READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE FROMA.D. 717 TO 1453
THE CONTEST WITH THE ICONOCLASTS, A.D. 717-367
CHAPTER III
THE AMORIAN DYNASTY, A.D. 820-867
Sect. I
MICHAEL II THE STAMMERER A.D.
820-829
MICHAEL II was proclaimed emperor with the fetters on
his limbs; and the first spectacle of his reign was the jailor delivering him
from a felon’s bonds. When relieved from his irons, he proceeded to the
church of St. Sophia, where he was crowned by the Patriarch.
Michael II was born in the lowest rank of society. He
had entered the army as a private soldier in early youth, but his attention to
his duties, and his military talents, quickly raised him to the rank of
general. His influence over the troops aided in placing Leo V on the imperial
throne. Amorium was his birthplace, an important and wealthy city, inhabited by
a mixed population of various races and languages, collected together by
trading interests. The Phrygians, who formed the majority, still retained many
native usages, and some religious ideas adverse to Greek prejudices. Many Jews
had also been established in the city for ages, and a sect called the Athingans, who held that the touch of many things was a
contamination, had numerous votaries.
The low origin of Michael, and the half-suppressed
contempt he disclosed for Greek learning, Roman pride, and ecclesiastical
tradition, awakened some animosity in the breasts of the pedants, the nobles,
and the orthodox of Constantinople. It is not surprising, therefore, that the
historians who wrote under the patronage of the enemies of the Amorian dynasty
should represent its founder as a horse-Jockey, a heretic, and a stammerer. As
he showed no particular favour to the Greek party in the Byzantine church, his
orthodoxy was questioned by the great body of the clergy; and as he very
probably expressed himself with hesitation in the Greek language, as spoken at
court, any calumny would find credit with the Hellenic populace, who have
always been jealous of strangers, and eager to avenge, by words, the compliance
they have been compelled to yield by deeds to foreign masters.
Michael, however, had sagacity to observe the
difficulties which the various parties in the church and court had the power of
raising up against his administration. To gain time, he began by conciliating
every party. The orthodox, headed by Theodore Studita and the exiled Patriarch Nicephoros, were the most
powerful. He flattered these two ecclesiastics, by allowing them to return to the
capital, and even permitted Theodore to resume his functions as abbot of
Studion; but, on the other hand, he refused to adopt their suggestions for a
reaction in favour of image-worship. He seems to have been naturally inclined
to religious toleration, and he was anxious to repress all disputes within the
pale of the church, as the best means of maintaining the public tranquillity.
In order to give a public guarantee for the spirit of the civil power, which he
desired should characterize his reign, he held a silention to announce toleration of private opinion in ecclesiastical questions; but it
was declared that the existing laws against the exhibition of images and
pictures in churches were to be strictly enforced. The indifference of Michael
to the ecclesiastical disputes which agitated a church, to many of whose
doctrines he was at heart adverse, did not create so violent an opposition as
the sincerer conduct of his predecessors, who banished images on religious
grounds.
The elevation of a new emperor, who possessed few
claims to distinction, awakened, as usual, the hopes of every ambitious
general. A formidable rival appeared in the person of Thomas, the only
officer of eminence who had remained faithful to the rebel Bardanes, when Leo
and Michael deserted his standard. Thomas, as has been already mentioned, was
appointed general of the federates by Leo V, but, owing to some circumstances
which are not recorded, he had retired into the dominions of the caliph, and
remained for some time on the borders of Armenia. His origin, whether Slavonian
or Armenian, by separating him in an unusual degree from the ruling classes in
the empire for he was, like Michael, of a very low rank in society caused him
to be regarded as a friend of the people; and all the subject races in the
empire espoused his cause, which in many provinces took the form of an attack
on the Roman administration, rather than of a revolution to place a new emperor
on the throne. This rebellion is remarkable for assuming more of the character
of a social revolution than of an ordinary insurrection. Thomas overran all
Asia Minor without meeting with any serious opposition even on the part of the
towns; so that, with the exception of the Armeniac theme and Opsikion, his
authority was universally acknowledged, and the administration was conducted by
his officers. He concluded an alliance with the Saracens to enable him to visit
Antioch, and receive the imperial crown from the hands of the Patriarch Job.
This alliance with the infidels tended to injure his popularity; and when he
returned accompanied by large bodies of mercenary troops, collected from the
Mohammedan tribes on the frontier, the public enthusiasm for his cause became
sensibly diminished. Thomas, too, feeling more confidence in the power of his
army, began to show himself careless of the good-will of the people.
The only manner of putting an end to the war was by
taking Constantinople, and this Thomas prepared to attempt. An immense fleet
was assembled at Lesbos. Gregorios Pterotes, a relation of Leo V, who had been banished to
Skyros by Michael, was sent into Thrace at the head of ten thousand men to
prepare for the arrival of Thomas, who soon followed with the bulk of his army,
and formed the siege of Constantinople. Michael had taken every precaution for
sustaining a long siege, and Thomas seems to have committed a serious error in
attacking so strong a city, while the troops of the Armeniac theme and of
Opsikion were in sufficient strength to attack his communications with the
centre of Asia Minor, and maintain a constant communication with the garrison
of Constantinople from the coast of Bithynia. The army of Thomas, though very
numerous, was in part composed of an undisciplined rabble, whose plundering
propensities increased the difficulty of obtaining supplies. On the other hand,
Constantinople, though closely invested, was well supplied with all kinds of
provisions and stores, and the inhabitants displayed great firmness in opposing
an enemy whom they saw bent on plunder, while Michael and his son Theophilus
performed the duties of able generals. Two attempts were made to storm the
fortifications, one during the winter, in 821, and the other in the spring of
822; and both were equally unsuccessful and entailed considerable loss on the
besiegers. In the meantime the partisans of Michael collected a fleet of 350
ships in the islands of the Archipelago and Greece; and this force, having
gained a complete victory over the fleet of Thomas, cut off the besiegers from
communication with Asia.
The Bulgarians, in order to profit by the civil war,
invaded the empire, and plundered the country from which the rebels were
compelled to draw their supplies. Thomas marched to oppose them with a part of
his army, but was defeated, and lost the greater part of his baggage. He was so
much weakened by this defeat that Michael sallied out from Constantinople,
again routed him, and compelled the rebel army to retire to Arcadiopolis,
where Thomas was soon closely besieged. For five months the place was obstinately
defended, but at last Thomas was delivered up by his own followers; and his
adopted son, who had been invested with the title of Emperor, was captured
shortly after in Byza. Both were hanged, after their
limbs had been cut off. This junction of a son with the reigning emperor as his
successor had become a rule of the Byzantine constitution, which was rarely
neglected by any sovereign. Two chiefs attached to the party of Thomas
continued for some time to defend the towns of Kabala and Saniana in Asia Minor, until the latter place was betrayed by one who bargained to be
appointed archbishop of Neocesarea, a fact recorded
in a satirical verse preserved by one of the Byzantine historians.
This remarkable civil war lasted nearly three years,
and is distinguished by some features of unusual occurrence from most of the
great rebellions in the Byzantine Empire. The large fleets collected on both
sides prove that the population and wealth of the coasts and islands of the
Archipelago had not declined under the administration of the Iconoclasts,
though this part of the empire was likely to be least favoured by the central
power, as having attempted to dethrone Leo III, and having always firmly supported
the party of the image worshippers. The most numerous partisans of Thomas, and
those who gave the strong revolutionary impulse to the rebellion at its
commencement, were that body of the Asiatic population which national
distinctions or religious opinions excluded from participation in public and
local affairs, and to whom even the ecclesiastical courts were shut, on account
of their heretical opinions; and to the ecclesiastical courts alone recourse
could be had for the equitable administration of justice in some cases. The
discontent of these classes, joined to the poverty created by excessive
taxation, supplied the army of Thomas with those numerous bands of marauders,
eager to seek revenge, who spread desolation far and wide, alarmed all men possessing
property, and ultimately rained his enterprise. The indiscipline of his troops,
and his incapacity to apply any remedy to the financial oppression and
religious intolerance against which the population of the Asiatic provinces had
taken up arms, alienated the minds of all who expected to find in him an
instrument for reforming the empire. But had Thomas really been a man of a
powerful mind, he might have laid the foundation of a new state of society in
the Eastern Empire, by lightening the burden of taxation, carrying out
toleration for religious opinions, securing an impartial administration of
justice even to heretics, and giving every class of subjects, without
distinction of nationality or race, equal security for their lives and
property. The spirit of the age was, however, averse to toleration, and the
sense of justice was so defective that these equitable principles could only
have been upheld by the power of a well-disciplined mercenary army.
The necessity of adopting a general measure for improving
the condition of the people was not felt by Michael II, even when this
rebellion was suppressed; and though he saw that some reduction of taxation to
the lower classes was required, he restricted the boon to the Armeniac theme
and Opsikion, because these provinces had not joined Thomas in the civil war;
and even in them he only reduced the hearth-tax to one half of the amount
imposed by Nicephorus I. The rest of the empire was oppressed more than usual,
as a punishment. It is certain that this unfortunate rebellion caused an
immense destruction of property in Asia Minor, and was no inconsiderable cause
of the accumulation of property in immense estates, which began to depopulate
the country, and prepare it for the reception of a new race of inhabitants.
The state of society under every known government was
at this period troubled by civil wars. The seeds of these convulsions may,
therefore, be sought in some general cause affecting the relations of the
various classes of men in the development of social progress, and so far it lay
beyond the immediate influence of the political laws of the respective
governments, whether Mohammedan or Christian. The frame of society in the
Saracen and Frank empires betrayed as many signs of decay as in the Byzantine.
One of the remarkable features of the age is the appearance of bands of men, so
powerful as to set the existing governments everywhere at defiance. These bands
consisted in great part of men of what may be called the middle and higher
classes of society, driven by dissatisfaction with their prospects in life to
seek their fortunes as brigands and pirates; and the extent to which slavery
and the slave-trade prevailed, afforded them a ready means of recruiting their
forces with daring and desperate men. The feeling which in our days impels
nations to colonise new countries, and improve uncultivated lands, in the ninth
century led the Saracens and Normans to ravage every country they could enter,
destroy capital, and consequently diminish cultivation and population.
Crete and Sicily, two of the most valuable provinces
of the Byzantine empire, inhabited almost exclusively by Greeks, and both in a
high state of civilisation and prosperity, were conquered by the Saracens
without offering the resistance that might have been expected from the wealth
and numbers of the inhabitants. Indeed, we are compelled to infer that the
change from the orthodox sway of the emperors of Constantinople to the
domination of the Mohammedans, was not considered by the majority of the Greeks
of Crete and Sicily so severe a calamity as we generally believe. In almost
every case in which the Saracens conquered Christian nations, history
unfortunately reveals that they owed their success chiefly to the favour with
which their progress was regarded by the mass of the people. To the disgrace of
most Christian governments, it will be found that their administration was more
oppressive than that of the Arabian conquerors. Oppression commenced when the
rude tribes of the desert adopted the corruptions of a ruling class. The
inhabitants of Syria welcomed the first followers of Mahomet; the Copts of
Egypt contributed to place their country under the domination of the Arabs; the
Christian Berbers aided in the conquest of Africa. All these nations were
induced, by hatred of the government at Constantinople, to place themselves
under the sway of the Mohammedans. The treachery of the nobles, and the
indifference of the people, made Spain and the south of France an easy prey to
the Saracens. The conquest of Crete and Sicily must be traced to the same
causes, for if the mass of the people had not been indifferent to the change,
the Byzantine government could easily have retained possession of these
valuable islands. The same disgraceful characteristic of Christian monarchies
is also apparent at a much later period. The conquest of the Greeks, Servians, and Vallachians by the
Othoman Turks was effected rather by the voluntary submission of the mass of
the Christians than by the power of the Mohammedans. This fact is rendered
apparent by the effective resistance offered by the Albanians under Scanderbeg.
Church and state must divide between them this blot on Christian society, for
it is difficult to apportion the share due to the fiscal oppression of Roman
centralisation, and to the unrelenting persecution of ecclesiastical orthodoxy.
Crete fell a prey to a band of pirates. The reign
of Al Hakem, the Ommiade caliph of Spain, was disturbed by continual troubles; and some theological
disputes having created a violent insurrection in the suburbs of Cordova, about
15,000 Spanish Arabs were compelled to emigrate in the year 815. The greater
part of these desperadoes established themselves at Alexandria, where they soon
took an active part in the civil wars of Egypt. The rebellion of Thomas, and
the absence of the naval forces of the Byzantine Empire from the Archipelago,
left the island of Crete unprotected. The Andalusian Arabs in Alexandria
availed themselves of this circumstance to invade the island, and establish a
settlement on it, in the year 823. Michael was unable to take any measures for
expelling these invaders, and an event soon happened in Egypt which added
greatly to the strength of this Saracen colony. The victories of the
lieutenants of the Caliph Almamun compelled the
remainder of the Andalusian Arabs to quit Alexandria; so that Abou Hafs, called by Greeks Apochaps,
joined his countrymen in Crete with forty ships, determined to make the new
settlement their permanent home. It is said by the Byzantine writers that they
commenced their conquest of the island by destroying their fleet, and
constructing a strong fortified camp, surrounded by an immense ditch, from
which it received the name of Chandak, now corrupted
by the Western nations into Candia. The construction of the new city, as the
capital of their conquests, was part of the Saracen system of establishing
their domination. The foundation of Cairo, Cairowan,
Fez, Cufa, and Bagdad, was the result of this policy.
A new state of society, and new institutions, were introduced with greater
facility in a new residence.
The Saracen pirates derived some facilities towards
rendering their conquests permanent, from the circumstance that their bands
generally consisted of young men, destitute of domestic ties, who were seeking
family establishments as well as wealth. It was thus that they became real
colonists, to a much greater extent than is usually the case with conquerors in
civilised countries. The ease, moreover, with which the Saracens, even of the
highest rank, formed marriages with the lower orders, and the equality which
reigned among the followers of the Prophet, presented fewer barriers to the
increase of their number than prevailed in the various orders and classes of
Byzantine society. The native population of Crete was in a stationary, if not a
declining condition, at the time of the arrival of the Saracens, while these
new colonists were introduced into the country under circumstances extremely
favourable to a rapid increase of their numbers. History, however, rarely
enables us to mark, from age to age, the increase and decrease of the different
classes, tribes, and nations concerning whose affairs it treats, though no fact
is more important to enable us to form a correct estimate of the virtues and
vices of society, to trace the progress of civilisation, and understand the
foundations of political power.
