effect on the more
civilized inhabitants of Greece, though the change was of a modified nature.
Similar influences, bearing powerfully on the whole Greek people wherever they
might be scattered, effected the same ethnological change on the whole race.
The rude mountaineers of Laconia could not well become less civilized than they
had been before the Roman conquest, but they yielded to the same circumstances
which affected Athens and Alexandria, Syracuse and Byzantium. The moral power
of the Roman administration changed the ancient Hellenes into modern Greeks,
according to the impress of one unvarying type; and of that change into Romaioi, or subjects of the Roman Empire, the Greek
language bears ineffaceable marks. As the institutions of the great
Transatlantic republic mould English, Irish, Celts, Dutch, Germans, French, and
Spaniards who settle under its sway into one people, so the great empire of the
ancient world moulded the Spartan, Athenian, Dorian, Ionian, and Aeolian into a
homogeneous mass. There can be no doubt that a change similar to that which
took place among the Greeks was wrought about the same time on the Thracian
race, but a dark veil covers the history of the native proprietors of the soil
in the countries between the Aegean Sea and the Danube for many centuries.
The Vallachian population of Thrace began to acquire some degree of
importance during the reign of Alexius I, though the passages in which it is
mentioned are vague. The number of the same race which then inhabited the
countries north of the Danube is also recorded to have been considerable. We
have already had occasion to notice that in the reign of Manuel I they were the
masters of a considerable part of Thessaly, which was subsequently known by the
name of Great Wallachia; and people were so struck by the resemblance which
their language bore to Latin that they were generally pronounced to be the
descendants of Italian colonists. Like the modern Greeks, they called
themselves Romans, from having, like the Greeks, acquired the rights of Roman
citizenship by the decree of Caracalla; and the name of Vlachs, or Wallachians,
appears to have been first given them by the Sclavonians who colonized their depopulated plains. It may be observed that the Slavonians
gave the Italians the same name, struck apparently by their general similarity,
and that the name has always been repudiated by the Wallachians.
No portion of the Roman Empire was more rapidly changed or earlier
depopulated by the severity of the government than the Thracian provinces,
though they were among the last which were subjected to fiscal oppression.
Several Roman legions were constantly quartered in these provinces, and
numerous Roman colonies were founded in them. Roman veterans settled in the
country, and young Thracians departed annually as recruits to distant legions.
The Latin language appears also to have amalgamated more readily with the
Thracian than with the Greek. We are informed by a Greek writer, who was
himself a Roman ambassador, that in the middle of the fifth century the Greek
language was unknown in the countries between the Adriatic, the Aegean, the
Black Sea, and the Danube, except in the commercial towns on the coasts of
Thrace and Illyria; but that Latin was the ordinary medium of communication
among foreign races, both for commercial and political intercourse. In the
sixth century, the Thracian dialect bore a strong resemblance to corrupt Latin,
and to the Vallachian language spoken at the present day. This Vallachian
language, too, like the modern Greek, bears strong marks of having been formed
by the operation of one overwhelming influence, affecting every portion of the
nation at the same time. And accordingly, as in the case of the Greeks, we find
every distant and isolated tribe speaking the same language which is spoken on
Mount Pindus by the last survivors of the population of Great Wallachia, as
well as by the Romans beyond the Danube and the Carpathian Mountains, in
the Bannat, and in Transylvania. But, after all this,
the question remains undecided whether these Wallachians are the lineal
descendants of the Thracian race, who Strabo tells us extended as far south as
Thessaly, and as far north as to the borders of Pannonia; for of the Thracian
language we know nothing.
From some causes which cannot now be traced, it is certain that the
Vallachian population in the Byzantine Empire increased greatly in wealth and
numbers during the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Benjamin of Tudela gives a romantic account of the complete
independence of those who inhabited Thessaly; but the general fact, that they
were governed according to their own usages by a tributary prince—as the Sclavonians of the Peloponnesus had been in the ninth and
tenth centuries—is confirmed by Nicetas, who informs
us that they were able to defend their independence against the Crusaders, who
conquered the Byzantine empire. Though the Wallachians of Mount Haemus had not,
like their countrymen in Thessaly, aspired at self-legislation and
independence, they had been gradually thrown more and more on their national
resources by the oppressions of Manuel, by the disorders that prevailed in the
central administration after his death, and by the invasion of the Sicilians.
The immediate cause of their rebellion against the empire was the imposition of
an additional tax by the Emperor Isaac in the year 1186, to defray the expenses
of his marriage with Margaret, the daughter of Bela III, king of Hungary.
Three brothers, Peter, Asan, and John, placed themselves at the head of
the insurrection, and claimed to be descended from the elder line of the
Bulgarian monarchs, though they were Wallachians in their nurture and early
associations. The Bulgarian and Sclavonian population, from Mount Haemus to the Danube, suffered from the same oppression
as the Vallachian, and detested the Byzantine government and their Greek rulers
with equal hatred. The hope of throwing off the domination of their oppressors,
induced all to take up arms with enthusiasm; and as superstition was a feeling
more deeply rooted in the human breast at this period than patriotism, it was
announced, and generally believed, that Saint Demetrius, the favourite saint of
the Wallachians, Bulgarians, and Sclavonians of these
provinces, had forsaken the city of Thessalonica, of which he had hitherto been
the patron, and had removed his sanctuary to a church lately erected to his
honour by Peter. The fanatics considered it their duty to put every Greek to
death who fell into their hands; and the people had suffered so much from the
exactions of the fiscal officers of the Byzantine government, that they were
incited to take part in these cruelties.
Peter having assembled an army in Mount Haemus, and assumed the imperial
title, marched into the districts of Thrace, which were inhabited by the
Greeks, and laid everything waste; but his first operations were unsuccessful.
He was defeated, and compelled to seek refuge in the Patzinak territory, beyond
the Danube. In the year 1187 the rebels were again defeated by the emperor’s
uncle, John the Sevastokrator; but the jealousy of
Isaac inducing him to remove his uncle from the command of the army, he sent
John Cantacuzenos, who had been deprived of his
sight, to take the command of the troops. The rebels now proved victorious;
and, to arrest their progress, the emperor was compelled to entrust Alexis Branas with the conduct of the war. Branas drove the Wallachians beyond Mount Haemus; but as soon as he had driven the
rebels out of Thrace, he left them to consolidate their power in Bulgaria, and
marched his army to Adrianople. Seeing that rebellion was to a certain degree
successful both in Bulgaria and Cyprus, and foreseeing that new insurrections
would soon follow, he thought that it would be easy to turn the general
discontent to his own profit. He therefore assumed the title of Emperor, and
appeared before Constantinople at the head of a well-appointed force, not
expecting to meet with any serious resistance.
But the persons connected with the general administration, and the
people within the walls of the capital, entertained the greatest aversion to
receive an emperor raised to the throne by the army. They feared that he would
be compelled to effect a financial revolution, and make numerous personal
changes in order to reward his followers. Alexis Branas,
therefore, met with a more determined opposition than he had expected. But
Isaac, in place of aiding the troops, consumed his time in prayers and
processions, so that Branas, manning a number of
fishing-boats which he had collected in the islands of the Propontis, rendered
himself master of the imperial fleet. The capital seemed on the eve of falling
into his hands, when it was saved by Conrad of Montferrat. That distinguished
Crusader, who has transmitted the vain title of King of Jerusalem to the
reigning family of Sardinia, had visited Constantinople on his way to
Palestine. Having married Theodora, the sister of the Emperor Isaac, and received
the rank of Caesar, he felt himself authorized to reproach his brother-in-law
with his misconduct, and point out to him that, unless he exerted himself, he
was likely to lose his crown. The alarming position of Constantinople rendered
the Greeks willing to submit to the superior military skill of Conrad. His
satirical observations at last roused Isaac to activity. He told him that
things were in such a state, that swords and lances were the means Heaven would
use if Isaac’s crown was to be saved, not priests and processions. When he
found the emperor occupied in planning feasts, he coolly remarked that it would
be time enough to think of the enjoyments of the table when he should be
assured of the future; but, for the moment, the defence of Constantinople
demanded all his care. Conrad fortunately found two hundred and fifty Latin
knights and five hundred veteran infantry at Constantinople, who ranged
themselves under his orders. All the Turkish and Georgian merchants
who resided in the city, and whose expeditions had accustomed them to war,
formed themselves into corps to defend their property. Isaac himself at last
enrolled all the native soldiers in the capital, and roused the spirit of the
troops by a donative, which he procured by pledging the imperial plate, and
borrowing money from the church funds.
At the head of these forces Conrad took the field, accompanied by the
emperor. Branas had encamped his army before
Constantinople without attempting to form a regular siege. The two armies spent
several hours in skirmishing; but Branas having
examined the strength of the imperial army, at last drew together his best
troops and prepared for a decisive attack. Conrad, who had closely watched his
operations, and kept his Latin knights ready for some daring exploit, boldly
anticipated the enemy’s movement. His defensive armour was a red linen
body-coat of numerous folds, soddened together into a substance impenetrable to
lance or sword; and with this light covering, and his small triangular shield,
which made him appear to the Greeks almost defenceless, he led his cavalry to
charge the centre of the rebel army. The shock bore down every opposition; and
the cavalry of Branas were soon scattered in
irretrievable confusion. Branas, attempting to rally
them, was dashed from his saddle by Conrad’s lance; and when he demanded
quarter on the ground, Conrad exclaimed—“You must pay your treason with your
life”. His attendants immediately decapitated the prostrate general.
This victory was celebrated by Isaac as if it had been achieved by his
own military prowess. He passed through Constantinople in triumph before the
army, with the head of Branas borne before him on the
point of a lance; and when he reached the imperial palace, he had the
inhumanity to send this bloody trophy to Maria Comnena,
the widow of Branas, whom the Emperor Manuel, her
uncle, had called, for her virtues, an honour to the imperial family. The
populace of the capital was allowed to make expeditions for the purpose of
plundering the inhabitants of the islands of the Propontis who had declared in
favour of Branas; and houses and villages were seen
in flames on every side of Constantinople. The Latins availed themselves of the
general anarchy to plunder the houses of many of the wealthy nobles who were considered
hostile to the emperor’s policy; and at last a regular battle was fought by the
Greeks and Latins in the streets, which the imperial officers had the greatest
difficulty in terminating. Much blood was shed on both sides; and the hatred
between the two races and religions became every day more bitter. Conrad
finding that the state of affairs was not favourable to his ambition, his wife
Theodora dying, and the news arriving that his father, the Marquis William, had
been taken prisoner by Saladin at the battle of Tiberias, quitted
Constantinople and arrived in Palestine, where he immediately increased his
fame by defeating Saladin under the walls of Tyre.
The Vallachian war was resumed after the death of Branas,
and Isaac took the field against the rebels; but though Peter and Asan were
unable, with their Vallachian, Bulgarian, and Sclavonian levies, to encounter the imperial army, they prevented the campaign from
producing any decided results. After besieging Lobitza for three months, the Byzantine army was compelled to retire, AD 1188.
THIRD CRUSADE, A.D. 1189
While the Wallachians were thus gradually forming an independent
kingdom, a new crusade threatened the Byzantine Empire with fresh dangers.
Fortunately for the Greeks, the only leader of the third crusade who passed
through the dominions of Isaac was Frederic I (Barbarossa), Emperor of Germany,
an experienced and prudent monarch, who wished to avoid all collision with the
Byzantine government; and who, having passed through the empire with his uncle
Conrad during the second crusade, knew how to adopt the most effectual measures
for preserving order. He allowed no pilgrim to join his standard who did not
possess three marks of silver to defray his expenses on the road. Never did a
finer army, or a nobler and abler commander, leave Europe for the East; yet, in
spite of the valour and discipline of the troops, and the experience of the
general, fortune declared against this expedition, and it was as fruitless as
the wildest enterprises of preceding Crusaders.
