READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE FROMA.D. 717 TO 1453
CHAPTER VI
PERIOD OF CONQUEST AND MILITARY GLORY
A.D. 963- 1025
Sect. I
REIGN OF NICEPHORUS II,
PHOKAS, AND JOHN I (ZIMISKES)
A.D. 963-1025
The Empress Theophano was left by Romanus II regent for her sons, but as
she was brought to bed of a daughter only two days before her husband’s death,
the whole direction of public business remained in the hands of Joseph Bringas,
whose ability was universally acknowledged, but whose severity and suspicious
character rendered him generally unpopular. His jealousy soon involved him
in a contest for power with Nicephorus Phokas, who, however, did not venture to
visit Constantinople until his personal safety was guaranteed by the Empress
Theophano and the Patriarch Polyeuktes. Nicephorus was allowed to celebrate his
victories in Syria by a triumph, in which he displayed to a superstitious crowd
the relics he had obtained by his victories over the Mohammedans; and the piety
of the age attached as much importance to these as his troops did to the booty
and slaves with which they were enriched. Bringas saw that the popularity of
Nicephorus and the powerful influence of his family connections must soon gain
him the title of Emperor, and his jealousy appears to have precipitated the
event he feared. He formed a plot to have the victorious general seized, in
order that his eyes might be put out. Nicephorus being informed of his danger,
and having secured the support of the Patriarch by his devout conduct,
persuaded Polyeuktes to take prompt measures to protect him from the designs of
Bringas. The senate was convoked, and the Patriarch proposed that Nicephorus
should be entrusted with the command of the army in Asia, according to the last
will of Romanus II. Bringas did not venture to oppose this proposal of the
Patriarch, which was eagerly adopted; and Nicephorus, after taking an oath
never to injure the children of Romanus, his lawful sovereigns, proceeded to
take the command of all the Byzantine forces in Asia.
Bringas still pursued his schemes; he wrote to John Zimiskes, the ablest
and most popular of the generals under the orders of Nicephorus, offering him
the supreme command if he would seize the general-in-chief, and send him to
Constantinople as a prisoner. Zimiskes was the nephew of Nicephorus; but his
subsequent conduct shows that conscience would not have arrested him in the
execution of any project for his own aggrandizement. On the present occasion,
he may have thought that the power of Bringas was not likely to be permanent,
and he may have known that he would show little gratitude for any service;
while the popularity of Nicephorus with the troops made fidelity to his general
the soundest policy. Zimiskes carried the letter of the prime-minister to
Nicephorus, and invited him to assume the imperial title, as the only means of
securing his own life and protecting his friends. It is said that John Zimiskes
and Romanus Kurkuas were compelled to draw their swords, and threaten to kill
their uncle, before he would allow himself to be proclaimed emperor. The same
thing had been said of Leo V (the Armenian), that he was compelled to mount the
throne by his murderer and successor, Michael II. Nicephorus at last yielded,
and marched immediately from Caesarea to Chrysopolis,
where he encamped. Bringas found little support in the capital. Basilios, the
natural son of the Emperor Romanus I, armed his household, in which he had
three thousand slaves, and, exciting a sedition of the populace, sallied into
the streets of Constantinople, and attacked the houses of the ministers, most
of whom were compelled to seek an asylum in the churches. Nicephorus was
invited to enter the capital, where he was crowned by the Patriarch Polyeuktes,
in St. Sophia’s, on the 16th of August, 963.
The family of Phocas was of Cappadocian origin, and had now for three
generations supplied the empire with distinguished generals. Nicephorus proved
an able emperor, and a faithful guardian of the young emperors; but his
personal bearing was tinged with military severity, and his cold phlegmatic
temper prevented his using the arts necessary to gain popularity either with
the courtiers or the citizens. His conduct was moral, and he was sincerely
religious; but he was too enlightened to confound the pretensions of the church
with the truth of Christianity, and, consequently, in spite of his real piety,
he was calumniated by the clergy as a hypocrite. Indeed, there was little
probability that a strict military disciplinarian, who ascended the throne at
the age of fifty-one, should prove a popular prince, when he succeeded a young
and gay monarch like Romanus II.