The Emperor Michael II was at length, by the defeat of
Thomas, enabled to make some attempts to drive the invaders out of Crete. The
first expedition was intrusted to the command of Photinos, general of the
Anatolic theme, a man of high rank and family; it was also strengthened by a
reinforcement under Damianos, count of the imperial stables and protospatharios; but this expedition was completely
defeated. Damianos was slain, and Photinos escaped with a single galley to Dia.
The second attack on the Saracens was commanded by Krateros, the general of the
Kibyrraiot theme, who was accompanied by a fleet of seventy ships of war. The
Byzantine historians pretend that their army was victorious in a battle on
shore, but that the Saracens, rallying during the night, surprised the
Christian camp, and captured the whole fleet. Krateros escaped in a merchant
vessel, but was pursued and taken near Cos, where he was immediately crucified
by the Saracens.
The Saracens, having established their sovereignty
over the twenty-eight districts into which Crete was then divided, sent out
piratical expeditions to plunder the islands of the Archipelago and the coasts
of Greece. Michael, alarmed lest more of his subjects should prefer the Saracen
to the Byzantine government, fitted out a well-appointed fleet to cruise in the
Aegean Sea, and named Oryphas to command it. A choice
of the best soldiers in the empire was secured, by paying a bounty of forty
byzants a man; and in this, a most effective squadron, with a body of
experienced warriors on board, the Byzantine admiral scoured the Archipelago.
The Saracen pirates from Syria, Egypt, Africa, and Spain, who had been stimulated
by the successes of their countrymen to plunder the Greeks, were pursued and
destroyed; but Oryphas was unable to effect anything,
when he attacked the Cretan colony on shore. This fleet was subsequently
neglected; and, in the first year of the reign of Theophilus, an imperial
squadron was totally destroyed by the Saracens, in a naval engagement near
Thasos, leaving the corsairs masters of the sea. The islands of the Archipelago
were then plundered, and immense booty in property and slaves was carried off.
The Saracens retained possession of Crete for one hundred and thirty-five
years.
The conquest of Sicily was facilitated by the
treachery of Euphemios, a native Greek of high rank, who is said to have
carried off a nun, and whom the emperor ordered to be punished by the loss of
his nose; for though Michael himself espoused Euphrosyne, the daughter of
Constantine VI, after she had taken the veil, he did not intend that any of his
subjects should be allowed a similar license. Euphemios was informed of the
emperor’s order in time to save his nose, by exciting a sedition in Syracuse,
his native city. In this tumult, Gregoras the
Byzantine governor was slain. Michael then deputed Photinos, whose unsuccessful
expedition to Crete has been already mentioned, to supply the place of Gregoras, and carry on the war against the Saracens of
Africa, whom Euphemios had already invited into Sicily, to distract the
attention of the Byzantine military. Ziadet Allah,
the Aglabite sovereign of Cairowan,
had paid particular attention to his fleet, so that he was well prepared to
carry on the war, and delighted to gain an entrance for his troops into Sicily.
In June, 827, his admiral effected a junction with the ships of Euphemios, who
had been driven out of Syracuse, and the Saracens landed at Mazara. Photinos
was defeated in a battle near Platana, and retreated
to Enna. The Saracens occupied Girgenti, but they
were not strong enough to commence offensive operations until the Byzantine
fleet was driven off the coast by the arrival of a squadron of ships from
Spain, which joined the Aglabites, and enabled fresh
reinforcements to arrive from Africa. The war was then carried on with
activity: Messina was taken in 831; Palermo capitulated in the following year;
and Enna was besieged, for the first time in 836. The war continued with
various success, as the invaders received assistance from Africa, and the
Christians from Constantinople. The Byzantine forces recovered possession of
Messina, which was not permanently occupied by the Saracens until 843. The
Emperor Theophilus was too much engaged by his military operations in Asia
Minor to send effectual aid to the Sicilians; while his father Michael II had
been too fond of his ease on the throne to devote the requisite attention to the
business of the distant provinces. Michael III thought of nothing but his
pleasures. At lengths in the year 859, Enna was taken by the Saracens.
Syracuse, in order to preserve its commerce from ruin, had purchased peace by
paying a tribute of 50,000 byzants; and it was not until the reign of Basil I,
in the year 878, that it was compelled to surrender, and the conquest of Sicily
was completed by the Arabs. Some districts, however continued, either by treaty
or by force of arms, to preserve their municipal independence, and the
exclusive exercise of the Christian religion, within their territory, to a
later period.
The loss of Crete and Sicily seems to have been viewed
with strange apathy by the court at Constantinople. The reason of this is
probably to be attributed to the circumstance that the surplus revenue was
comparatively small, and the defence of these distant possessions was found
often to require a military force, which it was deemed might be more
advantageously employed in the capital. These feelings of the statesmen at
Constantinople were doubtless strengthened by the circumstance that a portion
of the population, both in Crete and Sicily, had acquired a degree of municipal
independence extremely adverse to the principles which guided the imperial
cabinet.
The bold and indefatigable abbot, Theodore Studita, still struggled to establish the supremacy of the
church over the emperor in religious and ecclesiastical affairs. He
appears to deserve the credit of having discovered the necessity of creating a
systematic restraint on the arbitrary authority of the sovereign; but his
scheme for making the ecclesiastical legislation superior to the executive
power was defective, inasmuch as it sought to confer on the church a more
irresponsible and dangerous authority than that of which the emperor would have
been deprived. Experience had not yet taught mankind that no irresponsible
power, whether it be intrusted to king or priest, in a monarchy or a republic,
can be exercised without abuse. Until the law is superior to the executive
government there is no true liberty; but in the Byzantine Empire the emperor
was above the law, and the imperial officials and the clergy had a law of their
own, and so the people were doubly oppressed.
The conduct of Michael in conducting ecclesiastical
business indicates that he was not destitute of statesmanlike qualities, though
he generally thought rather of enjoying his ease on the throne than of
fulfilling the duties of his high station. During the civil war he was anxious to
secure the good-will of the monks and of the Greek party in the church. He
recalled Theodore from banishment, and declared himself in favour of perfect
toleration. This was far from satisfying the enthusiastic abbot, and the
bigoted ecclesiastics of his party; and after the establishment of tranquillity
they incited the image-worshippers to an open violation of the laws against
presenting pictures to the adoration of the people. Theodore also engaged with
fresh zeal in an extensive correspondence with all persons of influence whom he
knew to be favourable to his party. The emperor ordered him to discontinue this
correspondence, as of a seditious tendency; but the bold abbot ventured to
argue the case with Michael himself in a long letter, which is preserved in his
works.
The policy of forming friendly relations with the
western nations of Europe was every day becoming more apparent to the rulers of
the Byzantine Empire, as the political influence of the Popes extended itself,
and the power of the western nations increased. Michael II, in order to prevent
the discontented image-worshippers from receiving support from the Franks,
opened negotiations with the Emperor Louis le Debonnaire,
in the hope of obtaining a condemnation of image-worship similar to that of
Charlemagne. In the year 824, an embassy, bearing a vainglorious and bombastical letter, announcing the defeat of Thomas,
reached the court of Louis. In this epistle Michael recapitulates the religious
principles which ought to guide the emperors of the Romans in their
ecclesiastical affairs. He alludes to the condemnation of image-worship by the
council of Frankfort, and declares that he has not destroyed holy images and
pictures, but only removed them to such an elevation as was necessary to prevent
the abuses caused by popular superstition. He considers the councils held for
the condemnation of image worship merely as local synods, and fully recognises
the existence of a higher authority in general councils of the church, giving,
at the same time, his own confession of faith, in terms which he knew would
secure the assent of Louis and the Frank clergy. He then solicits the Frank
emperor to induce the Pope to withdraw his protection from the rebellious image
worshippers who had fled from the Byzantine Empire to Rome. A synod was
convoked at Paris in consequence of this communication, which condemned the
worship of images in the same terms as the Caroline Books, and blamed the
second council of Nicaea for the superstitious reverence it had shown for images,
but, at the same time, approved of the rebuke given to the Eastern emperors,
for their rashness in removing and destroying images, by Pope Hadrian, A.D.
825. The Emperor Louis was also requested by the synod to forward a letter to
Pope Eugenius, inviting him to write to the Emperor Michael, in order to
re-establish peace and unity in the Christian church. But the Pope, the two
emperors, and Theodore Studita, were all afraid of
plunging into ecclesiastical discussions at this period; for public opinion had
been so exercised in these polemics, that it was impossible to foresee the
result of the contest. Matters were therefore allowed to go on during the reign
of Michael without any open rupture. The imprisonment of Methodios,
afterwards Patriarch of Constantinople, and the condemnation to death of Euthymios, bishop of Sardis, were the only acts of extreme
severity with which the image-worshippers could reproach Michael; and these
seem to have originated from political and party motives rather than from religious
opinions, though the zeal of these ecclesiastics rendered them eager to be
considered as martyrs.
The marriage of Michael with Euphrosyne, the daughter
of Constantine VI, who had already taken the veil, was also made a ground for
exciting public reprobation against the emperor. It is probable, however, that
more importance is given to this marriage, as a violation of religion, by later
writers, than it received among contemporaries. The Patriarch absolved
Euphrosyne from her vows, and the senate repeatedly solicited the emperor to
unite himself with the last scion of Leo the Isaurian, the second founder of
the Eastern Empire. Michael affected to be averse to second marriages, and to
yield only to the public wish. That the marriage of the emperor with a nun
excited the animosity of the monks, who regarded marriage as an evil, and
second marriages as a delict, is very natural; and it would, of course, supply
a fertile source of calumnious gossip to the enemies of the Amorian dynasty.
Michael II died in October, 829, and was buried in a
sarcophagus of green Thessalian marble, in the sepulchral chapel erected by
Justinian in the Church of the Holy Apostles.
Sect. II
THEOPHILUS
A.D. 829-842
No emperor ever ascended the throne of Constantinople
with greater personal and political advantages than Theophilus. His education
had been the best the age could supply, and he possessed considerable talent
and industry. The general direction of his education had been intrusted to John
the Grammarian, one of the most accomplished as well as the most learned men of
the time. In arts and arms, in law and theology, the emperor was equally well
instructed: his taste made him a lover of poetry, music, and architecture; his
courage rendered him a brave soldier, his sense of justice a sound legislator,
but his theology made him a stern bigot; and a discontented temperament of mind
prevented his accomplishments and virtues from producing a harmonious union.
All acknowledged his merit, none seemed affectionately attached to his person;
and in the midst of his power he was called the Unfortunate. During his
father’s lifetime he had been intrusted with an active share in the government,
and had devoted particular attention to the ecclesiastical department. He
embraced the party of the Iconoclasts with fervour; and though his father
endeavoured to moderate his zeal, his influence seems to have produced the
isolated acts of persecution during the reign of Michael, which were at
variance with that emperor’s general policy.
Theophilus observed that the population of the empire
was everywhere suffering from the defects of the central government, and he was
anxious to remedy the evil. He erroneously attributed the greatest part of the
sufferings of the people to the corruption of the administration, instead of
ascribing it to the fact that the central authorities assumed duties which they
were unable to execute, and prevented local bodies, who could easily have
performed these duties in an efficient manner, from attempting to undertake
them. Theophilus, however, justly believed that a great reform might be
effected by improving the administration of justice, and he set about the task
with vigour; still many of his measures for enforcing equitable conduct on the
part of the judges were so strongly marked with personality, that his severity,
even when necessary, was stigmatised as cruel. He was in the habit of riding
through the streets of Constantinople on a weekly visit to the church of St
Mary at Blachern, in order to afford his subjects a
public opportunity of presenting such petitions as might otherwise never reach
his hands. The practice is perpetuated in the Othoman Empire to this day. The
sultan pays a public visit to one of the principal mosques of his capital
weekly for the same purpose. In both cases it may be received as a proof of the
want of a better and more systematic control over the judicial administration
of a mighty empire. There was no emperor, in the reign of Theophilus, to parade
the streets of provincial towns, where control was most wanted; and there is no
substitute for the sultan’s procession to the mosque in the provincial cities
of Turkey.
The first proof Theophilus gave of his love of justice
was so strangely chosen, that it was represented as originating in the wish to
get rid of some dangerous courtiers, rather than in a sense of equity. He
assembled the senate, and, exhibiting to its astonished members the candelabrum
of which one of the branches had been struck off at the assassination of Leo V,
he demanded whether the laws of the empire and divine justice did not both call
for the punishment of the men who had committed the double sacrilege of
murdering their emperor, and shedding his blood before the altar. Some
senators, prepared for the scene, suggested that, in order to avert the
vengeance of Heaven, it was necessary to put the traitors to death. Theophilus
immediately ordered the prefect of Constantinople to arrest every person
concerned in Leo’s assassination and bring them to trial, whether they belonged
to the party of the image-worshippers or of the Greek ecclesiastics. They were
all convicted, and executed in the Hippodrome, vainly protesting against the
injustice of their sentence, since their deed had been ratified and pardoned by
the Emperor Michael II, and the reigning emperor confirmed that ratification by
enjoying the profit of their act.
Other examples of the emperor’s severity were less
liable to suspicion. A poor widow accused Petronas, the emperor’s
brother-in-law, an officer of talents and courage, of having, in violation of
law, raised his house so high as to render hers almost uninhabitable from want
of air and light. The laws concerning the disposition of private buildings in
Constantinople were always regarded as an important object of imperial
legislation. Theophilus ordered the grievance to be redressed; but the
complaint was subsequently reiterated, and the emperor discovered that his
brother-in-law had disobeyed his decision. He now gave orders that the newly
built house should be levelled with the ground, and condemned Petronas to be
scourged in the public highway. Sometime after this, Petronas was appointed to
the high post of governor of Cherson, and during the reign of his nephew,
Michael III, he defeated the Saracens in an important battle in Asia Minor, as
will be hereafter related. This anecdote illustrates the state of society at
the Byzantine court, by the contrast it presents between the servile feelings
of the Romans and Greeks of Constantinople, and the independent spirit of the
Franks and Germans of Western Europe. In the Eastern Empire the shame of blows
was nothing, and a bastinado inflicted on an emperor’s brother-in-law, who
retained his official rank, was not likely to be a very painful operation. The
degradation of the punishment was effaced by the arbitrary nature of the power
that inflicted it. The sense of justice inherent in mankind is always wounded
by the infliction of arbitrary punishment; cruelty or caprice are supposed to
dictate the sentence; the public attention is averted from the crime, and pity
is often created when the sufferer really deserves to be branded with infamy.