Before Frederic Barbarossa quitted Germany, he dispatched an embassy to
Constantinople to ask permission to pass through the Byzantine empire, and
Isaac sent Dukas, the intendant of posts, to arrange
the articles of a treaty by which all disorders might be prevented during the
march of the Crusaders, and a sufficient supply of provisions and forage might
be furnished to them at reasonable prices. Frederic made all his dispositions
with prudence; but he had not proceeded far on his march before the inconstancy
of Isaac, who, like most of the Byzantine courtiers and the Greek clergy,
heartily detested the Franks, induced him to send orders to throw obstacles in
the way of the advance of the German army, and stop their supplies of provisions. Nicetas the historian was then governor of
Philippopolis; and he informed us that he received from day to day the most
contradictory orders from the court. By one dispatch he was ordered to repair
the fortifications, by another to dismantle the place. Attempts were made to
render the roads impracticable; large trees were cut down to block up the
passes, and other measures were taken which only delayed and irritated the
Germans, who punished the subjects of Isaac for obeying the orders of their
emperor. Frederic reached Philippopolis on the 23d of August 1189, and entered
the city without opposition. The Armenians, who had been for ages established
in this city and its neighbourhood, and whose heretical opinions rendered them
ill-disposed towards the Greeks, who treated them often with great injustice,
welcomed the Latins, and afforded them exact information concerning the state
of the empire, and the movements of the Byzantine troops.
The insolence of Isaac at last involved the two emperors in war; but the
Greek troops were unable to resist the Germans, and were soon defeated. In
their flight they plundered the inhabitants of the country far more cruelly
than the Crusaders. The opposition he had met with, and the advanced time of
the year, induced Frederic to take up his winter-quarters in Thrace. He felt
that the proceedings of Isaac might force him to attack Constantinople; and he
therefore made arrangements for assembling a fleet of Genoese, Pisan, and
Venetian ships, which he could employ either against the Byzantine Empire, or
for transporting his army to Asia, as circumstances might require.
As Isaac persisted in his hostile conduct, Frederic marched to
Adrianople in the month of February 1190. He then took Didymoteichos by storm, and occupied Arcadiopolis. Isaac, who had
trusted for success rather to the prophecies which the bigoted members of the
Greek clergy had repeated to him than to his military arrangements, was now
seriously alarmed, and sent to solicit peace on any terms. The conduct of the
German emperor was in accordance with his previous declarations. He asked
nothing but what Isaac had promised by their first treaty. Frederic had also
afforded a proof of his generosity which ought to have made a deep impression
even on a fool like Isaac, and on a herd of such knaves as composed the
Byzantine court. Peter and Asan had offered to join the Crusaders with an army
of forty thousand Wallachians and Bulgarians, on condition that the German
emperor would invest one of the brothers with the crown of Bulgaria; but
Frederic refused to intermeddle in the affairs of another Christian state,
further than was necessary to remove the obstacles thrown in the way of his
march to the Holy Land. The Byzantine government renewed its promises to supply
the Crusaders with provisions as long as they remained in the imperial
dominions, engaged to furnish them with vessels to convey them from Gallipoli
to Asia, and gave hostages to Frederic, who were to be released when he reached
Philadelphia. Frederic also insisted that the Emperor Isaac and five hundred of
the principal officers of the empire should publicly take an oath to fulfil the
articles of the treaty to his ambassadors in the Church of St Sophia, and in
the presence of the Patriarch; and to this the Byzantine emperor was compelled
to submit.
On the 28th of March 1190, Frederic passed over into Asia Minor with the
last division of his army, and marched by Thyatira, Philadelphia, and Laodicea
into the dominions of the Sultan of Iconium. He was generally received with as
much ill-will as the Byzantine authorities ventured to show; but at Laodicea he
found an independent Greek population accustomed to continual war with the
Turks, and who trusted to their own exertions, not to the imperial court and
the central government, for safety. These free citizens gave the Crusaders a
sincere welcome, and afforded them every assistance in their power. Frederic
was so touched by their conduct that he knelt down in the plain before his
camp, and prayed that God would recompense the people of Laodicea.
The Sultan of Iconium had promised to allow the Crusaders to pass
through his dominions without molestation, and permit them to purchase
provisions; but, like the Emperor Isaac, he endeavoured to throw obstacles in
their way. Frederic, however, used little ceremony with the Mohammedans; he
defeated their army at Philomelium, and marched
direct to Iconium, which the Emperors Alexius I, John II, and Manuel I had vainly
endeavoured to reach. The capital of the sultan was taken by storm, and ample
supplies of provisions were obtained for the army; but the sultan was allowed
to remain quietly in the citadel of his capital, as he offered no further
opposition. Frederic then pursued his march through the territories of the
Armenians of Cilicia. The delivery of the Holy Land was now supposed by the
Christians to be certain. A numerous and well-disciplined army, led by a
general experienced in all the difficulties of Eastern warfare, was about to
enter Syria, when death arrested the progress of Frederic Barbarossa. He died
of a cold caught by bathing in the limpid stream of the Calycadnus,
near Seleucia, the waters of which were chilled by the melted snow descending
from Mount Taurus. The enemies of Frederic acknowledge that he was a valiant
and noble prince.
The evils inflicted on the Greek race by the third crusade were rendered
permanent by fortuitous circumstances, and fell heaviest on the island of
Cyprus, which was already separated from the Byzantine Empire. Isaac Comnenos, who had assumed the title of Emperor in Cyprus
during the reign of Andronicus, contracted an alliance with William II, king of
Sicily. Isaac II of Constantinople, elated with his victory over the Sicilians,
expected to reconquer Cyprus without difficulty. In the year 1186 he sent a
fleet of seventy galleys with a numerous army to perform this service, but his
jealousy of his best officers induced him to entrust the command to men
incapable of performing military duty, as a security against their mounting the
throne. One was an old man, named John Koutostephanos,
and the other Alexis Comnenos, the natural son of
Manuel, whom Andronicus had deprived of sight. The expedition reached Cyprus in
safety, and the army was landed. But the King of Sicily sent a fleet to the
assistance of his ally, under the command of the Admiral Margaritone,
the ablest naval officer of the time, who surprised the Byzantine fleet, and
captured most of the transports and galleys. In the meantime the land forces
were also defeated, and the two generals, falling into the hands of the
Sicilian admiral, were carried prisoners to Palermo. Isaac of Cyprus, after
this victory, which he owed to the valour of foreigners, treated most of the
prisoners with horrid cruelty. Those whom he did not wish to enrol in his own
service were put to death with inhuman tortures. This victory secured the
throne of Cyprus to Isaac, who showed that he was a worthless and rapacious
tyrant; but as his political government favoured the trade of the Cypriots with
Sicily, Syria, and Armenia, they submitted to his sway; and had he possessed
ordinary prudence, he might have enjoyed his usurpation without danger. A
wanton display of insolence caused his ruin. In the year 1191, as the fleet of
Richard lion-hearted was proceeding from Messina to Palestine, it was assailed
by a tempest, and three ships were wrecked on the coast of Cyprus. Isaac, who
felt all the dislike to the Crusaders generally entertained by the Greeks, and
who was ignorant of the power of the King of England, seized the opportunity of
gratifying his own cruel disposition, and of proving his friendship for
Saladin, with whom he had recently formed an alliance. He took possession of
the property which was saved from the shipwrecked vessels, and imprisoned all
the English who escaped the waves. Perhaps Isaac might have escaped with
impunity had he only plundered the English, but he ventured to insult the king.
The vessel which carried Joanna of Sicily, Richard’s sister, and Berengaria of
Navarre, to whom he was betrothed, sought shelter from the storm in the port of Amathus (Limissol), but was
refused entrance. The storm, however, had already abated, and this ship had
joined Richard at Rhodes. The King of England immediately sailed to Cyprus; and
when Isaac refused to deliver up the shipwrecked crusaders, and to restore
their property, Richard landed his army and commenced a series of operations,
which ended in his conquering the whole island, in which he abolished the
administrative institutions of the Eastern Empire, enslaving the Greek race,
introducing the feudal system, by which he riveted the chains of a foreign
domination, and then gave it as a present to Guy of Lusignan, the titular King
of Jerusalem, who became the founder of a dynasty of Frank kings in Cyprus.
From that time to the present day the Greeks of Cyprus have suffered every
misery that can be inflicted by foreign masters; and the island, which at the
time of its conquest by Richard was the richest and most populous in the
Mediterranean, is now almost uncultivated, and very thinly inhabited.
Isaac Angelos, who occupied the throne of
Constantinople, was in constant danger of being precipitated from his
elevation, like his namesake of Cyprus. When accident had placed the crown on a
head so weak and incapable, every man of ambition hoped to be able to transfer
it to his own, and rebellion succeeded rebellion. One of the most dangerous
pretenders to the throne was a young man of Constantinople, who assumed the
name of Alexius II, and whose singular resemblance to that prince and to his
father Manuel induced many to credit his assertions. He visited Iconium while Kilidy-Arslan reigned; and the old sultan, struck with his
resemblance to Manuel, allowed him to enrol troops, but he refused to break the
treaty he had concluded with Isaac, and lose the tribute he received from the
Byzantine Empire. The false Alexius assembled an army of eight thousand men,
and ravaged the vale of the Meander, storming several
cities in order to gratify his followers with plunder: among others he took the
rich city of Chonae. Isaac sent his brother Alexius
to encounter the pretender, but the imperial troops met with little success.
The career of the rebel was, however, suddenly arrested by a priest, by whom he
was assassinated, as a just vengeance for his alliance with the Infidels, by
whose assistance he had plundered the richest cities of Asia Minor, and who
under his banner had desecrated the churches in these cities. The assassin
carried his head to Alexius the sevastokrator, who
was so struck by its resemblance to the well-known features of Manuel, that he
exclaimed, “Those who followed him may indeed be innocent!” After his death
several persons assumed the name of Alexius II; one was taken in Paphlagonia,
and put to death, and another at Nicomedia, who was deprived of sight.
Theodore Mankaphas, a noble of Philadelphia,
also assumed the title of Emperor, and attempted to dethrone Isaac; but his
historical importance is derived rather from the fact that he is recorded to
have coined silver money with his effigy than from the importance of his
rebellion. In the year 1189 he rendered himself master of the country round
Philadelphia, and his progress alarmed Isaac to such a degree that he marched
against him in person. The approach of Frederic Barbarossa made the emperor
anxious to terminate the war, and he agreed to pardon Mankaphas,
on the rebel making his submission, and laying aside the imperial ensigns. The
pardoned rebel soon after fled to Iconium, where Gaiasheddin Kaikhosrou allowed him to enrol troops among the
nomad tribes, and with these bands he ravaged the frontiers of the Byzantine Empire
with the same barbarity as the false Alexius. At last Isaac bribed the sultan
to deliver him up, on condition that his life should be spared, and his
punishment should not exceed perpetual imprisonment. New claimants to the
throne, however, continued to take the field, and the suspicions of Isaac
induced him to punish many nobles of the highest rank for real or imaginary
conspiracies.
The Vallachian insurrection in the meantime kept the northern provinces
of the empire in a state of anarchy. In the year 1192 the emperor hoped to
crush it by conducting in person a well-disciplined army against the
half-disciplined bands of Wallachians, Bulgarians, and Sclavonians,
who had taken up arms. But he led his army into the mountain-passes without
taking any precautions, where it was attacked and its ranks broken. The valour
of the imperial guard saved the emperor by breaking through the Wallachians,
carrying with them Isaac, helpless and bareheaded. In the following year the Wallachians
stormed Anchialus, Varna, Nyssa, and Stupion, and
burned part of Triaditza (Sardica). The emperor boasted
of a glorious campaign when he recovered possession of the plundered ruins of
these cities. He, however, defeated the Zupan of Servia, who had invaded the
empire and plundered Skupia. Subsequently he marched
to the banks of the Save, and after an idle procession to meet his
father-in-law, the King of Hungary, he returned to Constantinople. In 1194 the
Byzantine army, under the command of the generals of the European and Asiatic
native troops, was completely defeated by the Wallachians near Arcadiopolis; and the country round Philippopolis, Sardica,
and Adrianople was laid waste by the insurgents.