The coronation of Nicephorus was soon followed by his marriage with
Theophano, a match which must have been dictated to the beautiful widow by
ambition and policy rather than love; though the Byzantine writers accuse her
of a previous intrigue with the veteran general, and record that she exerted
great authority over him by her persuasive manners. The marriage ceremony was
performed by the Patriarch, but shortly after its celebration he forbade the
emperor to enter the chancel of St. Sophia's, where the imperial throne was
placed, declaring that even the emperor must submit to the penance imposed by
the orthodox church on second marriages, which excluded the contracting party
from the body of the church for a year. The hostile feeling, on the part of
Polyeuktes, that produced this insolence, also encouraged a report that
Nicephorus had acted as godfather to one of the children of Romanus and
Theophano—a connection which, according to the Greek church, forms an
impediment to marriage. The Patriarch appears to have adopted this report
without consideration, and threatened to declare the marriage he had celebrated
null; he had even the boldness to order the emperor to separate from Theophano
immediately. But this difficulty was removed by the chaplain who had officiated
at the baptism. He came forward, and declared on oath that Nicephorus had not
been present, nor had he, the priest, ever said so. The Patriarch found
himself compelled to withdraw his opposition, and, to cover his defeat, he
allowed Nicephorus to enter the church without remark. This dispute left a
feeling of irritation on the mind of the emperor, and was probably the cause of
some of his severities to the clergy, while it certainly assisted in rendering
him unpopular among his bigoted subjects.
Nicephorus had devoted great attention to improving the discipline of
the Byzantine army, and, as it consisted in great part of mercenaries, this
could only be done by a liberal expenditure. His chief object was to obtain
troops of the best quality, and all the measures of his civil administration
were directed to fill the treasury. An efficient army was the chief support of
the empire; and it seemed, therefore, to Nicephorus that the first duty of an
emperor was to secure the means of maintaining a numerous and well-appointed
military force. Perhaps the people of Constantinople would have applauded his
maxims and his conduct, had he been more liberal in lavishing the wealth he
extorted from the provinces on festivals and shows in the capital. A severe
famine, at the commencement of his reign, increased his unpopularity. This
scarcity commenced in the reign of Romanus II, and, among the reports
circulated against Joseph Bringas, it was related that he had threatened to
raise the price of wheat so high, that, for a piece of gold, a man should only
purchase as much as he could carry away in his pockets. It is very probable
that the measures adopted by Nicephorus tended to increase the evil, though
Zonaras, in saying that he allowed each merchant to use his own interest as a
law, would lead us to infer that he abolished monopolies and maximums, and left
the trade in grain free. The fiscal measures of his reign, however, increased
the burden of taxation. He retrenched the annual largesses of the court, and curtailed the pensions granted to courtiers. The worst act of
his reign, and one for which the Byzantine historians have justly branded him
with merited odium, was his violation of the public faith, and the honour of
the Eastern Empire, by adulterating the coin, and issuing a debased coin,
called the tetarteron. This debased money he
employed to pay the debts of the state, while the taxes continued to be exacted
in the old and pure coin of the empire. The standard of the coinage of the
Eastern Empire, it must always be borne in mind, remained always the same until
the taking of Constantinople by the Crusaders. The gold coins of Leo III and of
Isaac II are of the same weight and purity; and the few emperors who disgraced
their reigns by tampering with the currency have been branded with infamy.
Perhaps there is no better proof of the high state of political civilization in
Byzantine society. But the strong grounds of dissatisfaction against Nicephorus
were ripened into personal animosity by an accidental tumult in the hippodrome,
in which many persons lost their lives. It happened that, while the troops were
going through the evolutions of a sham-fight, a report arose that the emperor
intended to punish the people, who had thrown stones at him, and insulted him
as he passed through the streets. This caused a rush out of the enclosures, and
many persons, men, women, and children, perished. The citizens, of course,
insisted that the massacre was premeditated.
The whole reign of Nicephorus was disturbed by the ill-will of the
clergy, and one of his wisest measures met with the most determined opposition.
In order to render the military service more popular among his native subjects,
and prevent the veterans from quitting the army under the influence of
religious feelings distorted by superstition, he wished the clergy to declare
that all Christians who perished in war against the Saracens were martyrs in
the cause of religion. But the Patriarch, who was more of a churchman than a
patriot, considered it greater gain to the clergy to retain the power of
granting absolutions, than to bestow the most liberal donation of martyrs on
the church; and he appealed to the canons of St. Basil to prove that all war
was contrary to Christian discipline, and that a Christian who killed an enemy,
even in war with the Infidels, ought to be excluded from participating in the
holy sacrament for three years. With a priesthood supporting such religious
opinions, the Byzantine Empire had need of an admirable system of
administration, and a series of brave and warlike emperors, to perpetuate its
long existence. In the first year of his reign, Nicephorus endeavoured to
restrain the passion for founding monasteries that then reigned almost
universally. Many converted their family residences into monastic buildings, in
order to terminate their lives as monks, without changing their habits of life.
The emperor prohibited the foundation of any new monasteries and hospitals,
enacting that only those already in existence should be maintained; and he
declared all testamentary donations of land property in favour of the church
void. He also excited the anger of the clergy, by forbidding any ecclesiastical
erection to be made until the candidate had received the imperial approbation.
He was in the habit of leaving the wealthiest sees vacant, and either retained
the revenues or compelled the new bishop to pay a large portion of his receipts
annually into the imperial treasury.