On another occasion, as Theophilus rode through the
streets, a man stepped forward, and, laying his hand on the horse the emperor
was riding, exclaimed, “This horse is mine, O emperor!”. On investigating the
circumstances, it appeared that the horse had really been taken by force from
its proprietor by an officer of rank, who wished to present it to the emperor
on account of its beauty. This act of violence was also punished, and
the proprietor received two pounds’ weight of gold as an indemnity for the loss
he had sustained. The horse was worth about one hundred byzants.
Theophilus was also indefatigable in examining the
police details of the capital, and looking into the state of the markets. It is
true that the abundance of provisions, and their price at Constantinople, was a
matter of great importance to the Byzantine government, which, like the Roman,
too often sacrificed the prosperity of the provinces to the tranquillity of the
capital; yet still the minute attention which Theophilus gave to performing the
duties of a prefect, indicate that he was deficient in the grasp of intellect
required for the clear perception of the duties of an emperor.
The reign of Theophilus was an age of anecdotes and
tales. It had many poetic aspirations, smothered in chronicles and legends of
saints. Volumes of tales were then current which would have given us a better
insight into Byzantine manners than the folios of the historians, who have
preserved an outline of a few of these stories. Theophilus seems to have been a
kind of Byzantine Haroun Al Rashid. Unfortunately the Iconoclasts appear to
have embodied more of this species of literature in their habits than the
orthodox, who delighted in silly legends concerning saints rather than in
imaginative pictures of the deeds of men; and thus the mirror of truth has
perished, while the fables that have been preserved are neglected from their
unnatural stupidity.
Theophilus was unmarried when he ascended the throne,
and he found difficulty in choosing a wife. At last he arranged with his
stepmother, Euphrosyne, a project for enabling him to make a suitable
selection, or at least to make his choice from a goodly collection. The
empress-mother invited all the most beautiful and accomplished virgins at
Constantinople to a fête in her private apartments. When the gaiety of the
assembled beauties had removed their first shyness, Theophilus entered the
rooms, and walked forward with a golden apple in his hand. Struck by the grace
and beauty of Eikasia, with whose features he must
have been already acquainted, and of whose accomplishments he had often heard,
he stopped to address her. The proud beauty felt herself already an empress;
but Theophilus commenced his conversation with the ungallant remark, “Woman is
the source of evil”, to which the young lady too promptly replied, “But woman
is also the cause of much good”. The answer or the tone jarred on the captious
mind of the emperor, and he walked on. His eye then fell on the modest features
of the young Theodora, whose eyes were fixed on the ground. To her he gave the
apple without risking a word. Eikasia, who for a
moment had felt the throb of gratified ambition, could not recover from the
shock. She retired into a monastery which she founded, and passed her life
dividing her time between the practice of devotion and the cultivation of her
mind. She composed some hymns, which continued long in use in the Greek Church.
A short time after this, the Empress Euphrosyne retired into the monastery of Gastria, an agreeable retreat, selected also by Theodista, the mother of Theodora, as her residence.
Theodora herself is the heroine of another tale,
illustrating the corruption of the officials about the court, and the
inflexible love of justice of the emperor. The courtiers in the service of
the imperial family had been in the habit of drawing large profits from evading
the custom-duties to which other traders were liable, by engaging the
emperor-colleague or the empress in commercial adventures. The revenue of the
state and the commerce of the honest merchant both suffered by this
aristocratic mode of trading. Theophilus, who knew of the abuse, learned that
the young empress had been persuaded to lend her name to one of these trading
speculations, and that a ship, laden with a valuable cargo in her name, was
about to arrive at Constantinople. In order to put an end to these frauds by a
striking example, he took care to be informed as this ship entered the port.
When this vessel arrived, it displayed the imperial standard, and stood proudly
towards the public warehouses with a fair wind. Theophilus, who had led the
court to a spot overlooking the port, pretending to be struck by the gallant
appearance of the vessel, demanded with what military stores she was laden, and
whence she came. The truth was soon elicited, and when he obtained a full
confession of the nature of the cargo, he ordered it to be landed and publicly
burned; for he said, it was never heard that a Roman emperor or empress turned
trader.
The principles of toleration which had guided the
imperial administration during the preceding reigns were not entirely laid
aside by Theophilus, and though his religious bigotry was strong, he preferred
punishing the image worshippers for disobedience to the civil laws to
persecuting them for their ecclesiastical opinions. The emperor’s own
prejudices in favour of the divine right of kings were as intolerant as his
aversion to image-worship, so that he may really have acted as much on
political as religious grounds. His father had not removed pictures from the
walls of churches when they were placed in elevated situations; and had
Theophilus followed his example, Iconoclasts and image worshippers might at
last have accepted the compromise, and dwelt peaceably together in the Eastern
Church. The monks, too, had been wisely allowed considerable latitude within
the walls of their monasteries, though they were forbidden to preach publicly
to the people in favour of image-worship. Theophilus was inclined to imitate
the policy of Leo the Isaurian, but he could not venture to dissolve the
refractory monasteries and imprison the monks. The government of the earlier
Iconoclasts reposed on an army organised by themselves, and ready to enforce
all their orders; but in the time of Theophilus, the army neither possessed the
same power over society, nor was it equally devoted to the emperor.
In the year 832, an edict was issued prohibiting every
display of picture-worship, and commanding that the word holy, usually placed
in letters of gold before the name of a saint, should be erased. This edict was
at times carried into execution in an arbitrary and oppressive manner, and
caused discontent and opposition. A celebrated painter of ecclesiastical
subjects, named Lazaros, who acquired great fame
during the reign of Michael III, was imprisoned and scourged, but subsequently
released from confinement at the intercession of Theodora. Two monks,
Theophanes the Singer and Theodore Graptos, were much
more cruelly treated, for, in addition to other tortures, some verses were
branded on the forehead of Theodore, who from that circumstance received his
surname of Graptos.
Sometime after the publication of this edict against
image worship, John the Grammarian was elected Patriarch. Though a decided
opponent of image-worship, he was a man of a larger intellect and more tolerant
disposition than his imperial pupil, over whose mind, however, he fortunately
retained considerable influence. Still, when the emperor found his edict
unavailing, he compelled the Patriarch to assemble a synod, which was induced
to excommunicate all image-worshippers. As the Patriarch was averse to these
violent proceedings, it can hardly be supposed that they produced much effect
within the pale of the church; but they certainly tended to inflame the zeal of
those marked out for persecution, and strengthened the minds of the orthodox to
perform what they considered to be their duty, arming them with faith to resist
the civil power. The spirit of religious strife was awakened, and the emperor
was so imprudent as to engage personally in controversies with monks and priests.
These discussions ruffled his temper and increased his severity, by exposing
the lofty pretensions he entertained of his dignity and talents to be wounded
by men who gloried in displaying their contempt for all earthly power.
Theophilus sought revenge for his injured vanity. The monks who persisted in
publicly displaying images and pictures were driven from their monasteries; and
many members of the clergy, distinguished for learning and beloved for virtue,
were imprisoned and scourged. Yet, even during the height of his resentment,
the emperor winked at the superstition of those who kept their opinions
private, tolerated the prejudices of the Empress Theodora, and at her request
released Methodios, the future Patriarch of
Constantinople, from prison.
The wealth of the Byzantine Empire was at this period
very great, and its industry in the most flourishing condition, Theophilus,
though engaged in expensive and disastrous wars, found the imperial revenue so
much increased by the augmented commerce of his subjects, that he was able to
indulge an inordinate passion for pomp and display. His love of art was
gratified by the fantastic employment of rich materials in luxurious ornament,
rather than by durable works of useful grandeur. His architectural taste alone
took a direction at times advantageous to the public. The walls of
Constantinople towards the sea were strengthened, and their height increased.
He founded an hospital, which remained one of the most useful institutions of
the city to the latest days of Byzantine history; but, at the same time, he
gratified his love of display in architecture, by constructing palaces, at an
enormous expense, in no very durable manner. One of these, built in imitation
of the great palace of the caliphs at Bagdad, was erected at Bryas, on the Asiatic shore. The varied form, the peculiar
arches, the coloured decorations, the mathematical tracery, and the rich
gilding, had induced John the Grammarian, when he visited the Caliph Motassem as ambassador from Theophilus, to bring back
drawings and plans of this building, which was totally different from the
Byzantine style then in use. Other buildings constructed by Theophilus are
described by historians in a way that indicates they must have been far
superior in magnificence to the works of preceding or following emperors.
Theophilus was also an enthusiastic admirer of music,
and as church-music was in his time one of the principal amusements of persons
of taste, musical science was devoted to add to the grandeur and solemnity of
ecclesiastical ceremonies. In works of art, the emperor's taste appears not to
have been very pure. A puerile vanity induced him to lavish enormous sums in
fabricating gorgeous toys of jewellery. In these ornaments, singular mechanical
contrivances were combined with rich figures to astonish the spectator. A
golden plane-tree, covered with innumerable artificial birds that warbled and
fluttered their wings on its branches, vultures that screamed, and lions that
roared, stood at the entrance of the hall of state. Invisible organs, that
filled the ceilings of the apartments with soft melody, were among the strange
things that Theophilus placed in the great palace of Constantinople. They
doubtless formed the theme of many Byzantine tales, of which we still see a
reflected image in the Arabian Nights.
Two laws of Theophilus deserve especial notice: one
exhibits him in the character of a capricious tyrant; the other reveals the
extent to which elements adverse to Roman and Greek nationality pervaded Byzantine
society. The first of these edicts ordered all the Romans that is, all the
subjects of the empire, to wear their hair cropped short, under the pain of the
bastinado. Theophilus pretended that he wished to restore old Roman fashions,
but the world believed that the flowing locks of others rendered him ashamed of
his own bald head. The other law declared that the marriage of Persians and
Romans did in no way derogate from the rights of those who were citizens of the
empire; and it shows that a very great emigration of Persian Christians from
the dominions of the caliphs must have taken place, or such a law would not
have become necessary. Theophobus, one of the most
distinguished leaders of the Persians, who claimed descent from the Sassanides, married Helena, the emperor’s sister.
The wide extended frontiers of the empire required
Theophilus to maintain relations with the sovereigns of a large portion of Asia
and Europe. To secure allies against his great enemy, the Caliph of
Bagdad, he renewed the ancient alliance of the emperors of Constantinople with
the sovereign of the Khazars; but this people was now too much occupied in
defending its own territories against a new race of intruders, called
Patzinaks, to renew their invasions of the northern provinces of the Mohammedan
empire. The progress of the Patzinaks alarmed Theophilus for the security of
the Byzantine commerce with the northern nations, from which the imperial
treasury drew immense duties; and he sent his brother-in-law Petronas (whom, as
we have mentioned, he had condemned to be scourged) to Cherson, which was then
a free city like Venice, with orders to construct a fortress on the banks of
the Don. This commercial colony, called Sarkel, was
used as the trading depot with the north. A friendly intercourse was kept up
with Louis le Debonnaire and his son Lothaire. The Venetians were invited to assist in the naval
war for the defence of Sicily and southern Italy against the Saracens of
Africa. An embassy was sent to Abderrahman II, the
caliph of Spain, to secure the commerce of the Greeks in the West from any
interruption, and to excite the Ommiad caliph to hostilities against the Abassides of Bagdad.
When Theophilus ascended the throne, the Byzantine and
Saracen empires enjoyed peace; but they were soon involved in a fierce contest,
which bears some resemblance to the mortal combat between the Roman and Persian
empires in the time of Heraclius. Almamun, who
ruled the caliphate from 813 to 833, was a magnificent and liberal sovereign,
distinguished for his love of science and literature, and eager to surpass the
Greeks in knowledge and the Romans in arms. Though not himself a soldier, his
armies were commanded by several celebrated generals. The want of a moral check
on the highest officials of arbitrary governments usually prevents the
existence of a sense of duty in political relations, and hence rebellions and
civil wars become prevalent. In the reign of Almamun,
the disturbances in Persia reduced the population, whether fire-worshippers or
Christians, to despair; and a great number, unable to live in their native
country, escaped into the Byzantine Empire, and established themselves at
Sinope. This immigration seems to have consisted chiefly of Christians, who
feared equally the government of Almamun and the
rebel Babek, who, though preaching the equality of all mankind, was accused of
allowing every license to his own followers. The Persian troops at Sinope were
placed under the command of Theophobos, and their number was increased by an
addition of seven thousand men, when Afshin, the general of the Caliph Motassem, defeated Babek, and extinguished the civil war in
Persia.
The protection granted by Theophilus to refugees from
the caliph’s dominions, induced Almamun to invade the
empire in the year 831; and the Saracen general, Abu Chazar,
completely defeated the Byzantine army, commanded by Theophilus in person. The
emperor repaired this disgrace in the following year by gaining a victory over
the Saracens in Charsiana, which he celebrated with
great pomp and vainglory in the hippodrome of Constantinople. Almamun revenged the defeat of his generals by putting
himself at the head of his army, ravaging Cappadocia, and capturing Heracleia.
The armies of the Byzantine Empire at this period
consisted in great part of foreign mercenaries. Some secondary causes,
connected with the development of society, which have escaped the notice of
historians, operated to render the recruitment of armies more than usually
difficult among the civilised portions of mankind, and caused all the powerful
sovereigns of the age to exclude their native subjects as much as possible from
the use of arms. In the Saracen Empire this feeling led to the transference of
all military power into the hands of Turkish mercenaries; and in the Frank
Empire it led to the exposure of the country, without defence, to the
incursions of the Normans. It is true that jealousy of the Arab aristocracy in
one case, and fear of the hostile disposition of the Romanised population in
the other, had considerable influence on the conduct of the caliphs and the
Western emperors. The Byzantine Empire, though under the influence of similar
tendencies, was saved from a similar fate by a higher degree of political
civilization. The distrust of Theophilus for his generals was shown by the
severity with which he treated them. Manuel, one of the best officers of the
empire, disgusted at his suspicions, fled to the Saracens, and served with
distinction in their armies against the rebels of Chorasan.