The Emperor Isaac now felt the necessity of making some extraordinary
exertions to terminate this war, which was daily approaching nearer to the
walls of the capital. New levies were made in the empire, the foreign
mercenaries were assembled from their different stations, and great numbers of
Hungarian auxiliaries were brought into the field. Fifteen hundred pounds’
weight of gold and six thousand of silver were
expended in equipping the troops and forming the necessary magazines; and in
the month of March 1195, Isaac quitted Constantinople, accompanied by his
brother Alexius, in whom he placed implicit confidence. But natural affection,
as well as honour and truth, appears to have been banished from Byzantine
society; and this brother had already formed a plot to seize the throne, which
he carried into execution when the court reached Kypsela.
While the Emperor Isaac was engaged in hunting, Alexius occupied his tent, and
was proclaimed emperor by the nobles and troops he had gained to support his
usurpation. The army, who despised Isaac, readily transferred their allegiance
to Alexius, whose vices were then less known. The dethroned emperor, when
informed of the catastrophe, turned his horse’s head from the camp and fled, he
knew not whither. At Stagyra, then called Makri, he was overtaken by his brother’s agents, who
immediately deprived him of sight. He was transported directly to
Constantinople, where he was imprisoned in a dungeon, and supplied with rations
of bread and water like a criminal.
Isaac II reigned nine years and seven months. He was
middle-sized, of a healthy constitution, with a florid complexion and red
hair. When dethroned, he was not forty years of age, (April 1195).
Sect. II
Reign of Alexius III (Angelos Comnenos) A.D. 1196-1203.
During the reign of Andronicus, Alexius Angelos,
who was older than his brother Isaac II, fled for safety to the court of
Saladin, where he was residing when he heard of his brother’s elevation to the
throne. On his way to Constantinople he was arrested by the Prince of Antioch,
and owed his release from captivity to his brother’s affection. This, and many
other acts of kindness, he repaid with the basest treachery. Even the corrupt
society of Constantinople required that some attempt should be made to throw a
veil over the ingratitude of the new emperor. To effect this Alexius III
assumed the name of Comnenus, insinuating thereby that his adoption into that
imperial house had dissolved his connection with the humbler family of Angelos, and that duty compelled him to dethrone a
worthless sovereign like Isaac. Alexius, being tall and well made, and
possessing an agreeable and dignified manner, as well as more natural talent, a
better education, and more command over his temper, appeared very much superior
to his brother until he mounted the throne. As emperor, however, he laid aside
his hypocrisy, and was as careless of public business, as lavish in his
expenditure, as ignorant of military affairs, and as great a coward as Isaac.
The first act of Alexius III was to reward the officers and troops who had
shared his treason, by distributing among them the money his brother had
collected for carrying on the war against the Wallachians. He then sent the
army back to its usual quarters, and returned to the capital, leaving Thrace
and Macedonia exposed to the incursions of the rebels. His wife Euphrosyne had
prepared the senate and people to give him a favourable reception by a liberal
distribution of bribes and promises of promotion; and his coronation was
performed in St Sophia’s by the obsequious Patriarch. The behaviour of his
horse alone caused some to reflect on the injustice of his conduct and the
instability of his power. As he was about to mount on horseback at the steps of
the great church, after the ceremony was finished, and return in procession to
the palace, according to the immemorial usage of the Roman empire, his horse
for a long time refused to allow him to mount; and when at last he had gained
his seat, it reared and plunged until the emperor’s crown fell from his head,
and was broken by the fall. It then completed the disaster by throwing the
emperor himself on the ground. Alexius, however, escaped unhurt.
The public treasury was quickly emptied by the lavish expenditure of
Alexius and Euphrosyne; and every species of extortion, injustice, and fraud,
was then employed to collect money. When it was no longer possible to bestow
money, places, pensions, and estates belonging to the imperial domain, were
conferred on some favoured courtiers; and the right of collecting particular
branches of the revenue in the provinces was granted to others. Nicetas sarcastically observes that Alexius III would have
granted golden bulls to plough the sea or pile Athos on Olympus, had any
courtier presented himself to solicit such gifts. This conduct completed the
destruction of that wonderful financial and governmental mechanism which the
Byzantine government had inherited from the Roman Empire.
Euphrosyne, who was better acquainted with her husband’s idle
disposition than others, assumed a large share in conducting the business of
the empire, and no minister dared to take any step without her approval. Her
beauty, her talents, and her aptitude for business, gave her immense influence
among the nobility; but her pride, extravagance, and licentiousness, often
produced scandalous quarrels with Alexius. Nothing is generally supposed to
mark more strongly the degraded condition of the proudest nobles of the
Byzantine empire, at this time, than the fact that members of the celebrated
families of Comnenos, Dukas,
Paleologos, and Cantacuzenos contended for the honour
of carrying Euphrosyne in her litter at public ceremonies; yet British peers
now contend to be lords-in-waiting, their wives to be ladies of the bedchamber,
and their daughters to be bedchamber-women. The insolence and license of
Euphrosyne at last roused the anger and jealousy of the emperor. Alexius
ordered her paramour, Vatatzes, to be assassinated, and her female slaves and
the eunuchs of her household to be put to the torture. The beautiful and
accomplished Euphrosyne herself was expelled from the palace, clad in the
dress of a menial, and immured in the convent of Nematorea,
near the entrance of the Black Sea, with only two foreign slaves as her
attendants. Six months’ absence from court, however, taught her worthless
husband the value of her talents and energy. Everything fell into disorder;
even Alexius was alarmed at the peculations of the courtiers; and Euphrosyne
was reinstated in all her former power, which she abused with all her former
insolence. Her political energy, her superstitious follies, and her magnificent
hunting parties excited the wonder of the inhabitants of Constantinople; and as
she rode along with a falcon perched on her gold-embroidered glove, and
encouraged the dogs with her voice, and the curveting of her horse, the crowd
enjoyed the splendid spectacle, and only grave men like Nicetas thought that she was wasting the revenues which were required to defend the
empire.
(The belief in magic and the power of incantations was so general that
it excited little surprise at Constantinople when Euphrosyne, in order to
insure the happy issue of some of her divinations, thought fit to order a
bronze boar about to engage a lion, which formed one of the finest groups of
ancient sculpture in the hippodrome, to be mutilated by cutting off its snout,
and many other works of ancient art to be broken in pieces. Thus the Greeks
began to destroy the most precious remains of Hellenic taste before the Latins
entered Constantinople).
The venality and oppression of the imperial officers had caused so much
discontent, that Alexius III, on ascending the throne, deemed it necessary to
promise publicly that no official charge should be sold, but that all
employments should be bestowed according to merit. This proclamation remained
without effect. The emperor paid no attention to business, Euphrosyne cared
nothing for the people, the courtiers persisted in profiting by their
influence, and public employments continued to be an object of traffic. The
empress, however, at length perceived the danger of these proceedings, and
attempted to effect some reforms. Before her disgrace she persuaded Alexius to
appoint Constantine Mesopotamites prime-minister, and
this statesman succeeded in suppressing much venality and flagrant jobbing. But
it required purer hands to root out inveterate corruption of Byzantine society. Mesopotamites, while calling on others to respect the
laws, violated them himself. He thought that he could render his power more
secure against the factions of the court, and at the same time extend his
influence and patronage, by entering the church. But as the ecclesiastical
canons of the Eastern Church forbade the clergy to hold civil offices, Mesopotamites, on becoming a priest, obtained a
dispensation from the Patriarch to violate the law. In order to secure an
independent position, he got himself appointed Archbishop of Thessalonica; but
by this step he lost the emperor’s favour, and his enemies induced the Patriarch Xiphilinos to hold a synod, in which Mesopotamites was condemned for various crimes, and deposed
from the archiepiscopal dignity, without being allowed an opportunity of
refuting the charges brought against him. This contempt of justice on the part
of the ecclesiastical dignitaries nourished the aversion felt by the people to
the highest authorities both in the church and state; and though no popular cry
was heard demanding reform either in church or state, the inhabitants began to
feel as little inclined to defend the throne of their patriarch as the crown of
their emperor.
The utter neglect of the moral and religious condition of the people by
the hierarchy of the Eastern Church, during the twelfth century, proved a
severe blow to the Greek nation. The provincial Greek saw no authority to which
he could address himself in order to obtain justice against the violence and
rapacity of the imperial officers, and consequently every friendly link which
had once connected him with Constantinople was now broken. The apostasy of the
prelates from the cause of the people, and the ignorance and selfishness of the
monks, left the Greeks, as a nation, exposed to greater oppression and
injustice than any other portion of the inhabitants of the empire; for they
were less accustomed to bear arms, and their municipal institutions had been
rendered completely subservient to the central administration. There is,
perhaps, no feature in the history of the Christian church which suggests more
melancholy reflections than the prostitution of the Greek clergy to the
imperial power during this century. When we behold a priesthood which founded
the hierarchy of the church, gave laws to the Christian world, and curbed the
political presumption of the Popes of Rome, perverting an influence it had
justly gained to serve the vices of a corrupt court, we learn how small is the
measure of irresponsible power which can be entrusted to individuals, however
sanctified their occupations may appear
The anarchy that prevailed in the Byzantine administration increased
daily. Michael Stryphnos, the admiral of the fleet,
being sure of impunity, as he had married a sister of the Empress Euphrosyne,
sold the stores from the naval arsenal, and thought only of making as much
profit as possible from his office. The seas round the empire were filled with
pirates, and their profits appeared so considerable that the Emperor Alexius
himself at last turned pirate. He sent six galleys into the Euxine, under the
pretext of saving the cargo of a vessel wrecked near Kerasunt,
but he gave the admiral secret orders to make prizes of all ships bound for Amisos. This infamous expedition proved extremely
profitable to the court. Many merchants who were captured lost their whole
fortunes, and some, whose complaints it was feared might excite dangerous
inquiries, were murdered: others were put on shore, and found their way to
Constantinople, where they vainly presented themselves at the courts of law and
at the imperial palace, to demand justice. They carried their petitions to the
staircase of the palace as suppliants, with wax tapers in their hands, and
stood to receive the emperor in the vestibule of St Sophia’s: but all their
endeavours were fruitless; it was a time when justice slept. Those merchants
only who were subjects of Rokneddin, the sultan of
Iconium, obtained an indemnity. The emperor, to avoid war, threw the whole
blame of the piracies on his admiral, Constantine Francopulo,
paid an indemnity to the merchants of Iconium, and promised to pay Rokneddin an annual tribute.
The conduct of the emperor on the high seas was imitated by the nobles
in the capital. A rich banker named Kalomodios was
envied by those who often borrowed his money, and who for some time attempted
to cheat or rob him without success. A length a party of courtiers entered his
house and made him prisoner, declaring that they would not release him until he
paid them a large ransom. The merchants of Constantinople, hearing of this
insolent assault, repaired in a body to the residence of the Patriarch John Kamateros, the brother of the Empress Euphrosyne, but found
him not inclined to assist them by active interference. In the meantime,
however, the populace became aware of the conduct of their superiors, and
determined to use the same license to enforce justice. They assembled before
the Patriarch’s palace, and informed him that they would plunder his residence
and precipitate his holiness from the window, unless he obtained the
liberation of Kalomodios. These threats
opened the mind of the Patriarch to the claims of justice, and Kalomodios was released.
The foreigners in Constantinople conducted themselves in the same
lawless manner as the natives. The Venetians and Pisans engaged in bloody
battles in the streets, which the Greeks viewed with pleasure, and the imperial
authorities with indifference. Rebellions in the provinces were also as common
as seditions in the capital.
Fortunately for the Byzantine Empire, the Seljouk Empire of Roum or Iconium had been divided among the numerous sons of Kilidy-Arslan II, or the Turks, by forming an
alliance with the rebel Vallachian, Bulgarian, and Sclavonian population in Europe, might have succeeded in taking Constantinople before the
arrival of the Crusaders and Venetians. But Moeddin,
the sultan of Angora, availed himself of the disorders in the Byzantine
provinces to invade Paphlagonia and take the city of Dabyra.
Alexius, after carrying on the war feebly for a year and a-half, purchased
peace (A.D. 1197) by paying Moeddin five hundred
pounds’ weight of coined silver, by presenting him with forty pieces of the
rich brocaded silk which was manufactured at Thebes for the emperor’s especial
use, and by engaging to remit to Angora an annual tribute of three hundred
pounds’ weight of silver. In the following year Alexius involved himself in war
with Gaiaseddin Kaikhosrou I, who then reigned at Iconium, in consequence of the detention of two Arabian
horses by the Turk. In one of his thoughtless fits of passion, the emperor
ordered all the Turkish merchants at Constantinople to be imprisoned and
their property to be sequestrated. The sultan’s revenge was prompt and
terrible. He broke into the vale of the Maeander, and
ravaged the country to the walls of Antioch of Phrygia. Numbers of the
inhabitants were carried away into slavery, but an agricultural colony of five
thousand families was settled at Philomelium. They
were furnished with good farmhouses, and everything necessary for cultivating
the land; they were exempt from all taxation for five years, and after that
period they were assured that a fixed contribution would be required without
the arbitrary additions levied in the Byzantine Empire to cover the expense of
collecting the public revenues. This humane policy inflicted a more serious
wound on the empire than the devastations of the Turkish armies; for many
Christian families, worn out by the financial exactions of the imperial
officers, emigrated into the Turkish dominions; and Nicetas informs us that whole towns were abandoned by the Greek inhabitants. Rokneddin subsequently expelled his brother Kaikhosrou from Iconium, and compelled Alexius to purchase
peace by the payment of a tribute. Kaikhosrou, after
wandering from the court of Aleppo to that of Leo, king of Armenian Cilicia,
reached Constantinople as a suppliant, where he was well treated, and remained
until the death of Rokneddin, in 1202, enabled him
again to mount the throne of Iconium. He had afterwards an opportunity of
repaying the obligation he had received as an exile when Alexius III appeared
as a fugitive at Iconium.
The whole Vallachian, Bulgarian, and Sclavonian population between Mount Haemus and the Danube was now in arms to secure their
independence; and as society was in very much the same condition in these
provinces as in the other parts of the Byzantine Empire, many of the native
nobles aspired to the throne, or endeavoured to render themselves independent
princes. The three Vallachian brothers, Peter, Asan, and John, however,
maintained their position as the leaders of the rebellion, and Asan was
considered the real founder of the Vallachian or second Bulgarian kingdom,
though he was assassinated in the year 1196. His murderer was Ivan, a Bulgarian
noble of great military talent, who expected to mount the throne; but both the
Bulgarians and Wallachians recognised Peter as king and successor to his
brother. Ivan was compelled to seek safety in the Byzantine Empire. Shortly
after Peter was assassinated, but his youngest brother John, commonly called Joannice, who had escaped from Constantinople, where he was
detained as a hostage, was acknowledged King of Bulgaria. Alexius entrusted the
command of the passes of Mount Haemus to Ivan, who for three years (1197-1200)
effectually protected Thrace and Macedonia from the incursions of the Wallachians.
During this time, a Vallachian officer in the Byzantine army, named
Chryses, who had refused to join his rebellious countrymen, was entrusted with
the command of the fortress of Strumitza. The anarchy
he saw prevailing round him induced Chryses to declare himself independent; and
the Emperor Alexius III, hoping to obtain an easy victory over so weak an
enemy, took the field against him in person. In the second campaign, AD 1199,
the emperor besieged Chryses in the fort of Prosakon,
which was situated on high rocks overhanging the Axios (Vardar). The Byzantine troops stormed the outer enclosure of Prosakon, and attacked the citadel with such vigour that
their showers of missiles drove the enemy behind the ramparts. But the emperor
had no scaling-ladders, tools, or machines for an assault ready; the plate,
provisions, wine, and baggage of the imperial household had been brought
forward with the main body of the army, and the artillery and warlike stores
had been left behind until fresh means of transport should be collected. After
a vain attack, in which many of the bravest soldiers and officers perished, the
troops were repulsed. Alexius, finding that it would require more time and
labour to take Prosakon than he had expected,
concluded a treaty with Chryses, leaving him in possession of Prosakon and Strumitza, on
condition that he acknowledged himself a subject, and held his command as an
officer named by the emperor.
The weak conduct of Alexius induced Ivan to aspire at forming an
independent principality in Thrace and Macedonia. In 1200 he threw off his
allegiance to the Byzantine Empire, defeated an army commanded by the protostrator Manuel Kamytzes,
whom he took prisoner, and, descending the valley of the Nestos,
roused all the Bulgarian and Sclavonian population to
revolt, from Mosynopolis to Xantheia,
Mount Pangaeum, and Abdera.
Alexius took the field against Ivan in person, but the campaign was
almost immediately terminated by a treaty. The emperor, after taking possession
of the fort of Stenimachos, agreed to allow Ivan to
remain as governor of the country he occupied, promised him his grand-daughter
in marriage, and allowed him to assume the ensigns of a member of the imperial
family. Ivan, deceived by these proofs of amity, visited Constantinople, where
he was thrown into prison, Alexius perverting a passage of the psalmist as an
excuse for his treachery.
As soon as Ivan began to treat with Alexius, the Bulgarian guards of
Manuel Kamytzes carried their prisoner into the
dominions of Joannice, king of Bulgaria. Chryses,
however, paid his ransom, and Kamytzes was brought to Strumitza. Alexius, with his usual rapacity and
injustice, had sequestrated the immense private fortune of Kamytzes as soon as he heard of his defeat; and he now refused to repay Chryses 200 lb.
of gold from the treasures he had so unjustly seized. Kamytzes,
enraged at this act of injustice, formed an alliance with Chryses, and
determined to raise the ransom by plundering the empire. The two generals
invaded Pelagonia, and took Prilapos. Kamytzes then marched into Thessaly, and extended his
ravages over all Greece, exciting considerable commotion in the Peloponnesus by
his intrigues. In the meantime, a Cypriot of low rank, who was governor of Smolena, also raised the standard of revolt; and the
Patzinaks and Komans plundered the empire. Joannice, king of Bulgaria, availed himself of the general
confusion to take possession of the important commercial cities of Constantina and Varna.
The empire seemed on the eve of dissolution; but the danger roused the
ministers to activity, and the central government still exercised great power
through the existing remains of the old Roman administrative system. A powerful
army was brought into the field. Peace was concluded with the King of Bulgaria,
by sacrificing Constantina and Varna. Order was in
some degree restored in the Peloponnesus and continental Greece. Kamytzes was driven from all his conquests. The Cypriot was
compelled to abandon Smolena, and escape into
Bulgaria; and Chryses himself surrendered Strumitza to purchase pardon.
RELATIONS WITH WESTERN EUROPE
The preceding review of the internal condition of the dominions of
Alexius III, and of the conduct of his government, renders it by no means
surprising that the Byzantine Empire was destroyed by the first energetic
attack made on the capital, in spite of the great resources of which the central
administration could still dispose. The insolence with which the Crusaders had
been generally treated was deeply resented by the nobility and clergy
throughout Western Europe. The Venetians had never forgotten the injustice they
had suffered when the Emperor Manuel confiscated the property of their
merchants, and they sought an opportunity for revenge; and the weakness of
Alexius III now invited every enemy of the Greeks to assail the empire.
The Emperor Henry VI of Germany, son of Frederic Barbarossa, having
effected the conquest of Sicily by means of the ransom he had extorted from
Richard, king of England, formed the project of invading the Byzantine empire.
His ambition, which knew no bounds, easily furnished him with a pretext for
war. He claimed all the country from Dyrrachium to Thessalonica as having
belonged to the Sicilian crown, and from which Isaac II had driven the troops
of William II. Alexius III, on mounting the throne, had purchased peace by
promising to pay the German emperor sixteen hundred pounds’ weight of gold. A
considerable part of this treasure was collected, when the death of Henry VI (AD
1197) relieved Alexius from all further alarm on the side of Germany and
Sicily; and the money was soon wasted in idle expenditure, and in the foolish
war with the Sultan of Iconium about the two Arabian horses which has been
mentioned. Philip, who succeeded his brother Henry V, was the son-in-law of
Isaac; but he was involved in too many difficulties in Germany to attempt
anything against Alexius. The dethroned emperor and his son Alexius were
consequently guarded with little care, and at last the young Alexius escaped to
Italy in a Pisan ship.
In the meantime the Venetians—who had sought in vain, by several
embassies to Constantinople, to obtain payment of the sums which remained due
to them under the treaty of indemnity concluded with the Emperor Manuel in
1174—found it prudent, after the death of Henry VI, to conclude a commercial
treaty with Alexius III, which was ratified by a golden bull of the emperor in
1199. Though the emperor granted them extensive commercial privileges and
immunity from many duties paid by his Greek subjects, he treated them as
vassals of the empire; and the treaty, whether because it failed to secure
payment of the indemnity, or because its provisions were not fairly carried
into execution, seems to have increased rather than allayed the hostile
feelings of the Venetians. Venice soon found allies to join her in seeking to
obtain revenge by open war.
When the leaders of the fourth crusade assembled at Venice to embark for
Palestine, they were unable to pay the stipulated sum for transport.
Thirty-four thousand marks of silver were wanting to complete their contract.
The Doge of Venice, Henry Dandolo, a blind hero of ninety years of age, then
proposed that the republic should defer the claim, and allow the fleet to
depart immediately, on condition that the Crusaders joined the Venetians in
reducing the city of Zara, which had lately rebelled, and admitted a Hungarian garrison.
In vain the greatest of the popes, Innocent III, menaced the Crusaders with
excommunication if they dared to attack a city belonging to a monarch who, like
Andrew of Hungary, had taken the cross. Dandolo, who was as able a statesman as
Innocent, and a man of a firmer mind, set the threats of the Papal See at
defiance, and persuaded the superstitious barons that the Pope was acting from
motives of policy, not religion. He succeeded in conducting the greater part of
the Crusaders to Zara, which was soon taken; and this unholy crusade commenced
by plundering a Christian city, defended by the troops of a crusading king.
While the Crusaders were passing the winter at Zara, ambassadors from
the Emperor Philip of Germany solicited their assistance to restore his nephew,
the young Alexius Angelos, and his father, Isaac II,
to the throne of Constantinople. In spite of the opposition of many French
nobles, the Belgians, Venetians, and Lombards determined to attack the
Byzantine Empire. A treaty was signed, by which the Crusaders and Venetians
engaged to replace Isaac II and his son Alexius on the throne, and the young
Alexius bound himself to pay them the sum of two hundred thousand marks of
silver, and to furnish the whole expedition with provisions for a year. He
engaged, also, to acknowledge the papal supremacy, to accompany the Crusaders
in person to Egypt, or else to furnish a contingent of ten thousand men to
their army, with pay for a year; and he promised to maintain during his life a
corps of five hundred cavalry in Palestine for the defence of the Latin
possessions. Thus, says Nicetas, Alexius, who was as
young in mind as in years, consented to change the ancient usages of the
Romans.
The storm that was gathering in the Adriatic seems to have caused Alexius
III very little alarm. He wrote to Pope Innocent III, who was regarded as the
head of this crusade, requesting him to prevent the expedition from visiting
the Byzantine Empire, as such a proceeding would frustrate his plans for the
deliverance of the Holy Land. To this letter Innocent returned an evasive
answer, assuming the right of deciding to whom the Byzantine crown really
belonged.