Alexis Mousel, an Armenian, who received the
favourite daughter of Theophilus in marriage, with the rank of Caesar, was
degraded and scourged in consequence of his father-in-law’s suspicions.
Immediately after the death of Almamun,
the emperor sent John the Grammarian on an embassy to Motassem,
who had succeeded his brother as caliph. The object of this embassy was to
conclude a lasting peace, and at all events to persuade Manuel, whose fame in
the war of Chorasan had reached the ears of
Theophilus, to return home. With the caliph the negotiations appear not to have
been as successful as the emperor expected, but with Manuel they succeeded
perfectly. The magnificence of John on this occasion gave rise to many
wonderful tales, and the Greeks were long amused by the accounts of the
marvellous wealth displayed by the priestly ambassador.
Not very long after this embassy, Theophilus, availing
himself of the troubles occasioned in the caliph's dominions by the civil wars
arising out of the heretical opinions concerning the human composition of the
Koran, which had been favoured by Almamun, invaded
the caliph's dominions. The Byzantine troops ravaged the country to the
south of Melitene, anciently called Commagene,
defeated the Saracens with great loss, captured Zapetra,
and penetrated as far as Samosata, which Theophilus also took and destroyed. Zapetra, or Sosopetra, lay about
two days’ journey to the west of the road from Melitene to Samosata. The Greeks
pretended that it was the birthplace of Motassem, and
that the caliph sent an embassy to the emperor entreating him to spare the
town, which he offered to ransom at any price; but Theophilus dismissed the
ambassadors and razed Zapetra to the ground. This
campaign seems to have been remarkable for the cruelty with which the
Mohammedans were treated, and the wanton ravages committed by the Persian
emigrants in the Byzantine service. The Saracens repeated one of the tales in
connection with this expedition which was current among their countrymen, and
applied, as occasion served, from the banks of the Guadalquivir to those of the
Indus. In Spain it was told of Al Hakem, in Asia of Motassem. A female prisoner, when insulted by a Christian
soldier, was reported to have exclaimed in her agony, “Oh, shame on Motassem”. The circumstance was repeated to the caliph, who
learned at the same time that the unfortunate woman was of the tribe of Hashem,
and consequently, according to the clannish feelings of the Arabs, a member of
his own family. Motassem swore by the Prophet he
would do everything in his power to revenge her.
In the meantime Theophilus, proud of his easy
victories, returned to Constantinople, and instead of strengthening his
frontier, and placing strong garrisons near the mountain passes, brought his
best troops to Constantinople to attend on his own person. As he entered
the hippodrome in a chariot drawn by four white horses, wearing the colours of
the blue faction, his happy return was hailed by the people with loud shouts.
His welcome was more like that of a successful charioteer than of a victorious
general.
The Persian mercenaries, whose number had now
increased to thirty thousand, were placed in winter-quarters at Sinope and Amastris, where they began to display a seditious spirit;
for Theophilus could neither trust his generals nor acquire the confidence of
his soldiers. These mercenaries at last broke out into rebellion, and resolved
to form a Persian kingdom in Pontus. They proclaimed their general Theophobus king; but that officer had no ambition to insure
the ruin of his brother-in-law’s empire by grasping a doubtful sceptre; and he
sent assurances to Theophilus that he would remain faithful to his allegiance,
and do everything in his power to put an end to the rebellion. Without much
difficulty, therefore, this army of Persians was gradually dispersed through
the different themes, but tranquillity was obtained by sacrificing the
efficiency of one of the best armies in the empire.
Motassem, having also re-established tranquillity in the interior of his
dominions, turned his whole attention to the war with the Byzantine
Empire. A well-appointed army of veterans, composed of the troops who had
suppressed the rebellion of Babek, was assembled on the frontiers of Cilicia,
and the caliph placed himself at the head of the army, on the banks of the Cydnus, in the year 838. A second army of thirty thousand
men, under Afshin, advanced into the empire at a considerable distance to the
north-east of the grand army, under the immediate orders of the caliph. Afshin
had suppressed the rebellion of Babek after it had lasted twenty years, and was
considered the ablest general of the Saracens. On hearing that the army of
Afshin had invaded Lykandos, Theophilus intrusted the
defences of the Cilician passes, by which the caliph proposed to advance, to Aetios, the general of the Anatolic theme, and hastened to
stop the progress of Afshin, whose army, strengthened by a strong body of
Armenians under Sembat the native governor of the
country, and by ten thousand Turkish mercenaries, who were then considered the
best troops in Asia, was overrunning Cappadocia. Theophilus, apprehensive
that this army might turn his flank, and alarmed lest the Armenians and Persians,
of which it was part composed, might seduce those of the same nations in his
service, was anxious to hasten an engagement. The battle was fought at Dasymon, where the Byzantine army, commanded by Theophobus and Manuel, under the immediate orders of Theophilus,
attacked the Saracens. The field was fiercely contested, and for some time it
seemed as if victory would favour the Christians; but the admirable discipline
of the Turkish archers decided the fate of the day. In vain the emperor exposed
his person with the greatest valour to recover the advantage he had lost;
Manuel was compelled to make the most desperate efforts to save him, and induce
him to retreat. The greater part of the Byzantine troops fled from the field,
and the Persian mercenaries alone remained to guard the emperor's person.
During the night, however, Theophilus was informed that the foreigners were
negotiating with the Saracens to deliver him up a prisoner, and he was
compelled to mount his horse, and ride almost unattended to Chiliokomon,
where a portion of the native troops of the empire had rallied. From thence he
retired to Dorylaeum, where he endeavoured to
assemble an army to defend Amorium, Manuel died of the wounds he received in
saving the emperor.
While Theophilus was marching to his defeat, the
advanced guard of the Caliph’s army, under Ashnas and Wassif, threaded the Cilician passes in the direction
of Tyana; and Aetios,
unable to resist their advance, allowed the main body of the Saracens to
penetrate into the central plains of Asia Minor without opposition. Abandoning
the whole of the Anatolic theme to the invaders, he concentrated his forces
under the walls of Amorium. After ravaging Lycaonia and Pisidia, Motassem marched to besiege Amorium. The capture of this
city, as the birthplace of the Amorian dynasty, had been announced by the
caliph to be the object of the campaign; and it was said that 130,000 men had
marched out of Tarsus with AMORIUM painted on their shields. Motassem expected to carry the place by assault, and the
defeat of Theophilus by his lieutenants inspired him with the hope of carrying
his arms to the shores of the Bosphorus, and plundering the Asiatic suburb of
Constantinople. But all his attempts to storm Amorium, though repeated with
fresh troops on three successive days, were defeated by Aetios,
who had thrown himself into the city with the best soldiers in his army, and
the caliph found himself obliged to commence a regular siege. Theophilus now
sued for peace. The bishop of Amorium and the leading citizens offered to
capitulate, for the numerous army within the walls soon exhausted the
provisions. But Motassem declared that he would
neither conclude a peace nor grant terms of capitulation; vengeance was what he
sought, not victory, Amorium was valiantly defended for fifty-five days, but
treachery at length enabled the caliph to gratify his passion, just as he was
preparing to try the fortune of a fourth general assault. The traitor who sold
his post and admitted the Saracens into the city was named Voiditzes.
In this case both the Christian and Mohammedan accounts agree in ascribing the
success of the besiegers to treason in the Christian ranks, and the defence
appears to have been conducted by Aetios both with
skill and valour. The cruelty of Motassem far
exceeded that of Theophilus. Thirty thousand persons were massacred, and the
inhabitants who were spared were sold as slaves. The city of Amorium was burned
to the ground, and the walls destroyed. The ambassadors sent by Theophilus to
beg for peace had been detained by the caliph, to witness his conquest. They
were now sent back with this answer, “Tell your master that I have at last
discharged the debt contracted at Zapetra”.
Motassem, however, perceived that a considerable change had taken place in the
empire since the days in which the Saracens had besieged Constantinople. He did
not even consider it prudent to attempt advancing to the shores of the
Bosphorus, but returned to his own dominions, carrying with him Aetios and forty officers of rank captured in Amorium. For
seven years these men were vainly urged to embrace the Mohammedan faith; at
last they were put to death by Vathek, the son of Motassem, and they are regarded as martyrs by the Orthodox
Church. Theophilus is said to have offered the Caliph Motassem the sum of 2400 Ib. of gold to purchase peace, and the deliverance of all the
Christians who had been taken prisoner during the war; but the caliph demanded
in addition that a Persian refugee named Naser, and Manuel, of whose death he
appears not to have been assured, should also be given up. Theophilus refused
to disgrace himself by delivering up Naser, and the treaty was broken off.
Naser was shortly after killed in an engagement on the frontier.
The war was prosecuted for some years in a languid
manner, and success rather inclined to the Byzantine arms. The port of Antioch,
on the Orontes, was taken and plundered by a Greek fleet; the province of
Melitene was ravaged as far as Marash; Abou Said, who
had defeated and slain Naser, was in turn himself defeated and taken prisoner.
At last a truce seems to have been concluded, but no exchange of prisoners took
place.
Theophilus never recovered from the wound his pride
received at Amorium. The frequent defeats he sustained in those battles
where he was personally engaged, contrasted with the success of his generals,
rankled in his melancholy disposition. His sensitive temperament and the
fatigues of his campaigns undermined his health. To divert his mind, he
indulged his passion for building; and so great were the resources of the
Byzantine treasury, that even at this period of misfortune he could lavish
enormous sums in idle ornament it would have been well, both for him and for
the Christian world, had he employed some of this wealth at an earlier period
in fortifying the frontier and diminishing the burden of the land-tax. He now
erected a new chapel called Triconchos, a circus for
public races, a staircase called Sigma, a whispering gallery called the
Mystery, and a magnificent fountain called Phiala.
But the emperor’s health continued to decline, and he perceived that his end
was not very distant.
Theophilus prepared for death with prudence and
courage, but with that suspicion which disgraced his character. A council of
regency was named to assist Theodora. His habitual distrust induced him to
exclude Theophobos from this council. He feared lest Theophobos might seize the
throne by means of the army, or establish an independent kingdom in the
Armeniac theme by means of the Persian mercenaries. The conspiracy on the night
after the defeat at Dasymon had augmented the
jealousy with which the emperor regarded his brother-in-law ever after the
rebellion of the Persian troops at Sinope and Amastris.
He now resolved to secure his son's throne at the expense of his own
conscience, and ordered Theophobos to be beheaded. Recollecting the fortune of
his father, and the fate of Leo the Armenian, he commanded the head of his
brother-in-law to be brought to his bedside. The agitation of the emperor's mind,
after issuing this order, greatly increased his malady; and when the lifeless
head of his former friend was placed before him, he gazed long and steadily at
its features, his mind doubtless wandering over the memory of many a
battle-field in which they had fought together. At last he “slowly exclaimed,
Thou art no longer Theophobos, and I am no more Theophilus”, then, turning away
his head, he sank on his pillow, and never again opened his lips.
Sect. III
MICHAEL III THE DRUNKARD A.D. 842-867
Michael the son of Theophilus was between three and
four years old when his father died. His mother Theodora, having been
crowned empress, was regent in her own right. The will of her husband had
joined with her, as a council of administration, Theoktistos, the ablest
statesman in the empire; Manuel, the uncle of the empress; and Bardas, her
brother. Thekla, an elder sister of Michael, had also
received the title of Empress before her father’s death.
The great struggle between the Iconoclasts and the image
worshippers was terminated during the regency of Theodora, and she is
consequently regarded by the orthodox as a pattern of excellence, though she
countenanced the vices of her son, by being present at his most disgraceful
scenes of debauchery. The most remarkable circumstance, at the termination of
this long religious contest, is the immorality which invaded all ranks of
society. The moral and religious sincerity and strictness which, during the
government of the early Iconoclasts, had raised the empire from the verge of
social dissolution to dignity and strength, had subsequently been supplanted by
a degree of cant and hypocrisy that became at last intolerable. The sincerity
of both the ecclesiastical parties, in their early contests, obtained for them
the respect of the people; but when the political question concerning the
subjection of the ecclesiastical to the civil power became the principal object
of dispute, official tyranny and priestly ambition only used a hypocritical
veil of religious phrases for the purpose of concealing their interested ends
from popular scrutiny. As usual, the people saw much farther than their rulers
supposed, and the consequence was that, both parties being suspected of
hypocrisy, the influence of true religion was weakened, and the most sacred
ties of society rent asunder. The Byzantine clergy showed themselves ready on
all occasions to flatter the vices of the civil government: the monks were
eager for popular distinction, and acted the part of demagogues; while servile prelates
and seditious monks were both equally indifferent to alleviating the people’s
burdens.
Every rank of society at last proclaimed that it was
weary of religious discussion and domestic strife. Indifference to the
ecclesiastical questions so long predominant, produced indifference to religion
itself, and the power of conscience became dormant; enjoyment was soon
considered the object of life; and vice, under the name of pleasure, became the
fashion of the day. In this state of society, of which the germs were visible
in the reign of Theophilus, superstition was sure to be more powerful than religion.
It was easier to pay adoration to a picture, to reverence a relic, or to
observe a ceremony, than to regulate one's conduct in life by the principles of
morality and the doctrines of religion. Pictures, images, relics, and
ceremonies became consequently the great objects of veneration. The Greek
population of the empire had identified its national feelings with traditional
usages rather than with Christian doctrines, and its opposition to the Asiatic
puritanism of the Isaurian, Armenian, and Amorian emperors, ingrafted the
reverence for relics, the adoration of pictures and the worship of saints, into
the religious fabric of the Eastern Church, as essentials of Christian worship.
Whatever the church has gained in this way, in the amount of popular devotion,
seems to have been lost to popular morality.
The senate at this time possessed considerable
influence in administrative business. It was called upon to ratify the
will of Theophilus, and a majority of its members were gained over to the party
of the empress, who was known to favour image-worship. The people of
Constantinople had always been of this party; and the Iconoclasts of the higher
ranks, tired of the persecutions which had been the result of the
ecclesiastical quarrel, desired peace and toleration more than victory. The
Patriarch, John the Grammarian, and some of the highest dignitaries in the
church, were, nevertheless, conscientiously opposed to a species of devotion
which they thought too closely resembled idolatry, and from them no public
compliance could be expected. Manuel, however, the only member of the regency
who had been a fervent Inconoclast, suddenly
abandoned the defence of his opinions; and his change was so unexpected that it
was reported he had been converted by a miracle. A sudden illness brought him
to the point of death, when the prayers and the images of the monks of Studion
as suddenly restored him to health. Such was the belief of the people of
Constantinople, and it must have been a belief extremely profitable to the monks.