The fleet sailed from Zara in the month of April 1203, accompanied by
the young Alexius, who joined the Crusaders with a numerous suite of German
knights. It stopped at Dyrrachium, where the governor presented the keys to
Alexius as the representative of his father, Isaac II. Corfu followed the
example; and Andros and Euboea, at which the expedition touched, changed their
allegiance with equal readiness. No one showed any disposition to defend the
rights of Alexius III. A prosperous voyage conducted the fleet within sight of
Constantinople on the 23d June, and the troops were soon landed near Chalcedon,
which they occupied, as well as Chrysopolis (Scutari).
Constantinople was as ill prepared to receive the enemy as when it
was saved by the valour of Conrad of Montferrat, whose younger brother,
Boniface, now commanded the army that had arrived to attack it. The imperial fleet
had been so neglected that only twenty galleys could be rendered fit for
service; the discipline of the troops had been neglected; and in spite of the
great wealth and population of the city, few of the citizens were inclined to
take up arms to defend the empire. Alexius III endeavoured to negotiate, but
all his offers were rejected, and the Crusaders transported their cavalry
across the Bosphorus. The emperor had sent troops to prevent their landing; but
when the Venetian transports approached close to the shore above Galata, and
let down the bridges which opened in the sides of the vessels, the cavalry
bounded on shore, and mounted with such order and rapidity that the Greek
troops were immediately put to flight, and the imperial tent formed part of the
first spoils of the empire. Galata was protected by fortifications, of which
the line may be traced in some parts of the existing walls. Towards the sea
they were flanked by a great tower, to which one end of the immense chain that
closed the entrance of the port was secured. The other end was made fast in the
citadel within the walls of the great palace. The besiegers prepared to attack
the tower, the fleet to force the chain, when an unfortunate sortie of the
Greeks enabled the Latin troops to render themselves masters of the tower by
entering it along with the fugitives. The chain was soon after broken by one of
the heaviest of the transports, armed with an immense pair of shears, which
enabled the Venetians to bring the whole weight of the ship, impelled by a
strong wind, to press on the chain. It broke in two, and the fleet ranged
itself in the port near the present dockyard.
It now remained to storm Constantinople, which had once enjoyed the
reputation of being impregnable, and which had, on eleven great occasions,
repulsed the attacks of powerful armies. But Alexius I had destroyed the charm
of its impregnability, and its walls were in a neglected state. The Emperor
Manuel, during the second crusade, had found it prudent to strengthen the
fortifications near the palace of Blachern at the
northern angle. It was on this side that the Crusaders determined to attack the
city, while the Venetians assailed it near the center of the port. The army, formed into six divisions, encamped on the hill above
the modern suburb of Eyoub, with the powerful engines
they had brought for the attack of Jerusalem. The young Alexius summoned the
people of Constantinople to open their gates and replace his father on the
throne; but the people, who considered him an apostate from the Orthodox
Church, treated his propositions with scorn. The Crusaders, not being in
sufficient force to occupy the whole line of the land wall from the port to the
Propontis, contented themselves with guarding the gate near the palace of Blachern, and left the others open to the Greeks to make
their sorties—convinced that, whenever they could meet the enemy in a fair
field, they were sure of victory. But the garden walls and enclosures often
enabled the besieged to harass the Crusaders with sudden attacks, in which
they lost many men. At last, on the 17th of July, the Crusaders having
effected a breach in one of the towers opposite their camp, a general attack
was simultaneously made on the city both by sea and land.
The Crusaders assaulted the breach with desperate courage, but after a
long and bloody struggle they were repulsed by the English and Danish guards,
whose battle-axes were well adapted for defending the walls. The Pisan
auxiliaries also distinguished themselves by their valour. The Emperor Alexius
III viewed the defeat of the Crusaders from a tower in the palace of Blachern, and he was urged by the officers of his suite to
put himself at the head of the Varangian guard and attack the disordered
Franks. A vigorous attack of the Byzantine army, under the command of his
son-in-law, Theodore Lascaris, who was then at his side ready for action, might
at this moment have saved Constantinople. But Alexius was incapable of any
exertion. The Byzantine army was nevertheless drawn out in order of battle
without the walls.
While the Crusaders suffered a defeat by land, the Venetians were
completely successful by sea. They had constructed high towers of woodwork in
some of their vessels, and these towers were furnished with bridges which could
be let down on the walls of the city. Many other galleys, whose tops were
filled with archers and crossbowmen, supported the attack, and swept the
defenders from the fortifications. The old doge, in complete armour on the deck
of his galley, encouraged his countrymen; and when he gave the signal for the
grand assault, he ordered the crew of his ship to press forward, in order to be
the first to touch the walls. In a few minutes many bridges were firmly fixed
on the battlements, and after a short and desperate struggle the banner of
Saint Mark was seen waving on a lofty tower overlooking the center of the port. Twenty-five towers and the connecting line of wall were soon in
possession of the Venetians. But the narrow streets of the city, and the
vigorous defence of the Greeks, who defended their property with more valour
than they had defended the walls, arrested the progress of the Venetians. In
order to penetrate into the center of the city, and
at the same time to keep open their communications with the port, they set fire
to the houses before them. The conflagration soon extended from the foot of the
hill of Blachern to the monastery of Evergetes, and as far as the Devteron.
At this critical moment the news reached Dandolo that the attack of the
Crusaders had failed, and that the Byzantine army was issuing from
Constantinople to assail their camp. He immediately abandoned all his
conquests, and hastened with the whole Venetian force to support his allies.
But when he reached the camp the danger was already past. The Emperor Alexius,
after examining the Crusaders for some time, ordered his troops to reenter Constantinople.
During the following night he assembled a few of his confidential
creatures, and, carrying off as much of the imperial treasures and jewels as he
was able to transport, he abandoned Constantinople, and escaped to Debeltos.
Sect. III
The Conquest of Constantinople and the
Partition of the Byzantine Empire A.D. 1203-1204.
Before any of the ambitious nobles, who were usually watching for a
revolution in order to place the imperial crown on their own heads, could take
advantage of the cowardice and flight of Alexius III, the intendant of the
imperial treasury, a eunuch named Constantine, contrived to induce the Varangian
guard to replace Isaac II on the throne, by promising them a liberal donative.
The blind emperor was immediately conducted from the monastery where he had
been latterly confined, to the palace, and proclaimed emperor, with his son
Alexius IV as his colleague. The administration underwent no change, and only
those courtiers were driven from their places who were attached to the personal
interests of the late emperor. Most of the Byzantine statesmen were satisfied
with this arrangement. It purchased peace for the moment; and it might, in
their opinion, afford the Greeks, who prided themselves on their intellectual
superiority over the Latins, an opportunity of obtaining some diplomatic
advantage over their enemies. The presumptuous vanity of Greeks made them
overlook the profound knowledge of Eastern affairs possessed by the Venetians,
who equalled their enemies in cunning, and far surpassed them in daring. Even
the Crusaders, though incapable of steady counsels, had their suspicions fully
awakened, and distrusted the intrigues of the Greeks.
As soon, therefore, as it was known in the Latin camp that Isaac II was
restored to the throne, they were prepared to meet with chicane in place of
open hostilities. Alexius IV was retained as a hostage until envoys of their
own should bring back a report of the real state of affairs within the walls of
Constantinople, and obtain from Isaac the ratification of the treaty concluded
by his son at Zara. Isaac, on hearing the concessions made by his son, frankly
informed the Crusaders that he saw no possibility of carrying the stipulations
of the treaty into effect; but with his accustomed weakness he immediately
consented to ratify it, in order to have the pleasure of embracing his son.
Alexius IV then made his solemn entry into the capital on horseback, between
Baldwin, count of Flanders, and the doge, Henry Dandolo, and on the 1st of
August he was crowned as his father's colleague. The long imprisonment of Isaac
II, and the loss of his eyesight, had weakened his feeble mind; while Alexius,
an idle and ill-educated youth, destitute of natural talent, having contracted
the habits and vices of the Franks, was incompetent to supply the deficiencies
of his father. Both emperors, however, were sensible of the insurmountable difficulties
of their position; they felt that they could not trust their own subjects, and
they perceived the danger of relying on the Latins. The blindness of Isaac, and
his constant attacks of gout, made him pay more attention to his own sufferings
than to the dangers of the empire. As human aid promised no relief in either
case, he sought consolation from monks and astrologers, who flattered him with
imaginary prophetic revelations, and the supposed results of divination. These
cursed monks, as Nicetas calls them, dined at the
imperial table, where they consumed the finest fish of the Bosphorus, and the
richest wines of the Archipelago, which they paid for by persuading Isaac that
he was destined to recover his sight and health at the very time he was visibly
sinking into the grave. The conduct of Alexius was as foolish as that of Isaac,
and he was equally inattentive to public business. His thoughtless behaviour
rendered him contemptible both to the Greeks and Latins. He spent whole days in
the tents of the Crusaders, feasting and gambling with the young nobles, who,
in their revels, sometimes took the imperial bonnet, ornamented with precious
stones, from his head, and replaced it with the woollen cap commonly worn by
the Latins.
It soon became evident that the Byzantine government was unable to
satisfy the demands of the Crusaders; but the army and fleet were regularly
supplied with provisions, and from time to time their leaders were furnished
with such sums of money as the emperors were able to collect. These instalments
were obtained from the money in the imperial treasury which had escaped Alexius
III and his courtiers, from sums raised by confiscating the private wealth
accumulated by the Empress Euphrosyne and some of her relations, and by
collecting the gold and silver plate, and the jewels in the imperial palaces,
the monasteries, and even the churches. But all was inadequate to discharge the
debt, while the feelings of irritation between the Greeks and Latins were daily
increasing. To avoid a collision, the Latin army was encamped close to Galata,
and the soldiers were only allowed to visit Constantinople during the day in
small numbers.
The 29th of September, St Michael’s Day, was nevertheless fixed for the
departure of the Crusaders; and Alexius IV, in order to extend his power in the
provinces, and collect additional sums of money, left Constantinople,
accompanied by a considerable body of Latin troops under the command of the
Marquis of Montferrat, a selfish intriguer, who increased the general difficulties
by seeking to obtain clandestine profits for himself. He cheated Alexius with
as little delicacy as knavish associates usually display in their dealings with
foolish spendthrifts. Before Alexius mounted the throne, the marquis obtained a
promise of the investiture of Crete; and he now exacted an engagement for the
payment of one thousand six hundred pounds’ weight of gold before accompanying
the young emperor. The movements of the dethroned Alexius rendered it
absolutely necessary to attack him without delay; for, finding that he was not
pursued, he had collected a considerable body of troops at Debeltos,
occupied Adrianople, and secured his authority over the greater part of Thrace.
The young Alexius IV soon drove him out of Adrianople, and took possession of
Philippopolis and Kypsela; but it was found that no
money could be hastily collected in a province exhausted by continual
hostilities, beyond what was required for supplying the immediate wants of the
troops in the field. The marquis and his followers, who thought more of
securing payment of their subsidies than of assisting the empire, soon
compelled Alexius IV to return to Constantinople, though their precipitate
retreat left Alexius III in possession of Mosynopolis and all Macedonia, and allowed Joannice, king of
Bulgaria, who had crossed Mount Haemus in order to profit by the disturbed
state of the Byzantine empire, to conquer many places in Thrace.
The relations between the Byzantine government and the Crusaders were
thus rendered every day more complicated and less friendly. The Crusaders
insisted on the immediate fulfilment of all the stipulations of the treaty; the
emperors complained that the Crusaders left the provinces from which great part
of the revenues were derived in the hands of the usurper, while they employed
themselves in plundering the property of the friendly population in the
vicinity of Constantinople. As the emperors were unable to pay the immense sums
they had promised, and the Crusaders had really only fulfilled a part of what
they had engaged to perform, nothing but mutual concessions could prevent a
quarrel. The complicated nature of the obligations between the Byzantine
government and the Crusaders and Venetians on one side, and between the feudal
barons and the Venetians on the other, rendered a peaceful termination of the
expedition almost impossible. Things were in that peculiar state, when nothing
but great talents and great moderation on the part of three different powers
could insure tranquillity. One man alone possessed the talents and the
authority capable of preserving order; and this very man, Henry Dandolo, was
eagerly watching for every event tending to hasten the collision which he
looked forward to as inevitable.