It was necessary to hold a general council in order to
effect the restoration of image worship; but to do this as long as John the
Grammarian remained Patriarch was evidently impossible. The regency, however,
ordered him to convoke a synod, and invite to it all the bishops and abbots
sequestered as image worshippers, or else to resign the patriarchate. John
refused both commands, and a disturbance occurred, in which he was wounded by
the imperial guards. The court party spread a report that he had wounded
himself in an attempt to commit suicide, the greatest crime a Christian could
commit. The great mechanical knowledge of John, and his studies in natural
philosophy, were already considered by the ignorant as criminal in an
ecclesiastic; so that the calumnious accusation, like that already circulated
of his magical powers, found ready credence among the orthodox Greeks. The
court seized the opportunity of deposing him. He was first exiled to a
monastery, and subsequently, on an accusation that he had picked out the eyes
in a picture of a saint, he was scourged, and his own eyes were put out. His
mental superiority was perhaps as much the cause of his persecution as his
religious opinions.
Methodios, who had been released from imprisonment by Theophilus at the
intercession of Theodora, was named Patriarch, and a council of the church was
held at Constantinople in 842, to which all the exiled bishops, abbots, and
monks who had distinguished themselves as confessors in the cause of image
worship were admitted. Those bishops who remained firm to their Iconoclastic
opinions were expelled from their Sees, and replaced by the most eminent
confessors. The practices and doctrines of the Iconoclasts were formally
anathematised, and banished for ever from the Orthodox Church. A crowd of monks
descended from the secluded monasteries of Olympus, Ida, and Athos, to revive
the enthusiasm of the people in favour of images, pictures, and relics; and the
last remains of traditional idolatry were carefully interwoven with the
established religion in the form of the legendary history of the saints.
A singular scene was enacted in this synod by the
Empress Theodora. She presented herself to the assembled clergy, and asked
for an act declaring that the church pardoned all the sins of her deceased
husband, with a certificate that divine grace had effaced the record of his
persecutions. When she saw dissatisfaction visible in the looks of a majority
of the members, she threatened, with frank simplicity, that if they would not do
her that favour, she would not employ her influence as empress and regent to
give them the victory over the Iconoclasts, but would leave the affairs of the
church in their actual situation. The Patriarch Methodios answered, that the church was bound to employ its influence in relieving the
souls of orthodox princes from the pains of hell, but, unfortunately, the
prayers of the church had no power to obtain forgiveness from God for those who
died without the pale of orthodoxy. The church was only intrusted with the keys
of heaven to open and shut the gates of salvation to the living, the dead were
beyond its help. Theodora, however, determined to secure the services of the
church for her deceased husband. She declared that in his last agony Theophilus
had received and kissed an image she laid on his breast. Although it was more
than probable that the agony had really passed before the occurrence happened,
her statement satisfied Methodios and the synod, who
consented to absolve its dead emperor from excommunication as an Iconoclast,
and admit him into the bosom of the orthodox church, declaring that, things
having happened as the Empress Theodora certified in a written attestation,
Theophilus had found pardon from God.
The victory of the image worshippers was celebrated by
the installation of the long-banished pictures in the church of St. Sophia, on
the 19th February, 842, just thirty days after the death of Theophilus. This
festival continues to be observed in the Greek Church as the feast of orthodoxy
on the first Sunday in Lent.
The first military expedition of the regency was to
repress a rebellion of the Slavonians in the Peloponnesus, which had commenced
during the reign of Theophilus. On this occasion the mass of the Slavonian
colonists was reduced to complete submission, and subjected to the regular
system of taxation; but two tribes settled on Mount Taygetus,
the Ezerits and Melings,
succeeded in retaining a certain degree of independence, governing themselves
according to their own usages, and paying only a fixed annual tribute. For the Ezerits this tribute amounted to three hundred pieces of
gold, and for the Melings to the trifling sum of
sixty. The general who commanded the Byzantine troops on this occasion was
Theoktistos Briennios, who held the office of protospatharios.
In the meantime Theoktistos the regent, anxious to
obtain that degree of power and influence which, in the Byzantine as in the
Roman Empire, was inseparable from military renown, took the command of a great
expedition into Cholcis, to conquer the Abasges. His fleet was destroyed by a tempest, and his
troops were defeated by the enemy. In order to regain the reputation he had
lost, he made an attempt in the following year to reconquer the island of Crete
from the Saracens. But while he was engaged in the siege of Chandax,
(Candia,) the report of a revolution at Constantinople induced him to quit his
army, in order to look after his personal interests and political intrigues.
The troops suffered severely after they were abandoned by their general, whom
they were compelled at last to follow.
The war with the caliph of Bagdad still continued, and
the destruction of a Saracen fleet, consisting of four hundred galleys, by a
tempest off Cape Chelidonia, in the Kibyrraiot theme,
consoled the Byzantine government for its other losses. The caliph had
expected, by means of this great naval force, to secure the command of the
Archipelago, and assist the operations of his armies in Asia Minor. The
hostilities on the Cilician frontier were prosecuted without any decided
advantage to either party, until the unlucky Theoktistos placed himself at the
head of the Byzantine troops. His incapacity brought on a general engagement,
in which the imperial army was completely defeated, at a place called Mauropotamos, near the range of Mount Taurus. After this
battle, an officer of reputation, (Theophanes, from Ferganah)
disgusted with the severity and blunders of Theoktistos, deserted to the
Saracens, and embraced Islamism. At a subsequent period, however, he again
returned to the Byzantine service and the Christian religion.
In the year 845, an exchange of prisoners was effected
on the banks of the river Lamus, a day’s journey to
the west of Tarsus. This was the first that had taken place since the taking of
Amorium. The frequent exchange of prisoners between the Christians and the
Mussulmans always tended to soften the miseries of war; and the cruelty which
inflicted martyrdom on the forty-two prisoners of rank taken at Amorium in the
beginning of this year, seems to have been connected with the interruption of
the negotiations which had previously so often facilitated these exchanges.
A female regency was supposed by the barbarians to be
of necessity a period of weakness. The Bulgarians, under this impression,
threatened to commence hostilities unless the Byzantine government consented to
pay them an annual subsidy. A firm answer on the part of Theodora, accompanied
by the display of a considerable military force on the frontier, however,
restrained the predatory disposition of King Bogoris and his subjects. Peace was re-established after some trifling hostilities, an
exchange of prisoners took place, the commercial relations between the two
states became closer; and many Bulgarians, who had lived so long in the
Byzantine empire as to have acquired the arts of civilised life and a knowledge
of Christianity, returning to their homes, prepared their countrymen for
receiving a higher degree of social culture, and with it the Christian
religion.
The disturbed state of the Saracen Empire, under the
Caliphs Vathek and Motawukel,
would have enabled the regency to enjoy tranquillity, had religious zeal not
impelled the orthodox to persecute the inhabitants of the empire in the
south-eastern provinces of Asia Minor. The regency unfortunately followed the
counsels of the bigoted party, which regarded the extinction of heresy as the
most important duty of the rulers of the state. A numerous body of Christians
were persecuted with so much cruelty that they were driven to rebellion, and
compelled to solicit protection for their lives and property from the Saracens,
who seized the opportunity of transporting hostilities within the Byzantine
frontiers.
The Paulicians were the heretics who at this time
irritated the orthodoxy of Constantinople. They were enemies of image
worship, and showed little respect to the authority of a church establishment,
for their priests devoted themselves to the service of their fellow-creatures
without forming themselves into a separate order of society, or attempting to
establish a hierarchical organization. Their social and political opinions were
viewed with as much hatred and alarm by the ecclesiastical counsellors of
Theodora, as the philanthropic principles of the early Christians had been by
the pagan emperors of Rome. The same calumnies were circulated among the
orthodox against the Paulicians, which had been propagated amongst the heathen
against the Christians. The populace of Constantinople was taught to exult in
the tortures of those accused of manicheanism, as the
populace of Rome had been persuaded to delight in the cruelties committed on
the early Christians as enemies of the human race.
From the time of Constantine V the Paulicians had
generally enjoyed some degree of toleration; but the regency of Theodora
resolved to consummate the triumph of orthodoxy, by a cruel persecution of all
who refused to conform to the ceremonies of the established church. Imperial
commissioners were sent into the Paulician districts to enforce ecclesiastical
union, and every individual who resisted the invitations of the clergy was
either condemned to death or his property was confiscated. It is the boast of
orthodox historians that ten thousand Paulicians perished in this manner. Far
greater numbers, however, escaped into the province of Melitene, where the
Saracen emir granted them protection, and assisted them to plan schemes of
revenge.
The cruelty of the Byzantine administration at last
goaded the oppressed to resistance within the empire and the injustice
displayed by the officers of the government induced many, who were themselves
indifferent on the religious question, to take up arms against oppression. Karbeas, one of the principal officers on the staff of
Theodotos Melissenos, the general of the Anatolic theme, hearing that his
father had been crucified for his adherence to the doctrines of the Paulicians,
fled to the emir of Melitene, and collected a body of five thousand men, with
which he invaded the empire. The Paulician refugees were established, by the
caliph's order, in two cities called Argaous, and
Amara; but their number soon increased so much, by the arrival of fresh emigrants,
that they formed a third establishment at a place called Tephrike, (Divreky), in the district of Sebaste,
(Sivas,) in a secluded country of difficult access, where they constructed a
strong fortress, and dwelt in a state of independence. Omar, the emir of
Melitene, at the head of a Saracen army, and Karbeas with a strong body of Paulicians, ravaged the frontiers of the empire. They
were opposed by Petronas, the brother of Theodora, then general of the
Thrakesian theme. The Byzantine army confined its operations to defence; while
Alim, the governor of Tarsus, having been defeated, and civil war breaking out
in the Saracen dominions in consequence of the cruelties of the Caliph Motawukel, the incursions of the Paulicians were confined
to mere plundering forays. In the meantime a considerable body of Paulicians
continued to dwell in several provinces of the empire, escaping persecution by
outward conformity to the Greek Church, and by paying exactly all the dues
levied on them by the Byzantine clergy. The whole force of the empire was not
directed against the Paulicians until some years later, during the reign of
Basil I.
In the year 852, the regency revenged the losses
inflicted by the Saracen pirates on the maritime districts of the empire, by
invading Egypt. A Byzantine fleet landed a body of troops at Damietta, which
was plundered and burned: the country round was ravaged, and six hundred female
slaves were carried away.
Theodora, like her female predecessor Irene, displayed
considerable talents for government. She preserved the tranquillity of the
empire, and increased its prosperity in spite of her persecuting policy; but,
like Irene, she neglected her duty to her son in the most shameful manner. In
the series of Byzantine sovereigns from Leo III (the Isaurian) to Michael III,
only two proved utterly unfit for the duties of their station, and both appear
to have been corrupted by the education they received from their
mothers. The unfeeling ambition of Irene and the heartless vanity of
Theodora were the original causes of the folly of Constantine VI and the vices
of Michael III. The system of education generally adopted at the time seems to
have been singularly well adapted to form men of ability, as we see in the
instances of Constantine V, Leo IV, and Theophilus, who were all educated as
princes and heirs to the empire. Even if we take the most extended view of
Byzantine society, we shall find that the constant supply of great talents
displayed in the public service must have been the result of careful
cultivation and judicious systematic study. No monarchical government can
produce such a long succession of able ministers and statesmen as conducted the
Byzantine administration during the eighth, ninth, and tenth centuries. The
remarkable deficiency of original genius during this period only adds an
additional proof that the mind was disciplined by a rigid system of education.
Theodora abandoned the care of her child’s
education to her brother Bardas, of whose taste and talents she may have been a
very incompetent judge, but of whose debauched manners she must have seen and
heard too much. With the assistance of Theoktistos she arrogated to herself the
sole direction of the public administration; and viewed with indifference the
course of idleness and profligacy by which Bardas corrupted the principles of
her son in his endeavour to secure a mastery over his mind. Both mother and
uncle appear to have expected to profit by the young emperor’s vices. Bardas
soon became a prime favourite, as he not only afforded the young emperor every
facility for gratifying his passions, but supported him in the disputes with
the regency that originated on account of his lavish expenditure. Michael at
last came to an open quarrel with his mother. He had fallen in love with
Eudocia, the daughter of Inger, of the great family of the Martinakes,
a connection which both Theodora and Theoktistos viewed with alarm, as likely
to create a powerful opposition to their political influence. To prevent a
marriage, Theodora succeeded in compelling Michael, who was then in his
sixteenth year, to marry another lady named Eudocia, the daughter of Dekapolitas. The young debauchee, however, made Eudocia
Ingerina his mistress, and, towards the end of his reign, bestowed her in
marriage on Basil the Macedonian as a mark of his favour. She became the mother
of the Emperor Leo VI, the Wise.
This forced marriage enabled Bardas to excite the
animosity of Michael against the regency to such a degree that he was persuaded
to sanction the murder of Theoktistos, whose able financial administration was
so generally acknowledged that Bardas feared to contend openly with so honest a
minister. Theoktistos was arrested by order of the young emperor, and murdered
in prison. The majority of Michael III was not immediately proclaimed, but
Bardas was advanced to the office of Master of the Horse, and assumed the
direction of the administration. He was consequently regarded as the real
author of the murder of Theoktistos.
Theodora, though her real power had ceased, continued
to occupy her place as empress-regent; but in order to prepare for her
approaching resignation, and at the same time prove the wisdom of her financial
administration, and the value of the services of Theoktistos, by whose counsels
she had been guided, she presented to the senate a statement of the condition
of the imperial treasury. By this account it appeared that there was then
an immense accumulation of specie in the coffers of the state. The sum is
stated to have consisted of 109,000 Ib. of gold, and 300,000 lb. of silver,
besides immense stores of merchandise, jewels, and plate. The Empress Theodora
was evidently anxious to guard against all responsibility, and prevent those
calumnious accusations which she knew to be common at the Byzantine court. The
immense treasure thus accumulated would probably have given immortal strength
to Byzantine society, had it been left in the possession of the people, by a
wise reduction in the amount of taxation, accompanied by a judicious
expenditure for the defence of the frontiers, and for facilitating the
conveyance of agricultural produce to distant markets.
The Empress Theodora continued to live in the imperial
palace, after the murder of Theoktistos, until her regency expired, on her son
attaining the age of eighteen. Her residence there was, however, rendered a
torture to her mind by the unseemly exhibitions of the debauched associates of
her son. The eagerness of Michael to be delivered from her presence at length
caused him to send both his mother and his sisters to reside in the Carian
Palace, and even to attempt persuading the Patriarch Ignatius to give them the
veil. After her banishment from the imperial palace, Theodora still hoped to
recover her influence with her son, if she could separate him from Bardas; and
she engaged in intrigues with her brother's enemies, whose secret object was
his assassination. This conspiracy was discovered, and only tended to increase
the power of Bardas. He was now raised to the dignity of curopalat.
Theodora and the sisters of Michael were removed to the monastery of Gastria, the usual residence of the ladies of the imperial
family who were secluded from the world. After the death of Bardas, however,
Theodora recovered some influence over her son; she was allowed to occupy
apartments in the palace of St. Mamas, and it was at a party in her rural
residence at the Anthemian Palace that Michael was
assassinated. Theodora died in the first year of the reign of Basil I; and Thekla, the sister of Michael, who had received the
imperial title, and was as debauched in her manners as her brother, continued
her scandalous life during great part of Basil’s reign; yet Theodora is
eulogised as a saint by the ecclesiastical writers of the Western as well as
the Eastern church, and is honoured with a place in the Greek calendar.
Encouraged by the counsels and example of Bardas,
Michael plunged into every vice. His orgies obtained for him the name of
the Drunkard; but, in spite of his vicious conduct, his devotion to
chariot-races and his love of festivals gave him considerable popularity among
the people of Constantinople. The people were amused by his follies, and the
citizens profited by his lavish expenditure. Many anecdotes concerning his
vices have been preserved, but they are deserving of detailed notice only as
proofs of the great demoralization then existing at Constantinople, for, as
facts concerning Michael, it is probable they have received their colouring
from the flatterers of the dynasty of his assassin. Michael’s unworthy conduct,
however, ultimately rendered him contemptible to all classes. Had the emperor
confined himself to appearing as a charioteer in the Hippodrome, it would have
been easily pardoned; but he carried his extravagance so far as to caricature
the ceremonies of the orthodox church, and publicly to burlesque the religious
processions of the clergy. The indifference of the people to this ribaldry
seems doubly strange, when we reflect on the state of superstition into which
the Constantinopolitans had fallen, and on the important place occupied by the
Eastern Church in Byzantine society. Perhaps, however, the endeavours which had
been made, both by the church and the emperors, to render church ceremonies an
attractive species of public amusement, had tended to prepare the public mind
for this irreverent caricature. It is always imprudent to trifle with a serious
subject, and more especially with religion and religious feelings. At this
time, music, singing, eloquence, magnificence of costume, and scenic effect,
had all been carefully blended with architectural decoration of the richest
kind in the splendid church of St. Sophia, to excite the admiration and engage
the attention. The consequence was, that religion was the thing least thought
of by the people, when they assembled together at ecclesiastical festivals.
Their object was to enjoy the music, view the pageantry, and criticise the
performers. Michael gratified the supercilious critics by his caricatures, and
gave variety to the public entertainments by the introduction of comedy and
farce. The necessity of this was felt in the Roman Catholic Church, which
authorised similar saturnalia, to prevent the ground being occupied by
opponents. The Emperor Michael exhibited a clever but very irreverent caricature
of the ecclesiastical processions of the Patriarch and clergy of
Constantinople. The masquerade consisted of an excellent buffoon arrayed in the
patriarchal robes, attended by eleven mimic metropolitan bishops in full
costume, embroidered with gold, and followed by a crowd disguised as choristers
and priests. This cortège accompanied by the emperor in person, as if in a
solemn procession, walked through the streets of the capital singing ridiculous
songs to psalm tunes, and burlesque hymns in praise of debauchery, mingling the
richest melodies of Oriental church-music with the most discordant nasal
screams of Greek popular ballads. This disgraceful exhibition was frequently
repeated, and on one occasion encountered the real Patriarch, whom the buffoon saluted
with ribald courtesy, without exciting a burst of indignation from the pious
Greeks.
The depravity of society in all ranks had reached the
most scandalous pitch. Bardas, when placed at the head of the public
administration, took no care to conceal his vices; he was accused of an
incestuous intercourse with his son’s wife, while the young man held the high
office of generalissimo of the European troops. Ignatius the Patriarch was a
man of the highest character, eager to obtain for the church in the East that
moral supremacy which the papal power now arrogated to itself in the
West. Disgusted with the vices of Bardas, he refused to administer the
sacrament to him on Advent Sunday, when it was usual for all the great
dignitaries of the empire to receive the Holy Communion from the hands of the
Patriarch, AD 857. Bardas, to revenge himself for this public mark of infamy,
recalled to the memory of the young emperor the resistance Ignatius had made to
Theodora’s receiving the veil, and accused him of holding private communication
with a monk who had given himself out to be a son of Theodora, born before her
marriage with Theophilus. As this monk was known to be mad, and as many
senators and bishops were attached to Ignatius, it would have been extremely difficult
to convict the Patriarch of treason on such an accusation; and there appeared
no possibility of framing any charge of heresy against him. Michael was,
however, persuaded to arrest him on various charges of having committed acts of
sedition, and to banish him to the island of Tenebinthos.
It was now necessary to look out for a new Patriarch,
and the circumstances required that the successor of Ignatius should be a man
of high character as well as talent, for the deposed Patriarch had occupied no
ordinary position. His father and his maternal grandfather (Michael I and
Nicephorus I) had both filled the throne of Constantinople; he was celebrated
for his piety and his devotion to the cause of the church. But his party zeal
had already raised up a strong opposition to his measures in the bosom of the
church; and Bardas took advantage of these ecclesiastical dissensions to make
the contest concerning the patriarchate a clerical struggle, without bringing
the state into direct collision with the church, whose factious spirit did the
work of its own degradation. Gregory, a son of the Emperor Leo V, the Armenian,
was Bishop of Syracuse. He had been suspended by the Patriarch Methodios for consecrating a priest out of his diocese.
During the patriarchate of Ignatius, the hereditary hostility of the sons of
two rival emperors had perpetuated the quarrel, and Ignatius had probably
availed himself with pleasure of the opportunity offered him of excommunicating
Gregory as some revenge for the loss of the imperial throne. It was pretended
that Gregory had a hereditary aversion to image-worship, and the suspicions of Methodios were magnified by the animosity of Ignatius into
absolute heresy. This dispute had been referred to Pope Benedict III, and his
decision in favour of Ignatius had Induced Gregory and his partisans, who were
numerous and powerful, to call in question the legality of the election of
Ignatius. Bardas, availing himself of this ecclesiastical contest, employed
threats, and strained the influence of the emperor to the utmost, to induce
Ignatius to resign the patriarchate; but in vain. It was, therefore, decided
that Photius should be elected Patriarch without obtaining a formal resignation
of the office from Ignatius, whose election was declared null.
Photius, the chief secretary of state, who was thus
suddenly raised to the head of the Eastern Church, was a man of high rank,
noble descent, profound learning, and great personal influence. If we
believe his own declaration, publicly and frequently repeated, he was elected
against his will; and there seems no doubt that he could not have opposed the
selection of the emperor without forfeiting all rank at court, and perhaps
incurring personal danger. His popularity, his intimate acquaintance with civil
and canon law, and his family alliance with the imperial house, gave him many
advantages in his new rank. Like his celebrated predecessors, Tarasios and
Nicephorus, he was a layman when his election took place. On the 2oth December
857, he was consecrated a monk by Gregory, archbishop of Syracuse; on the
following day he became an anagnostes; the day after,
a sub-deacon; next day he was appointed deacon; and on the 24th he received
priest’s orders. He was then formally elected Patriarch in a synod, and on
Christmas-day solemnly consecrated in the church of St. Sophia.
The election of Photius, which was evidently illegal,
only increased the dissensions already existing in the church; but they drew
off the attention of the people in some degree from political abuses, and
enabled Bardas to constitute the civil power judge in ecclesiastical matters.
Ignatius and the leading men of his party were imprisoned and ill-treated; but
even the clergy of the party of Photius could not escape being insulted and
carried before the ordinary tribunals, if they refused to comply with the
iniquitous demands of the courtiers, or ventured to oppose the injustice of the
government officials. Photius soon bitterly repented having rendered himself
the agent of such men as Bardas and Michael; and as he knew their conduct and
characters before his election, we may believe the assertion he makes in his
letters to Bardas himself, and which he repeats to the Pope, that he was
compelled to accept the patriarchate against his wish.
In the meantime, Ignatius was allowed so much liberty
by the crafty Bardas, who found Photius a less docile instrument than he had
expected, that his partisans assembled a synod in the church of Irene for forty
days. In this assembly Photius and his adherents were excommunicated. Bardas,
however, declared in favour of Photius, and allowed him to hold a counter-synod
in the Church of the Holy Apostles, in which the election of Ignatius was
declared uncanonical, as having been made by the Empress Theodora in opposition
to the protest of several bishops. The persecution of Ignatius was renewed; he
was exiled to Mitylene, and his property was
sequestrated, in the hope that by these measures he would be induced to resign
the patriarchal dignity. Photius, however, had the sense to see that this
persecution only increased his rival's popularity, and strengthened his party;
he therefore persuaded the emperor to recall him, and reinstate him in the
possession of his private fortune. Photius must have felt that his own former intimacy
with his debauched relation Bardas, and his toleration of the vices of Michael,
had fixed a deep stain on his character in the eyes of all sincere Christians.
It was now necessary to legalize the election of
Photius, and obtain the ratification of the deposition of Ignatius by a general
council of the church; but no general council could be convoked without the
sanction of the Pope. The Emperor Michael consequently despatched
ambassadors to Rome, to invite Pope Nicholas I to send legates to Constantinople,
for the purpose of holding a general council, to put an end to the dissensions
in the Eastern Church. Nicholas appointed two legates, Zacharias and Rodoald, who were instructed to examine into the disputes
concerning the patriarchate, and also to demand the restitution of the estates
belonging to the patrimony of St. Peter in Calabria and Sicily, of which the
papal See had been deprived in the time of Leo III.
The Pope, moreover, required the emperor to
re-establish the papal jurisdiction over the Illyrian provinces, and recognise
its right to appoint the archbishop of Syracuse, and confirm the election of
all the bishops in the European provinces of the empire. The Popes were how
beginning to arrogate to themselves that temporal power over the whole church
which had grown out of their new position as sovereign princes; but they based
their temporal ambition on that spiritual power which they claimed as the rock
of St. Peter, not on the donation of Charlemagne. The truth is, that the first
Christian emperors had laid a firm foundation for the papal power, by
constituting the Bishop of Rome a kind of secretary of state for Christian
affairs. He was employed as a central authority for communicating with the
bishops of the provinces; and out of this circumstance it very naturally arose
that he acted for a considerable period as a minister of religion and public
instruction in the imperial administration, which conferred immense power in a
government so strictly centralised as that of the Roman Empire. The Christian
emperors of the West, being placed in more direct collision with paganism than
those of the East, vested more extensive powers, both of administration and
police, in the Bishop of Rome, and the provincial bishops of the Western
Church, than the clergy attained in the East. This authority of the bishops
increased as the civil and military power of the Western Empire declined; and
when the imperial city became a provincial city of the Eastern Empire, the
popes became the political chiefs of Roman society, and inherited no small
portion of the influence formerly exercised by the imperial administration over
the provincial ecclesiastics. It is true, the Bishops of Rome could not
exercise this power without control, but, in the opinion of a majority of the
subjects of the barbarian conquerors in the West, the Pope was the legal
representative of the civilisation of imperial Rome as well as the legitimate
successor of St Peter, and the guardian of the rock on which Christianity was
founded. Unless the authority of the popes be traced back to their original
position as archbishops of Rome and patriarchs of the Western Empire, and the
institutions of the papal church be viewed as they originally existed in
connection with the imperial administration, the real value of the papal claims
to universal domination, founded on traditional feelings, cannot be justly
estimated. The popes only imitated the Roman emperors in their most exorbitant
pretensions; and the vicious principles of Constantine, while he was still a
pagan, continue to exert their corrupt influence over the ecclesiastical
institutions of the greater part of Europe to the present day.
The popes early assumed that Constantine had conferred
on the Bishop of Rome a supreme ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the three
European divisions of his dominions, when he divided the empire into four
prefectures. There were, indeed, many facts which tended to support this
claim. Africa, in so far as it belonged to the jurisdiction of the European
prefectures, acknowledged the authority of the Bishop of Rome; and even after
the final division of the empire, Dacia, Macedonia, Thessaly, Epirus, and Greece,
though they were separated from the prefecture of Illyricum, and formed a new
province of the Eastern Empire, continued to be dependent on the ecclesiastical
jurisdiction of the Pope. The Patriarch of Antioch was considered the head of
the church in the East. Egypt formed a peculiar district in the ecclesiastical,
as it did in the civil administration of the Roman Empire, and had its own
head, the Patriarch of Alexandria. The Patriarchs of Jerusalem and
Constantinople were modern creations. The bishop of Jerusalem, who had been
dependent on the Patriarch of Antioch, received the honorary title of Patriarch
at the council of Nicaea, and the Emperor Theodosius II conferred on him an
independent jurisdiction over the three Palestines,
the two Phoenicias, and Arabia; but it was not until
after the council of Chalcedon that his authority was acknowledged by the body
of the church, and it was then restricted to the three Palestines,
AD 451.