An accidental calamity tended greatly to increase the hatred of the
Greeks to the Latins. On the 19th of August, while young Alexius was absent on
his Thracian expedition, a dreadful fire destroyed a considerable part of
Constantinople, adding greatly to the sufferings of the population, and to the
embarrassments of the government. This conflagration originated in the wilful
act of a few Flemish soldiers, who had crossed the port to visit some of their
countrymen established as merchants in the empire. After drinking together
until they were nearly drunk, the Crusaders proposed attacking a Turkish mosque
in the neighbourhood, and plundering the rich warehouses of the Turkish
merchants who traded with Persia and Egypt. Their pillage was interrupted by
the Greeks, who drove them back, and pursued them so hotly towards the port,
that the Flemings, in order to save themselves, set fire to some houses in
their rear. A strong wind caused the conflagration to spread with frightful
rapidity, and it burned for the space of two days. The entire breadth of the
city, from the port to the Propontis, was laid in ashes, forming a belt of
cinders a mile and a half in extent, over which it was necessary to pass from
one part of the town to the other. The fire passed close to the Church of St
Sophia, destroying the richest quarter of the city. Splendid palaces, filled
with works of ancient art and antique classic manuscripts, as well as
warehouses stored with immense wealth, were destroyed by this conflagration,
from the calamitous effects of which Constantinople never recovered. About
fifteen thousand Latins had hitherto continued to reside in Constantinople as
traders and artisans. The fury of the populace and the ruin of their houses now
compelled them to seek refuge at Galata, under the protection of the Crusaders.
The losses caused by this fire, and the hostile disposition it caused in
the breasts of the Greeks both against the emperors and the Latins, rendered it
impossible to make the pecuniary payments required by the Crusaders. But their
threats compelled the Byzantine government to seize the golden ornaments and
immense silver candelabra that ornamented St Sophia’s and other churches in the
capital. The golden shrines that enclosed the relics of saints and martyrs, and
the silver frames of holy pictures, were melted down and handed over to the
Venetian commissaries. A new treaty was negotiated with the Crusaders, for the
prolongation of their stay until the following Easter. The emperors engaged to
defray the whole expenses of the army and fleet during the interval, though the
Venetians exacted an additional freight for their ships. The young Alexius IV
promised to oblige the Patriarch to proclaim Innocent III head of the whole
Christian church, and wrote to that ambitious pontiff an assurance that he was
labouring to reunite the Eastern Church under papal supremacy. Many of the
Crusaders were extremely unwilling to remain, and their army showed signs of
discontent. The Greeks, on the other hand, enraged at their sufferings, and the
insults offered to their Church, began to think of resistance. They remembered
that they had repulsed the attack of the land troops, and their behaviour
indicated an approaching insurrection. Alexius IV thought at times of placing
himself at the head of the national party, and formed a friendship with Alexius Dukas Murtzuphlos, who was
the most daring leader of the war party; but his father warned him of the
danger, and convinced him that, without the assistance of the Crusaders, it
would be impossible to defend the throne.
The monks and astrologers who surrounded Isaac II persuaded him to
transport the bronze boar, which Euphrosyne had mutilated, from the hippodrome
into the palace, as an effectual means of taming the fury of the populace of
Constantinople, of which they said this boar was the type. The populace really
resembled the emperor in superstition so closely that they emulated his
astrological follies. They conceived a fancy that a splendid bronze statue of
Minerva, thirty feet high, was the genius of the Latins, whom its attitude
appeared to invite. This noble work of Hellenic art the Greeks destroyed.
Things at last reached a crisis. The Crusaders sent a formal
declaration of war to the emperors, in case they failed to fulfil the
conditions of the new treaty and pay the money due. The people of
Constantinople rose in rebellion, and declared that they would no longer submit
to be governed by emperors who had sold the empire and the church to the
Latins. On the 25th of January 1204 the people assembled in St Sophia’s, and
compelled the members of the senate, the clergy, and the principal nobles of
the capital, to attend in order to elect a new emperor.
But as every man of rank knew that the Latins would support the cause of
Alexius IV, as a pretext for attacking the city, no one was found who would
accept the proffered sovereignty. For
three days the confusion continued, until a young man named
Nikolas Kanavos was anointed emperor against his will. Isaac II died
during this period of anarchy. Alexius IV sent to the Marquis of
Montferrat, and made arrangements for introducing the Crusaders into
Constantinople; but Alexius Murtzuphlos, hearing of
this, placed himself at the head of his military partisans, and, having
obtained admittance to the Emperor Alexius late in the evening, frightened him
with dreadful accounts of the conduct of the enraged populace. The shouts
of the followers of Murtzuphlos were heard at the
palace gates. The fate of Andronicus presented itself to the imagination
of Alexius, who begged Murtzuphlos to assist him in
escaping to the Latins. The traitor, after receiving the ensigns of the
imperial rank from the hands of the confiding prince, led him by
long galleries to the dungeons of the palace. Alexius Murtzuphlos then returned to his followers, by whom he
was proclaimed emperor; and the choice was ratified by all the troops. Kanavos
was compelled to descend from the throne; and Alexius IV was strangled in the
dungeon to which he had been conducted, after a reign of six months and eight
days.
ALEXIUS V (MURTZUPHLOS), A.D. 1204.
Alexius V, who placed himself on the throne by this daring act of
rebellion and assassination, was a member of the great family of Dukas, which had given two emperors to the East, and was
closely allied with the families of Comnenos and Angelos. He had received the by-name of Murtzuphlos from his school companions on account of his large overhanging eyebrows. At
this time he was generally looked up to by his countrymen as the bravest
soldier among the nobility, and he had given proofs of his valour in several
skirmishes with the Crusaders. His enemies admit that he was indefatigable in
his exertions to re-establish order, and put the fortifications in a state of
defence. He restored the discipline of the troops by appearing constantly at
their exercises. He preserved tranquillity among the populace by traversing the
city frequently on horseback, by night as well as by day, with his mace-of-arms
in his hand, fie repaired the walls, strengthened the towers, improved the machines
for throwing missiles, and formed scaffolds for new engines on the towers most
exposed to attack from the side of the port, in order that they might command
the decks of the Venetian ships.
As the military energy of the Byzantine empire, like that of modern
states, depended in a great measure on its financial resources, and the
circumstances under which Murtzuphlos mounted the
throne rendered it impossible for him to think of imposing any new tax, even
though it was well known that the treasury was empty, he took measures for
raising the supplies necessary for the preparations he was carrying on, and for
the payment of the mercenary troops, by sequestrating the fortunes of all who
had acted as intendants of finance, as collectors of the imperial revenue, or
as government contractors, whose property was generally confiscated on the
ground that they were deeply indebted to the public. This mode of raising money
was popular in the Roman Empire in every age, from the time of Augustus Caesar
to that of Dukas Murtzuphlos.
But it was impossible to infuse a warlike spirit into the breasts of the Greeks
of Constantinople. Both nobles and citizens were equally disgusted with the
severe military discipline introduced by the new emperor, who compelled every
Greek who was unfit to perform the duties of an officer, or to serve in the
cavalry, to range himself in the infantry and do duty on the walls. The
merchants and shopkeepers were averse to serve in person, because they paid
exorbitant taxes in order that government might find mercenary troops for their
defence; and they were ashamed of the ridicule to which they exposed themselves
by their awkwardness in military array beside the English, Danes, and Pisans of
the imperial guard, who moved in complete armour as easily as the citizens in
their holiday garments. Many Greeks, too, of every class, detested the imperial
government, and had lost their attachment to the hierarchy of the church. Some
looked forward to their destruction as a necessary reform; many viewed it with
indifference, and some with pleasure.
For two months the new emperor and the Crusaders prepared themselves
with all their energy for the struggle which was to decide the fate of the
Byzantine Empire. Murtzuphlos, by repeated
skirmishes, ably conducted, succeeded in circumscribing the foraging parties of
the Crusaders in the immediate vicinity of the capital, and Henry of Flanders
was obliged to march with a large body of cavalry as far as Philea on the Black Sea, in order to collect a supply of provisions. The emperor
attempted to surprise this division on its return; but the Belgian soldiers of
Henry, though suddenly attacked, closed their ranks without confusion, and
completely defeated the Greeks. Twenty of the bravest horsemen of the imperial
guard were slain in the first charge; and the grand standard of the Virgin,
which always accompanied the emperor when he took the field in person, and
which was regarded by the people as the talisman of the empire, was taken by
Henry. The Byzantine troops suffered so severely in this encounter that Murtzuphlos did not again venture to lead them without the
walls.
The Crusaders and Venetians had prepared everything for a new assault by
the end of March 1204. A council was then held to arrange the manner in which the
plunder of Constantinople was to be divided, and to settle the partition of the
Byzantine Empire. The treaty then signed put an end to the Eastern Roman
Empire; for neither the Latin empire of Romania, established by the conquerors,
nor the Greek empires of Nicaea and of Constantinople which succeeded, have a
just claim to be considered the legitimate representatives either of the policy
or of the dignity of the Byzantine government.
This treaty was concluded by the Doge Henry Dandolo on the part of the
Venetians, and by Boniface, marquis of Montferrat, Baldwin, count of Flanders,
Louis, count of Blois, and Henry, count of St Pol, on the part of the
Crusaders, in order to avoid all disputes, should it please God, for His honour
and glory, to grant them the victory over their enemies. The Venetians very
naturally considered that the freight of the expedition was the first debt
which it was the duty of the Crusaders to discharge. But to prevent the whole
booty from being absorbed by this claim, it was provided that the Venetians
were to receive three quarters of the plunder, and the Crusaders one, until the
whole sum due to Venice was discharged. In every case the rations necessary for
the whole expedition were to be issued from the common stock according to the
established rule. The Venetians were to enjoy all the privileges in the
conquered territory which they possessed in their own country, and were to be
governed by their own laws. Twelve electors were to be chosen as soon as
Constantinople was taken, who were to elect an emperor; and they were to choose
the man best able to govern the new conquests for the glory of God and the
advantage of the Holy Roman Church: six of these electors were to be named by
the barons, and six by the Venetians. The emperor was to possess as his
immediate domain the palaces of Blachern and Bucoleon, with one quarter of the Byzantine empire; the
remaining three quarters were to be equally divided between the Crusaders and
the Venetians. The clergy of the party to which the emperor did not belong were
to elect the patriarch of the Eastern Church, and the ecclesiastics of the two
parties were to occupy the benefices in the territories assigned to their
respective nations. The two parties bound themselves to remain united for another
year—that is, until the 31st of March 1205; and all who then established
themselves in the empire were to take an oath of fealty, and do homage to the
emperor. Twelve commissioners were to be chosen by each party, in order to
divide the conquered territory into fiefs, and determine the service due by the
crown vassals to the emperor. No person belonging to any nation at war with the
parties to the treaty was to be received in the empire as long as hostilities
lasted. This stipulation was evidently inserted by the Venetians, and directed
against their great commercial and political rivals, the Genoese. Both parties
were to exert all their influence to induce the Pope to ratify and confirm the
treaty, and excommunicate any who should refuse to execute its stipulations.
The emperor was to swear to observe the treaty; and in case it should be found
necessary to make any modifications in it before his election, the Doge of
Venice and the Marquis of Montferrat, with the twelve electors, were empowered
to make the change required, The doge, Henry Dandolo, as a personal honour, was
dispensed from taking an oath of fealty to the future emperor for any fief or
office he might hold.
It appears that an act of partition, describing the territories
comprised in the quarter of the empire assigned to the emperor, in the quarter
and half quarter assigned to the Venetians, and in the quarter and half quarter
assigned to the Crusaders, was drawn up at the same time as the
treaty. But the imperfect copies of this act which have been preserved,
the manner in which the geographical names are disfigured, and the
modifications to which it was immediately subjected, in consequence of
disputes, exchanges, and sales of the various lots, render the fragments we
possess a doubtful authority for determining the original partition of the
empire.
On the 9th of April everything was ready for the assault, and at
daybreak the whole force of the expedition moved forward to attack the towers
on the side of the port, for it seemed doubtful whether the diminished numbers
of the land forces would be able to make any impression on the numerous
mercenaries who manned the land wall under the eye of a leader like Murtzuphlos. On the other hand, the long line of wall
towards the port offered no flank defences beyond the slight projection and
elevation of its towers; while the assailants could take advantage of the quays
for landing merchandise in making their attack with ordinary scaling-ladders,
and concentrate an overwhelming flight of missiles on any given point from
three hundred engines planted on the decks of their ships. Murtzuphlos had, however, done much to strengthen this part of the fortifications, and it
was found well prepared to offer a desperate resistance. The assault was
commenced with the greatest fury, and persisted in with the fiercest
perseverance. Many Crusaders landed on the quays, and planted their ladders
against the walls, but every assailant who reached their summit was hurled down
headlong. The machines of the defenders broke the yards of those ships that
approached the towers, and swept the men from their decks. At length, after a
contest of hours, and the loss of some of their bravest soldiers, the Crusaders
were obliged to retire.
But the assailants were not men to be easily discouraged by danger, and
they determined to renew the attack on the 12th of April. The interval was
employed in preparing more powerful means of escalade. The largest ships of the
fleet were bound together in pairs, their decks were protected by stronger
bulwarks, and their tops were enlarged. The fleet, ranged in successive lines,
was enabled to bring an overwhelming force against the defenders of any single
tower. The attack commenced by an unremitted volley of missiles against the
points which it was proposed to storm. When the defenders were compelled to
conceal themselves from this volley, the ships destined for the assault were
impelled rapidly to the wall, aided by a strong north wind, which carried the
heaviest double ships with rapidity alongside the towers.
The Pilgrim and the Paradise were the first to plant their
platform on a Byzantine tower, and a band of Venetians and Crusaders sprang in
eager emulation at the same instant on the hostile ramparts. The shout of
victory spread instantaneously through the host, and four towers were
immediately stormed. In a few minutes, three of the city gates were thrown
open, and the knights began to land their horses from the ships in the rear. Murtzuphlos had pitched his tents and encamped the imperial
guard at the monastery of Pantepoptes, in the open
space left by the first conflagration. He saw the victory gained before it was
in his power to send succours to the defenders; and when the hostile banners
were already floating from the towers, his guards refused to march against the
victorious enemy, and fled with their emperor to the palace of Bucoleon. The conquerors immediately occupied his
encampment, and took possession of the neighbouring palace of Blachern; but the day was too far spent to do more than establish
themselves firmly in the positions they had seized. The leaders deemed it
imprudent to allow any part of their troops to advance into the streets of a
city which had not yet capitulated, and to which the imperial palace formed a
strong citadel, garrisoned by a numerous body of well-disciplined mercenaries.
To increase the confusion among the Greeks, and prevent their attacking the
camp during the night, the Crusaders set fire to the houses on their flank.
This third conflagration destroyed the eastern part of the city beyond the
monastery of Evergetes, and extended near the sea as
far as the Drungarion. Villehardouin says that the
three fires lighted by the Crusaders destroyed more houses than were contained
in the three largest cities in France.
The Emperor Alexius V, finding no one disposed to defend his throne,
embarked in a galley with the Empress Euphrosyne and her daughter Eudocia, whom
he had married, and fled from the capital.
(The imperial families of Comnenos and Angeloe present us scenes as tragical as anything in the
ancient drama “presenting Thebes and Pelops’ line”. Alexius II and his sister,
the beautiful Maria, were murdered by Andronicus LI, whose horrid death was
accompanied by the murder of his sons. Isaac, the tyrant of Cyprus, the blind
Isaac II, the fugitive Alexius III, the murdered Alexius IV, and Eudocia, the
daughter of Alexius III, all bore a part in fearful tragedies. Eudocia was
married to Simeon, king of Servia, who retired into a monastery on Mount Papykes. His son Stephen, struck with the beauty of his
young stepmother, married her, and had children by the marriage. A scandalous
quarrel, however, arose; he divorced her, and expelled her from the palace,
almost naked. As nobody dared to assist her, she would probably have perished,
had not Fulk, the king’s brother, sent her to Constantinople. Murtzuphlos, who had already divorced two wives, married
her; and after the execution of Murtzuphlos, she
married Leo Sguros, the chief of Argos, Nauplia, and Corinth).
In the meantime, the people of every rank crowded to St Sophia’s, and
exhibited a strange example of the political weakness and demoralization caused
by the complete centralization of all executive action. No one thought of
taking advantage of the numerous means of defence which were still available.
The election of a new emperor was necessary to secure obedience to any order,
and even in this scene of anarchy two claimants presented themselves as
pretenders to the throne. Fortune determined the election in favour of Theodore
Lascaris; but after a vain attempt to rally the imperial guard, and excite the
Greeks to active resistance, he found it necessary to escape to Asia as soon as
morning dawned; adding a third to the fugitive emperors who were wandering the
Byzantine provinces in search of their empire.
The Crusaders and Venetians met with no further resistance. The Marquess
of Montferrat occupied the palace of Bucoleon, and
Henry of Flanders that of Blachern. The Byzantine
troops laid down their arms on receiving assurance of personal safety. Guards
were then placed over the imperial treasury and the arsenal, but the troops and
sailors were allowed to plunder the city without restraint. The insolence of
victory was never more haughtily displayed; every crime was perpetrated without
shame. The houses of the peaceful citizens were plundered, their wives
dishonoured, and their children enslaved. Churches and monasteries were rifled;
monuments of religious zeal were defaced; horses and mules were stabled in
temples whose architectural magnificence was unequalled in the rest of Europe.
The ceremonies of the Greeks were ridiculed; the priests were insulted; the
sacred plate, the precious shrines in which the relics of martyrs and saints
were preserved, the rich altar-cloths, and the jewelled ornaments, were carried
off. The soldiers and their female companions made the Church of St Sophia the
scene of licentious orgies; and Nicetas recounts with
grief and indignation that “one of the priestesses of Satan” who accompanied
the Crusaders seated herself on the Patriarch’s throne, sang ribald songs
before the high altar, and danced in the sacred edifice, to the delight of the
infuriated soldiery. It is not necessary to detail all the miseries suffered by
the unfortunate Greeks; Pope Innocent III has left a description of the scene
so horrible that it will hardly bear a literal translation. The age was one of
fierce wars and dreadful calamities; but the sack of Constantinople so far
exceeded everything else that happened, both in its glory and shame, as to
become the favourite theme of popular song and dramatic representation
throughout the known world. Villehardouin says that every Crusader occupied the
house that pleased his fancy; and men who the day before were in absolute
poverty, suddenly found themselves possessed of wealth, and living in luxury.
Some of the Latin clergy vainly endeavoured to moderate the fury which
their own bigoted precepts had instilled into the troops; but many thought only
of collecting a rich booty of relics, and showed themselves as little
scrupulous as the Venetians and soldiers in robbing churches and monasteries.
Well might the Greeks contrast the conduct of this army of the soldiers of
Christ under the especial care of its holy father the Pope, with the
behaviour of the Mussulman troops under the command of Saladin, who conquered
Jerusalem. The Christians had bound themselves by an oath not to shed the blood
of Christians; they had made vows of abstinence and chastity. What attention
they paid to these vows when they turned their arms against a Christian state,
which for many centuries had formed the bulwark of Europe against the invasion
of the Saracens, is recorded by the Pope himself.
The chiefs of the expedition at last determined to re-establish order;
but before it was possible to restore the salutary restraint of military
discipline, they were obliged to put several of their mutinous followers to
death, and the Count of St Pol hung a French knight with his shield round his
neck. This severe punishment was inflicted, not for an abuse of the rights of
conquest towards the defenceless Greeks, but as an act of public vengeance
against a traitor who had defrauded his companions by concealing a portion of
the plunder. Thanks were then offered up to God with the greatest solemnity for
the glorious conquest of a city containing half a million of inhabitants by an
army composed of twenty thousand men; and “God wills it” was fervently shouted
by the pious brigands.
A proclamation was published, ordering all the booty to be collected in
three of the principal churches of the city, and promising personal protection
to the inhabitants. Most of the Byzantine nobility availed themselves of this
opportunity to escape from the city. Nicetas the
historian, who for the last century has been our best guide in the Byzantine
annals, has left us an account of his own adventures during the catastrophe of
his country. The palace he occupied before the calamities commenced was
situated in the quarter Sphoralrion, near St Sophia’s,
and was enriched with many treasures of ancient art and literature. It was
destroyed in the second conflagration, and the historian then retired to a
smaller dwelling in a narrow street. In this house many of his friends sought
refuge; and a Venetian whom he had protected in the days of his official power
now armed himself as a Crusader, and guarded the entrance as if it was his own
quarters. This succeeded for some days; but as soon as the proclamation was
known, Nicetas and his friends resolved to quit
Constantinople, and abandon their property in order to escape from insult. On
Saturday, the fifth day after the capture of the city, while a cold wind from
the Black Sea gave the morning a wintry aspect, Nicetas,
accompanied by his pregnant wife, and surrounded by his children and friends,
walked through the streets of the capital to gain the Golden Gate, where some
wretched conveyance might be obtained, by means of which they could reach Selymbria. Several of the party carried infants in their
arms, for their servants and slaves had deserted them. The young women of rank
and beauty were placed in the midst of the band of exiles, their faces
disfigured with dust, and their figures concealed in unsightly dresses. In this
way the fugitives passed many bands of soldiers without interruption, but when
they reached the Church of St Mokios a soldier seized
a beautiful girl, and carried her off by force. The father, feeble from
sickness, was unable to pursue the ravisher, and he implored Nicetas to save his daughter. The historian followed the
soldier, imploring all the Latins he met to protect the honour of an innocent
family, and save a noble lady from insult and slavery. He appealed to the
proclamation which it was their duty to respect, until his eloquent and
pathetic gestures, rather than his words, awakened compassion. A party of
Crusaders accompanied Nicetas to the house into which
the maiden had been carried, where they found the robber standing at the door.
He denied all knowledge of the transaction; but when the house was searched,
the young lady was found, and conducted back to her father. The sad procession
soon after reached the Golden Gate, and gained the road to Selymbria.
It was joined by the Patriarch, now travelling forth, like a true apostle, without
attendants and sumpter-mules, and as destitute as the rest of his companions.
The exiles reached Selymbria in safety; but the
people generally treated their sufferings with derision, by which they were
more galled than by the insolence of the Franks.
The financial oppression of the Byzantine government, the vices of the
court, and the crimes of the recent emperors, were attributed by the people to
the meanness and rapacity of the nobility and dignified clergy, who were
supposed to have upheld the vicious fabric of the imperial administration for
their own profit. The people, therefore, expressed their satisfaction in rude
terms when they saw princes, patriarchs, and senators, reduced to the state of
poverty in which they were themselves living. The calamity appeared to them an
equitable dispensation of Divine justice. Nor was this judgment confined to the
lower classes; on the contrary, it was the deliberate opinion of many Greeks
throughout the provinces that the ruin of the Byzantine empire was caused by
the base complicity of the senate and the clergy in all the abuses and rapacity
which has disgraced the public administration since the death of Manuel
I. Nicetas complains bitterly of the injustice
of this opinion, and endeavours to throw the blame of the taking of
Constantinople on the cowardice of the troops and the worthlessness of their
officers; but it is certain that the civil government was more to blame than
the troops for the fall of the empire.