The bishop of Byzantium had been dependent on the
metropolitan or exarch of Heraclea before the translation of the imperial
residence to his See, and the foundation of Constantinople. In the council held
at Constantinople in 381, he was first ranked as Patriarch, because he was the
bishop of the capital of the Eastern Empire, and placed immediately after the
Bishop of Rome in the ecclesiastical hierarchy. St. Chrysostom and his
successors exercised the patriarchal jurisdiction, both in Europe and Asia,
over the Eastern Empire, just as the popes of Rome exercised it in the Western,
yielding merely a precedence in ecclesiastical honour to the representative of
St. Peter. In spite of the opposition of the bishops of old Rome, the bishops
of new Rome thus attained an equality of power which made the popes tremble for
their supremacy, and they regarded the Patriarchs of Constantinople rather as
rivals than as joint rulers of the church. Their ambitious jealousy, joined to
the aspiring arrogance of their rivals, caused all the evils they feared. The
disputes between Ignatius and Photius now gave the Pope hopes of
re-establishing the supremacy of Rome over the whole church, and of rendering
the Patriarchs of the East merely vicegerents of the Roman See.
The Papal legates sent by Nicholas were present at a
general council held at Constantinople in the year 861, which was attended by
three hundred and eighteen bishops. Bardas and Photius had succeeded in
securing the goodwill of the majority of the Eastern clergy. They also
succeeded in gaining the support of the representatives of the Pope, if they
did not purchase it. Ignatius, who was residing in his mother’s palace of Posis, was required to present himself before the council.
He was deposed, though he appealed to the Pope’s legates, and persisted in
protesting that the council did not possess a legal right to depose him. It is
said that a pen was placed forcibly between his fingers, and a cross drawn with
it, as his signature to the act of deposition. He was then ordered to read his
abdication, on the day of Pentecost, in the Church of the Holy Apostles; but,
to avoid this disgrace, he escaped in the disguise of a slave to the Prince's
Islands, and concealed himself among the innumerable monks who had taken up
their abode in these delicious retreats. Bardas sent Oryphas with six galleys to examine every one of the insular monasteries in succession,
in order to arrest the fugitive; but the search was vain. After the termination
of the council, Ignatius returned privately to his maternal palace, where he
was allowed to remain unmolested. The discussions of this council are said by
its enemies to have been conducted in a very tumultuous manner; but as the
majority was favoured by the Patriarch, the papal legates, and the imperial
administration, it is not likely that any confusion was allowed within the
walls of the council, even though the party of Ignatius was supported by the
Empresses Theodora and Eudocia, and by the great body of the monks. The Emperor
Michael, with great impartiality, refused to throw the whole weight of his
authority in either scale. The truth is, that, being somewhat of a freethinker
as well as a debauchee, he laughed at both parties, saying that Ignatius was
the patriarch of the people, Photius the patriarch of Bardas, and Gryllos (the imperial buffoon) his own patriarch.
Nevertheless, Ignatius was deposed, and the acts of the council were ratified
by the papal legates.
The legates of the Pope certainly yielded to improper
influence, for, besides approving the measures of the Byzantine government with
reference to the patriarchate, they neglected to demand the recognition of the
spiritual authority of the papal see in the terms prescribed by their
instructions. They were consequently disavowed on their return to Rome. The
party of Ignatius appealed to the Pope, who, seeing that no concessions could
be gained from Michael, Bardas, or Photius, embraced the cause of the deposed
Patriarch with warmth. A synod was convoked at Rome; Photius was
excommunicated, in case he should dare to retain possession of the patriarchal
chair, after receiving the papal decision in favour of Ignatius, A.D. 863.
Gregory, the archbishop of Syracuse, who had ordained Photius, was
anathematised, and declared a schismatic, as well as all those who held
communion with him, if he continued to perform the sacerdotal functions. When
the acts of this synod were communicated to Michael by papal letters, the
indignation of the emperor was awakened by what he considered the insolent
interference of a foreign priest in the affairs of the empire, and he replied
in a violent and unbecoming letter. He told his Holiness that he had invited
him to send legates to the general council at Constantinople, from a wish to
maintain unity in the church, not because the participation of the Bishop of
Rome was necessary to the validity of the acts of the Eastern Church. This was
all very reasonable; but he went on to treat the Pope and the Latin clergy as
barbarians, because they were Ignorant of Greek. For this insult, however, the
emperor received a sharp and well-merited rebuke from Pope Nicholas, who asked
him why he styled himself Emperor of the Romans, if he thought the language of
the Roman Empire and of the Roman church a barbarous one. It was a greater
disgrace, in the opinion of the Pope, for the Roman emperor to be ignorant of
the Roman language, than for the head of the Roman church to be ignorant of
Greek.
Nicholas had nothing to fear from the power of
Michael, so that he acted without the restraint imposed on Gregory II In his
contest with Leo the Isaurian. Indeed, the recent success of the Pope, in his
dispute with Lothaire, king of Austrasia, gave him
hopes of coming off victorious, even in a quarrel with the Eastern emperor. He
did not sufficiently understand the effect of more advanced civilisation and extended
education on Byzantine society. Nicholas, therefore, boldly called on Michael
to cancel his insolent letter, declaring that it would otherwise be publicly
burned by the Latin clergy; and he summoned the rival Patriarchs of
Constantinople to appear in person before the papal court, that he might hear
and decide their differences.
This pretension of the Pope to make himself absolute
master of the Christian church, awakened the spirit of resistance at
Constantinople, and caused Photius to respond by advancing new claims for his
See. He insisted that the Patriarchs of Constantinople were equal in rank and
authority to the Popes of Rome. The disputes of the clergy being the only
subject on which the government of the Eastern Empire allowed any expression of
public opinion, the whole attention of society was soon directed to this
ecclesiastical quarrel. Michael assembled a council of the church in 866, at
which pretended representatives of the patriarchs of Antioch, Alexandria, and
Jerusalem were present: and in this assembly Pope Nicholas was declared
unworthy of his See, and excommunicated. There was no means of rendering this
sentence of excommunication of any effect, unless Louis II, the emperor of the
West, could be induced, by the hatred he bore to Nicholas, to put it in
execution. Ambassadors were sent to urge him to depose the Pope, but the death
of Michael suddenly put an end to the contest with Rome, for Basil I embraced
the party of Ignatius.
The contest between Rome and Constantinople was not merely
a quarrel between Pope Nicholas and the Patriarch Photius. There were other
causes of difference between the two Sees, in which Ignatius was as much
opposed to papal pretensions as Photius. Not to mention the old claim of Rome
to recover her jurisdiction over those provinces of the Byzantine Empire which
had been dissevered from her authority, a new conflict had arisen for supremacy
over the church in Bulgaria. When the Bulgarian king Crumn invaded the empire, after the defeat of Michael I, he carried away so many
prisoners that the Bulgarians, who had already made considerable advances in
civilisation, were prepared, by their intercourse with these slavs, to receive Christianity. A Greek monk, Theodore Koupharas, who remained long a prisoner in Bulgaria,
converted many by his preaching. During the invasion of Bulgaria by Leo V, a
sister of King Bogoris was carried to Constantinople
as a prisoner, and educated with care. The Empress Theodore exchanged this
princess for Theodore Koupharas, and on her return
she introduced the Christian religion into her brother’s palace.
War subsequently broke out between the Bulgarian
monarch and the empire, and Michael and Bardas made an expedition against the
Bulgarians in the year 861. The circumstances of the war are not detailed; but
in the end the Bulgarian king embraced Christianity, receiving the name of
Michael from the emperor, who became his sponsor. To purchase this peace,
however, the Byzantine emperor ceded to the Bulgarians all the country along
the range of Mount Haemus, called by the Greeks Sideras,
and by the Bulgarians Zagora, of which Debeltos is
the chief town. Michael pretended that the cession was made as a baptismal
donation to the king. The change in the religion of the Bulgarian monarch
caused some discontent among his subjects, but their opposition was soon
vanquished with the assistance of Michael, and the most refractory were
transported to Constantinople, where the wealth and civilisation of Byzantine
society produced such an impression on their minds that they readily embraced
Christianity.
The Bulgarian monarch, fearing lest the influence of
the Byzantine clergy on his Christian subjects might render him in some degree
dependent on the emperor, opened communications with Pope Nicholas for the
purpose of balancing the power of the Greek clergy by placing the
ecclesiastical affairs of his kingdom under the control of the Latins. He
expected also to derive some political support for this alliance, when he saw
the eagerness of the Pope to drive the Eastern clergy out of Bulgaria, Pope
Nicholas appears to have thought that Photius would have made great concessions
to the papal See, in order to receive the pallium from Rome; but when that
Patriarch treated the question concerning the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of
the Eastern church in Bulgaria as a political affair, and referred its decision
to the imperial cabinet, the Pope sent legates into Bulgaria, and the churches
of Rome and Constantinople were involved in a direct conflict for the ecclesiastical
patronage of that extensive kingdom. At a later period, when Ignatius was
re-established as Patriarch, and the general council of 869 was held to condemn
the acts of Photius, Pope Hadrian found Ignatius as little inclined to make any
concessions to the papal See in Bulgaria as his deposed rival, and this subject
remained a permanent cause of quarrel between the two churches.
Michael, though a drunkard, was not naturally
deficient in ability, activity, or ambition. Though he left the ordinary
administration of public business in the bands of Bardas, on whom he conferred
the title of Caesar, which was then almost equivalent to a recognition of his
title as heir-apparent to the empire, still he never allowed him to obtain the
complete control over the whole administration, nor permitted him entirely to
crush his opponents in the public service. Hence many officers of rank
continued to regard the emperor, with all his vices, as their protector in
office. Like all the emperors of Constantinople, Michael felt himself
constrained to appear frequently at the head of his armies. The tie between the
emperor and the soldiers was perhaps strengthened by these visits, but it can
hardly be supposed that the personal presence of Michael added much to the
efficiency of military operations.
The war on the frontiers of the Byzantine and Saracen
empires was carried on by Omar, the emir of Melitene, without interruption, in
a series of plundering incursions on a gigantic scale. These were at times
revenged by daring exploits on the part of the Byzantine generals. In the year
856, Leo, the imperial commander-in-chief, invaded the dominions of the caliph.
After taking Anazarba, he crossed the Euphrates at
Samosata, and advanced with his army into Mesopotamia, ravaging the country as
far as Amida. The Saracens revenged themselves by
several plundering incursions into the different parts of the empire. To stop
these attacks, Michael put himself at the head of the army, and laid siege to
Samosata without effect. Bardas accompanied the emperor rather to watch over
his own influence at court, than to assist his sovereign in obtaining military
glory. The following year Michael was engaged in the campaign against the
Bulgarians, of which the result has been already mentioned. In 860, he led an
army of 40,000 European troops against Omar of Melitene, who had carried his
plundering incursions up to the walls of Sinope. A battle took place in the
territory of Dasymon, near the spot which had
witnessed the defeat of Theophilus, and the overthrow of Michael was as
complete as that of his father. The same difficulties in the ground which had
favoured the retreat of Theophilus enabled Manuel, one of the generals of
Michael, to save the army.
The war was still prosecuted with vigour on both
sides. In 863, Omar entered the Armeniac theme with a large force, and took Amisus. Petronas, the emperor’s uncle, who had now acquired
considerable military experience and reputation as general of the Thrakesian
theme, was placed at the head of the Byzantine army. He collected his forces at Aghionoros, near Ephesus, and when his army was
reinforced by a strong body of Macedonian and Thracian troops, marched towards
the frontier in several divisions, which he concentrated in such a manner as to
cut off the retreat of Omar, and enclose him with an overwhelming force. The
troops under Nasar, the general of the Boukelkrian theme, strengthened by the Armeniac and Paphlagonian legions, and the troops of the theme Koloneia,
enclosed the Saracens on the north. Petronas himself, with the Thrakesian,
Macedonian, and Thracian legions, secured the passes and advanced from the
west; while the troops of the Anatolic, Opsikian, and
Cappadocian themes, with the divisions of the Kleisourarchs of Seleucia and Charsiana, having secured the passes
to the south, cut off the direct line of Omar's retreat. An impassable range of
rocky mountains, broken into precipices, rendered escape to the eastward
impracticable. The headquarters of Petronas were established at Poson, a place situated on the frontiers of the Paphlagonian and Armeniac themes, near the river Lalakon, which flows from the north to south. Omar had
encamped in a plain without suspecting the danger lurking in its rugged
boundary to the east. He suddenly found himself enclosed by the simultaneous
advance of the various divisions of the Byzantine army, and closely blockaded.
He attempted to escape by attacking each division of the enemy in succession,
but the strength of the positions selected by the imperial officers rendered
all his attacks vain. Omar at last fell in the desperate struggle; and
Petronas, leading fresh troops into the plain to attack the weary Saracens,
completed the destruction of their army. The son of Omar contrived to escape
from the field of battle, but he was pursued and taken prisoner by the Kleisourarch of Charsiana, after
he had crossed the Halys. When Petronas returned to
Constantinople, he was allowed to celebrate his victory with great pomp and
public rejoicings. The Byzantine writers estimated the army that was destroyed
at 40,000, while the Arabian historians reduced their loss to only 2000 men.
Public opinion in the empire of the caliph, however, considered the defeat as a
great calamity; and its real importance may be ascertained from the fact, that
alarming seditions broke out against the government when the news reached
Bagdad. After this victory, too, the eastern frontier enjoyed tranquillity for
some time
In the year 865, a nation hitherto unknown made its
first appearance in the history of the world, where it was destined to act no
unimportant part. Its entrance into the political system of the European
nations was marked by an attempt to take Constantinople, a project which it has
often revived, and which the progress of Christian civilisation seems to
indicate must now be realised at no very distant date, unless the revival of
the Bulgarian kingdom to the south of the Danube create a new Slavonian power
in the east of Europe capable of arresting its progress. In the year 862,
Rurik, a Scandinavian or Varangian chief, arrived at Novgorod, and laid the
first foundation of the state which has grown into the Russian empire. The
Russian people, under Varangian domination, rapidly increased in power, and
reduced many of their neighbours to submission. Oskold and Dir, the princes of Kiof, rendered themselves
masters of the whole course of the Dnieper, and it would seem that either
commercial jealousy or the rapacity of ambition produced some collision with
the Byzantine settlements on the northern shores of the Black Sea; but from
what particular circumstances the Russians were led to make their daring attack
on Constantinople is not known. The Emperor Michael had taken the command of an
army to act against the Saracens, and Oryphas,
admiral of the fleet, acted as governor of the capital during his absence.
Before the Emperor had commenced his military operations, a fleet of two
hundred Russian vessels of small size, taking advantage of a favourable wind,
suddenly passed through the Bosphorus, and anchored at the mouth of the Black
River in the Propontis, about eighteen miles from Constantinople. This Russian
expedition had already plundered the shores of the Black Sea, and from its
station within the Bosphorus it ravaged the country about Constantinople, and
plundered the Prince’s Islands, pillaging the monasteries, and slaying the
monks as well as the other inhabitants. The emperor, informed by Oryphas of the attack on his capital, hastened to its
defence. Though a daring and cruel enemy, the Russians were by no means
formidable to the strength and discipline of the Byzantine forces. It required
no great exertions on the part of the imperial officers to equip a force
sufficient to attack and put to flight these invaders; but the barbarous cruelty
of the soldiers and sailors, and the wild daring of their Varangian leaders,
made a profound impression on the people of Constantinople, suddenly rendered
spectators of the miseries of war, in their most hideous form, in a moment of
perfect security. We need not, therefore, be surprised to find that the sudden
destruction of these dreaded enemies by the drunken emperor, of whom the
citizens of the capital entertained probably even more contempt than he merited
as a soldier, was ascribed to the miraculous interposition of the Virgin of the Blachern, rather than to the superior military
tactics and overwhelming numbers of the imperial forces. How far this
expedition of the Russians must be connected with the enterprising spirit of
that vigorous band of warriors and pirates from Scandinavia, who, under the
name of Danes, Normans, and Varangians, became the sovereigns of Normandy,
Naples, Sicily, England, and Russia, is still a subject of learned discussion.
About the same time a fleet, manned by the Saracens of
Crete, plundered the Cyclades, and ravaged the coast of Asia Minor, carrying
off great booty and a number of slaves. It would seem that the absence of the
Emperor Michael from Constantinople at the time of the Russian attack was
connected with this movement of the Saracens.
Our conceptions of the manner in which the Byzantine
Empire was governed during Michael’s reign, will become more precise if we
enter into some details concerning the court intrigues and personal conduct of
the rulers of the state. The crimes and assassinations, which figure as the
prominent events of the age in the chronicles of the time, were not, it is
true, the events which decided the fate of the people; and they probably
excited less interest among contemporaries who lived beyond the circle of court
favour, than history would lead us to suppose. Each rank of society had its own
robberies and murders to occupy its attention. The state of society at the
court of Constantinople was not amenable to public opinion, for few knew much
of what passed within the walls of the great palace; but yet the immense
machinery of the imperial administration gave the emperors’ power a solid
basis, always opposed to the temporary vices of the courtiers. The order which
rendered property secure, and enabled the industrious classes to prosper,
through the equitable administration of the Roman law, nourished the vitality
of the empire, when the madness of a Nero and the drunkenness of a Michael
appeared to threaten political order with ruin. The people, carefully secluded
from public business, and almost without any knowledge of the proceedings of
their government, were in all probability little better acquainted with the
intrigues and crimes of their day than we at present. They acted, therefore,
when some real suffering or imaginary grievance brought oppression directly
home to their interests or their feelings. Court murders were to them no more
than a tragedy or a scene in the amphitheatre, at which they were not present.
Bardas had assassinated Theoktistos to obtain power,
yet, with all his crimes, he had great natural talents and some literary taste.
He had the reputation of being a good lawyer and a just judge; and after he
obtained power, he devoted his attention to watch over the judicial department
as the surest basis of popularity. Nevertheless, we find the government of
Michael accused of persecuting the wealthy, merely for the purpose of filling
the public treasury by the confiscation of their property. This was an old
Roman fiscal resource, which had existed ever since the days of the republic
and whose exercise under the earlier emperors calls forth the bitterness of
Tacitus in some of his most vigorous pages. After Bardas was elevated to the
dignity of Caesar, his mature age gave him a deeper interest in projects of
ambition than in the wild debauchery of his nephew. He devoted more time to
public business and grave society, and less to the wine-cup and the imperial
feasts. New boon-companions assembled round Michael, and, to advance their own
fortunes, strove to awaken some jealousy of the Caesar in the breast of the
emperor. They solicited the office of spies to watch the conduct of one who,
they said, was aspiring to the crown. Michael, seeing Bardas devoted to
improving the administration of justice, reforming abuses in the army,
regulating the affairs of the church, and protecting learning, felt how much he
himself neglected his duties, and naturally began to suspect his uncle. The
reformation of the Caesar was an act of sedition against the worthless emperor.
The favourite parasite of Michael at this time was a
man named Basil, who from a simple groom had risen to the rank of lord
chamberlain. Basil had attracted the attention of the emperor while still
a stable-boy in the service of an officer of the court. The young groom had the
good fortune to overcome a celebrated Bulgarian wrestler at a public wrestling
match. The impression produced by this victory over the foreigner, who had been
long considered invincible, was increased by a wonderful display of his power
in taming the wildest horses, for he possessed the singular natural gift of
subduing horses by a whisper. The emperor took him into his service as a groom;
but Basil’s skill as a sportsman soon made him a favourite and a companion of
one who showed little discrimination in the choice of his associates. At the
imperial orgies, Basil's perseverance as a boon-companion, and his devotion to
all the whims of the emperor, raised him quickly to the highest offices of the
court, and he was placed in constant attendance on his sovereign. These favours
awakened the jealousy of Bardas, who suspected the Macedonian groom of the
power of whispering to Michael as well as to horses. At the same time it
secured Basil the support of all the Caesar’s enemies, who considered a drunken
groom, even though he had risen to great power at court, as a person not likely
to be their rival in ministerial offices.
Basil, however, soon received a very high mark of
Michael's personal favour. He was ordered to divorce his wife and marry Eudocia
Ingerina, who had long been the emperor's mistress; and it was said that the
intercourse continued after she became the wife of the chamberlain. Every
ambitious and debauched officer about the court now looked to the fall of
Bardas as the readiest means of promotion. Symbatios an Armenian, a patrician and postmaster of the empire, who was the son-in-law
of Bardas, dissatisfied with his father-in-law for refusing to gratify his
inordinate ambition, joined Basil in accusing the Caesar of plotting to mount
the throne. The emperor, without much hesitation, authorised the two intriguers
to assassinate his uncle.
An expedition for reconquering Crete from the Saracens
was about to sail. The emperor, the Caesar, and Basil all partook of the holy
sacrament together before embarking in the fleet, which then proceeded along
the coast of Asia Minor to Kepos in the Thrakesian
theme. Here the army remained encamped, under the pretext that a sufficient
number of transports had not been assembled. Bardas expressed great
dissatisfaction at this delay; and one day, while he was urging Michael to give
orders for the immediate embarkation of the troops, he was suddenly attacked by Symbatios and Basil, and murdered at the emperor’s
feet. Basil, who, as chamberlain, had conducted him to the imperial tent,
stabbed him in the back.
The accomplished but unprincipled Bardas being
removed, the project of invading Crete was abandoned, and Michael returned to
the capital. On entering Constantinople, however, it was evident that the
assassination of his uncle had given universal dissatisfaction. Bardas, with
all his faults, was the best of Michael's ministers, and the failure of the
expedition against Crete was attributed to his death. As Michael passed through
the streets, a monk greeted him with this bitter salutation: “All hail,
emperor! all hail from your glorious campaign! You return covered with blood,
and it is your own!”. The imperial guards attempted in vain to arrest the
fanatic; the people protected him, declaring he was mad.
The assassination of Bardas took place in spring 866;
and on the 26th of May, Michael rewarded Basil by proclaiming him his
colleague, with the title of Emperor. Symbatios expected that his participation in his father-in law’s murder would have
secured him the title of Caesar; but he soon perceived he had injured his own
fortunes by his crime. He now sought to obtain by open force what he had failed
to gain by private murder. He succeeded in drawing Peganes,
who commanded the troops in the Opsikian theme, into
his conspiracy. The two rebels took up arms, and proclaimed that their object
was not to dethrone Michael, but to depose Basil. Though they drew together a
considerable body of troops, rendered themselves masters of a great extent of
country, and captured many merchant-ships on their passage to Constantinople,
they did not venture to attack the capital. Their plan was ill concerted, for
before the end of the summer they had allowed themselves to be completely
surrounded by the imperial troops. Peganes was taken
prisoner at Kotaeion, and conducted to
Constantinople, where his eyes were put out. He was then placed in the Milion, with a platter in his hand, to ask charity from the
passers-by. Symbatios was subsequently captured at Keltizene. When he reached Constantinople, he was conducted
before Michael. Peganes was brought out to meet him,
with a censer of earthenware filled with burning sulphur instead of incense. Symbatios was then deprived of one of his eyes, and his
right hand was cut off. In this condition he was placed before the palace of Lausus, with a dish on his knees, as a common beggar. After
exhibiting his rebellious officers in this position for three days, Michael
allowed them to be imprisoned in their own houses. When Basil mounted the
throne, they were pardoned as men no longer dangerous.
The degrading punishment, to which two men of the
highest rank in the empire were subjected, made a deep impression on the people
of Constantinople. The figure of Peganes, a soldier
of high reputation, standing in the Milion, asking
for an obolos, with a platter in his hand like a
blind beggar, haunted their imagination, and, finding its way into the romances
of the age, was borrowed to illustrate the greatest vicissitudes of court
favour, and give colouring to the strongest pictures of the ingratitude of
emperors. The fate of Peganes and Symbatios,
woven into a tale called the Life of Belisarius, in which the interest of
tragic sentiment was heightened by much historical and local truth, has gained
immortality in European literature, and confounded the critical sagacity of
eminent modern writers.
One of the few acts which are recorded of the joint
reign of Michael and Basil was the desecration of the tomb of Constantine V (Copronymus). This base act was perpetrated to flatter a
powerful party in the church, of which the leading members were hostile to
Bardas, on account of his persecution of Ignatius. The precarious position of
Photius after the murder of his patron, and the inherent subserviency of the
Greek ecclesiastical dignitaries, made him ready to countenance any display of
orthodoxy, however bigoted, that pleased the populace. The memory of
Constantine V was still cherished by no inconsiderable number of Iconoclasts.
Common report still boasted of the wealth and power to which the empire had
attained under the just administration of the Iconoclast emperors, and their
conduct served as a constant subject of reproach to Michael. The people,
however, were easily persuaded that the great exploits of Constantine V, and
the apparent prosperity of his reign, had been the work of the devil. The
sarcophagus in which the body of this great emperor reposed was of green
marble, and of the richest workmanship. By the order of the drunken Michael and
the Slavonian groom Basil, it was broken open, and the body, after having lain
for upwards of ninety years in peace, was dragged into the circus, where the
body of John the Grammarian, torn also from the tomb, was placed beside it. The
remains of these great men were beaten with rods to amuse the vilest populace,
and then burned in the Amastrianon, the filthiest
quarter of the capital, and the place often used for the execution of
malefactors. The splendid sarcophagus of Constantine was cut in pieces by order
of Michael, to form a balustrade in a new chapel he was constructing at Pharos.
The drunkenness of Michael brought on delirium
tremens, and rendered him liable to fits of madness. He observed that Basil’s
desire to maintain the high position he had reached produced the same
reformation in his conduct which had been visible in that of Bardas. The
Emperor Basil became a very different man from Basil the groom. The change was
observed by Michael, and it rendered him dissatisfied with his colleague. In
one of his fits of madness he invested another of the companions of his orgies,
named Basiliskian, with the imperial title.
In such a court there could be little doubt that the
three emperors, Michael, Basil, and Basiliskian,
could not long hold joint sway. It was probably soon a race who should be the
first murdered, and in such cases the ablest man is generally the most
successful criminal. Basil, having reason to fear for his own safety, planned
the assassination of his benefactor with the greatest deliberation. The murder
was carried into execution after a supper-party given by Theodora to her son in
the palace of Anthimos, where he had resolved to spend a day hunting on the
Asiatic coast. Basil and his wife, Eudocia Ingerina, were invited by the
empress-mother to meet her son, for all decency was banished from this most
orthodox court. Michael, according to his usual habit, was carried from the
supper-table in a state of intoxication, and Basil accompanied his colleague to
his chamber, of which he had previously rendered the lock useless. Basiliskian, the third of this infamous trio, was sleeping,
in a state of intoxication, on the bed placed in the imperial apartment for the
chamberlain on duty. The chamberlain, on following his master, found the lock
of the door useless and the bolts broken, but did not think of calling for
assistance to secure the entrance in the palace of the empress-mother.
Basil soon returned, attended by John of Chaldia, a Persian officer named Apelates,
a Bulgarian named Peter, Constantine Toxaras, his own
father Bardas, his brother Marines, and his cousin Ayleon.
The chamberlain immediately guessed their purpose, and opposed their entry into
the chamber. Michael, disturbed by the noise, rose from his drunken sleep, and
was attacked by John of Chaldia, who cut off both his
hands with a blow of his sabre. The emperor fell on the ground. Basiliskian was slain in the meantime by Apelates. Constantine Toxaras,
with the relatives of Basil, guarded the door and the corridor leading to the apartment,
lest the officers of the emperor or the servants of Theodora should be alarmed
by the noise. The shouts of the chamberlain and the cries of Michael alarmed
Basil and those in the chamber, and they rushed into the corridor to secure
their retreat. But the tumult of debauchery had been often as loud, and the
cries of murder produced no extraordinary sensation where Michael was known to
be present. All remaining silent without, some of the conspirators expressed
alarm lest Michael should not be mortally wounded. John of Chaldia,
the boldest of the assassins, returned to make his work sure. Finding the
emperor sitting on the floor uttering bitter lamentations, he plunged his sword
into his heart, and then returned to assure Basil that all was finished.
The conspirators crossed over to Constantinople, and
having secured their entrance into the imperial palace by means of two
Persians, Eulogios and Artabasd,
who were on guard, Basil was immediately proclaimed sole emperor, and the death
of Michael III was publicly announced. In the morning the body of Michael was
interred in a monastery at Chrysopolis, near the
palace of Anthimos. Theodora was allowed to direct the funeral ceremonies of
the son whom her own neglect had conducted to an early and bloody death.
The people of Constantinople appear to have taken very
little interest in this infamous assassination, by which a small band of
mercenary adventurers transferred the empire of the Romans from the Amorian
dynasty to a Macedonian groom, whose family reigned at Constantinople for two
centuries, with greater power and glory than the Eastern Empire had attained
since the days of Justinian.
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