The first care of the victors was to divide the plunder accumulated in
the three churches they had selected for magazines. Sacred plate, golden
crowns, images of saints, shrines of relics, candelabra of precious metals,
statues of ancient gods, precious ornaments of Hellenic art and of Byzantine
jewellery, were heaped up with coined money from the imperial treasury, and
with silk, velvet, embroidered tissues, and jewels, collected from the
warehouses of merchants, from the shops of goldsmiths, and by domestic
spoliation. The booty, in spite of fraud, concealment, waste, and
conflagration, amounted to three hundred thousand marks of silver, besides ten
thousand horses and mules which had belonged to the cavalry or the imperial
stables. Baldwin of Flanders, the future emperor, declares that the riches of Constantinople
equalled the accumulated wealth of all Western Europe. The spoil was first
divided into two equal parts, and the Crusaders then paid the Venetians from
their portion the sum of fifty thousand marks, according to the original
convention concluded at Venice. The remaining one hundred thousand marks were
divided in the following proportion: each horseman received double the share of
a foot-soldier, and each knight double the share of a horseman. The small
difference between the shares of a common soldier and a knight proves that the
feudal militia of this expedition, which was a fair type of the military force
of the age in Western Europe, consisted of men in a higher social rank than
those who form our modern armies. It was necessary to be born a gentleman in
order to be a soldier in the twelfth century; and as great physical powers and
long practice alone could enable a man to move with activity under the weight
of the armour then worn, the power of raising recruits was restricted to a much
smaller proportion of the population than it is in our days, when scientific
manoeuvres and distant artillery do much of the work formerly achieved by the
personal courage and the strong arm of the combatants.
On the 9th of May, Baldwin, count of Flanders, was elected Emperor of
the East, and the sceptre passed into the hands of the Belgians. The personal
character of Baldwin, his military accomplishments, his youth, power, and
virtue, all pointed him out as the leader most likely to enjoy a long and
prosperous reign. His piety and the purity of his private life commanded the
respect of the Greeks, who vainly hoped to enjoy peace under his government. He
was one of the few Crusaders who paid strict attention to his vows of
abstinence; and a singular proclamation, which he thought it necessary to
repeat twice a-week, forbidding all who were guilty of incontinency to sleep
within the walls of his palace, shows that he knew the majority of his
countrymen easily forgot their vows. The connection of the Belgians with the
French, and the little jealousy entertained by the Venetians of a sovereign
whose hereditary dominions were so far distant from the possessions of the
republic, contributed to the preference of Baldwin.
The two fugitive Byzantine emperors, Alexius III and Alexius Murtzuphlos, wandered about in Macedonia, with little hope
of finding partisans disposed to join their cause. Murtzuphlos joined his father-in-law, hoping by their united influence to assemble an army
capable of preventing the Crusaders from reaching Thessalonica. But Alexius III
feared his son-in-law on account of his military talents, and contrived to
seize him, and have his eyes put out. The unfortunate Murtzuphlos was soon taken prisoner by the Crusaders, who carried him to Constantinople, where
they tried him for the murder of Alexius IV. Murtzuphlos pleaded that the young Alexius had been deposed and condemned as a traitor by a
lawful assembly; but the Crusaders found him guilty, and ordered him to be
executed in a singular manner. The last of the Byzantine emperors was
precipitated from the top of a column in the Tauros,
one of the principal squares in the capital, and was dashed to pieces on the
pavement of the city. Alexius III fled as the Crusaders advanced. To gain a new
ally, he bestowed the accommodating Eudocia in marriage on Leo Sguros, who had occupied a great part of Greece; but when
that chief was defeated by the Marquess of Montferrat, Alexius submitted to the
conqueror, and received a pension. He soon fled to Michael, despot of Epirus;
thence he repaired as a suppliant to the court of Gaiaseddin Kaikhosrou II sultan of Iconium, whom he had received
with kindness when an exile. The power which
Theodore Lascaris had acquired at Nicaea excited the envy of Alexius,
though Theodore was the husband of his daughter Anna, and, with the aid of the
Turks, he endeavoured to seize his throne. Theodore Lascaris defeated the
sultan, and took Alexius prisoner. The dethroned and restless monarch was shut
up in a monastery, where he passed the remainder of his life, universally
despised as a worthless and cowardly emperor, and detested as an envious and
cruel man, utterly void of every feeling of natural affection, honour, or
gratitude.
CONCLUSION
End of the Byzantine Empire
Such was the termination of the Byzantine phase of the Eastern Roman
Empire. Many new states were formed from its disjointed members, as had
formerly happened at the fall of the Empire of the West. Three of these assumed
the rank of empires, and the Belgian Emperor of Constantinople found himself
compelled to dispute for the honour of representing the Roman Empire of the
East with two Greek sovereigns, who assumed the imperial title at Nicaea and at
Trebizond. Most of the European provinces were subjected to a new code of laws,
and were forced to adopt new habits and manners. The feudal system was imposed
on Greece by its conquerors, and a considerable portion of the Hellenic race
never again recovered its independence; but when the power of its feudal
princes and of its other masters, the Venetians, the Genoese, and the Knights
of St John, declined, it passed under the dominion of the Ottoman Turks. The
Greek emperor of Nicaea, even after he had expelled the Belgian emperor from
Constantinople, never extended his power over more than a moiety of the Greek
nation. The Greek empire of Constantinople was only a counterfeit
representation of its Byzantine predecessor, in the same manner as the empire
of Charlemagne formed a mere nominal revival of that of Rome. But more
instruction would be derived by making the difference in the state of society
at the fall of the empires of the East and West, than in tracing analogies
which naturally occurred at the dissolution of two states long governed by the
same principles of policy and jurisprudence.
The task here assumed is confined to a more restricted field. It will be
enough to recapitulate the principal causes which produced the ruin of the
Byzantine empire, and to indicate the various influences that operated in
transforming the spirit of universality, which characterised the government of
the Iconoclast emperors, into the confined Greek nationality that displayed
itself under the houses of Comnenos and Angelos. A great modification in the official establishment
of the empire took place by the consolidation of arbitrary power in the hands
of the Basilian dynasty. The arbitrary nature of the executive power, as then
exercised, circumscribed the class from which the higher officials in the administration
were selected, and robbed intellectual cultivation, scientific knowledge, and
long experience, of the guarantees they previously possessed for attaining high
rank in the public service. Courtly privileges, political ignorance, decreased
communications, restricted ideas, the decay of internal trade, and a stationary
condition of the people, soon proclaimed the decline of society. We are apt to
feel surprised that ancient nations submitted tamely to the severe oppression
under which they are recorded to have bowed for many successive generations. A
careful consideration of the constitution of society, that arose out of the
existence of slavery, explains the difficulty. The slaves at
Constantinople, as in ancient Rome, were very numerous; many were
as well educated as their masters, and mingled habitually with the highest
ranks of society. To a large body of these slaves, therefore, the feelings of
every class, the extent of popular grievances, the strength of rival factions,
and the resources of the central executive power, were as well-known as to the
greater part of the free population. The mass of slaves lived in perpetual
hostility to the existing order of things, ready to seize any opportunity that
might present itself for effecting a social revolution; nor would leaders have
been wanting among the slaves themselves, had a favourable moment been found.
The free citizens knew the danger in which they lived, and hence their
political conduct was fettered by perpetual bonds: they feared an insurrection
of their slaves more than the arbitrary power of their emperors.
It may be asserted without hesitation, that the first irremediable
injury inflicted on the Byzantine government was the corruption of the
administration of justice by ignorant and venal courtiers, whom the Basilian
emperors intrusted with the exercise of arbitrary power. The immense influence
of the Byzantine judicial system, in maintaining order and activity throughout
all ranks of society, is apt to be overlooked, because it was never fully
appreciated by contemporary historians. Its social power may be justly
estimated by reflecting that the Byzantine law approached much nearer to the
principles of equity than the Eastern Church did to the principles of
Christianity. As soon as judicial functions were ill performed, general
civilization declined. The people, finding that justice was prostituted, and
that there was no hope of reforming the administration, ceased to respect the
central authority. The great moral tie which had attached the inhabitants of
the provinces to the emperors was then broken. A practical separation of the
interests of different nations and territories ensued; and a marked change in
the relations of those provinces which possessed a national character to the
central government was the first manifest sign of the weakness of the empire.
The operation of fiscal oppression in accelerating the revolution, and in
separating every subject race except the Greek from the government, has been
fully treated in the preceding pages. The Armenians, Cappadocians, Cilicians, Bulgarians, Sclavonians,
Wallachians, and Albanians were, one after the other, driven to assert their
independence; and the supremacy of the Hellenic race in the Byzantine empire,
which may be dated from the extinction of the Basilian dynasty, prepared the
way for internal revolutions and foreign conquest. The other nations struggled
to preserve their independence; the Greeks bartered theirs for official and
ecclesiastical power.
The decline of the Byzantine Empire must also be considered as closely
connected with the identification of the Greek Church with the Roman
administration. This union of the ecclesiastical with the civil government may
be also dated from the last years of the Basilian dynasty. It was consummated
after the complete schism of the Greek and Latin churches in 1053, which was
unfortunately effected by the Patriarch Michael Keroularios,
with a degree of violence that implanted a deep hatred in the breasts of the
priesthood of the rival sects. By this union of the ecclesiastical with the
political administration, the power and influence of the Greek aristocracy was
greatly extended and strengthened, but the spirit of the government was
rendered more exclusive and bigoted. The Byzantine emperors, as they identified
the ecclesiastical with the civil administration, always held the Eastern
clergy in a state of abject dependence on the imperial power. They used the
church as a ministerial department of government for the religious affairs and
the education of the people. So that, when the loss of Sicily and Italy and the
hostility of Armenia had excluded men of education belonging to these countries
from the higher ecclesiastical charges at Constantinople, the general ignorance
of the other subject-races threw every ecclesiastical office into the hands of
the Greeks, who converted the oriental church into a national monopoly. From
that period the administration of public affairs displayed an excess of bigotry
from which it had been generally free in preceding ages. The union of the
church and state grew constantly more intimate, and the Greeks, having no
rivals in official power, became more blindly prepossessed in favour of their
own national prejudices and ecclesiastical practices. This exclusive national
spirit, combining religion with politics, has ever since proved a misfortune to
the Greek race. During the latter years of the Byzantine Empire it prevented
the people from learning those new social and religious ideas which were then
beginning to enlarge the intelligence and the energies of the people in Western
Europe. The religious hatred with which the Greeks regarded every nation that
acknowledged the papal supremacy led them to reject many social, political, and
ecclesiastical reforms that originated in Catholic countries. The twelfth
century did much to improve the condition of the Western nations, but nothing
to improve that of the Greeks. The consequence was that the arbitrary power of
the Byzantine emperors was exercised without any civil or ecclesiastical
restraint; for the Greeks repudiated every principle of civil liberty, and
every ecclesiastical declaration in favour of the rights of humanity, as
heretical and revolutionary innovations introduced by the popes to further
their own ambitious projects. It must be remembered that the papal church was
at this time often actively engaged in defending freedom, in establishing a
machinery for the systematic administration of justice to the people, and in
impressing men with the full value of fixed laws for the purpose of restraining
the abuses of the temporal power of princes. In short, the papal church was
then the great teacher of social and political reform, and those who scorned to
listen to its words and study its policy could hardly perceive the changes
which time was producing in the Christian world. The Byzantine Greeks
immediately rejected the idea of progress; the papal church would have fain
arrested the progressive impulse it had given to society a century or two
later. The Greeks prided themselves on their conservative, or, as they called
it, their Roman spirit. By clinging superstitiously to antiquated formulas,
they rejected the means of alleviating the evils of a ruinous political fabric,
and refused to better their condition by entering on paths of reform indicated
by the Western nations, who were already emerging from their social
degradation. While the rest of Europe was actively striving to attain a happier
future, the Greeks were gazing backward on what they considered a more glorious
past. This habit of appropriating to themselves the vanished glories of the
Roman empire, or of ancient Greece, created a feeling of self-sufficiency which
repudiated reform in the latter days of the Byzantine empire, and which has
ever since retarded the progress of the modern Greeks in the career of European
civilization.
EMPIRE OF NICAEA, AD. 1204-1261
|