Nicephorus was so well aware of his unpopularity, that he converted the
great palace into a citadel, which he made capable of defence with a small
garrison. As the army was devoted to him, he knew that beyond the walls of
Constantinople he was in no danger. In estimating the character and conduct of
Nicephorus II, we must not forget that his enemies have drawn his portrait, and
that, unfortunately for his reputation, modern historians have generally
attached more credit to the splenetic account of the Byzantine court by Luitprand, the bishop of Cremona, than diplomatic
despatches of that age are entitled to receive. Luitprand visited Constantinople as ambassador from the German emperor, Otho the Great,
to negotiate a marriage between young Otho and Theophano, the stepdaughter of
Nicephorus. Otho expected that the Byzantine emperor would cede his possessions
in southern Italy as the dowry of the princess; Nicephorus expected the German
emperor would yield up the suzerainty over Beneventum and Capua for the honour
of the alliance. As might be expected, from the pride and rapacity of both
parties, the ambassador failed in his mission; but he revenged himself by
libelling Nicephorus; and his picture of the pride and suspicious policy of the
Byzantine court in its intercourse with foreigners gives his libel some value,
and serves as an apology for his virulence.
The darling object of Nicephorus was to break the power of the Saracens,
and extend the frontiers of the empire in Syria and Mesopotamia. In the spring
of 964, he assembled an army against Tarsus, which was the fortress that
covered the Syrian frontier. The river Cydnus flowed
through the city, dividing it into two portions, which were united by three
bridges. The place was populous, well fortified, and
amply supplied with every means of defence, so that the emperor was compelled
to raise the siege, and lead his army against Adana, which he took. He then
formed the siege of Mopsuestia, and, employing his
men to run a subterraneous gallery under the walls, he prevented the besieged
from observing the operation by throwing the earth taken from the excavation into
the Pyramus during the night. When his mine was completed, the beams which
supported the walls were burned, and as soon as the rampart fell, the Byzantine
army carried the place by storm. Next year (965), Nicephorus again formed the
siege of Tarsus with an army of forty thousand men. The place was inadequately
supplied with provisions; and though the inhabitants were a warlike race, who
had long carried on incursions into the Byzantine territory, they were
compelled to abandon their native city, and retire into Syria, carrying with
them only their personal clothing. A rich cross, which the Saracens had taken
when they destroyed the Byzantine army under Stypiotes in the year 877, was recovered, and placed in the church of St. Sophia at
Constantinople. The bronze gates of Tarsus and Mopsuestia,
which were of rich workmanship, were also removed, and placed by Nicephorus in
the new citadel he had constructed to defend the palace. In the same year
Cyprus was reconquered by an expedition under the command of the patrician Niketas.
For two years the emperor was occupied at Constantinople by the civil
administration of the empire, by a threatened invasion of the Hungarians, and
by disputes with the king of Bulgaria; but in 968 he again resumed the command
of the army in the East. Early in spring he marched past Antioch at the head of
eighty thousand men, and, without stopping to besiege that city, he rendered
himself master of the fortified places in its neighbourhoods, in order to cut
it off from all relief from the caliph of Bagdad. He then pushed forward his
conquests; Laodicea, Hierapolis, Aleppo, Arca, and Emesa were taken, and Tripolis and Damascus paid tribute to
save their territory from being laid waste. In this campaign many relics were
surrendered by the Mohammedans. In consequence of the approach of winter, the
emperor led his army into winter quarters, and deferred forming the siege of
Antioch until the ensuing spring. He left the patrician Burtzes in a fort on the Black Mountain, with orders to watch the city, and prevent the
inhabitants from collecting provisions and military stores. The remainder of
the army, under the command of Peter, was stationed in Cilicia. As he was
anxious to reserve to himself the glory of restoring Antioch to the empire, he ordered
his Lieutenants not to attack the city during his absence. But one of the spies
employed by Burtzes brought him the measure of the
height of a tower which it was easy to approach, and the temptation to take the
place by surprise was not to be resisted. Accordingly, on a dark winter night,
while there was a heavy fall of snow, Burtzes placed
himself at the head of three hundred chosen men, and gained possession of two
of the towers of Antioch. He immediately sent off a courier to Peter,
requesting him to advance and take possession of the city; but Peter, from fear
of the emperor's jealousy, delayed moving to the assistance of Burtzes for three days. During this interval, however, Burtzes defended himself against the repeated attacks of
the whole population with great difficulty. The Byzantine army at length
arrived, and Antioch was annexed to the empire after having remained 328 years
in the power of the Saracens. The Emperor Nicephorus, instead of rewarding Burtzes for his energy, dismissed both him and Peter from
their commands.
The Fatimite caliph Moez reigned at Cairowan, and was already contemplating the conquest of
Egypt. Nicephorus not only refused to pay him the tribute of eleven thousand
gold byzants, stipulated by Romanus I, but even sent an expedition to wrest
Sicily from the Saracens. The chief command was entrusted to Niketas, who had conquered Cyprus; and the army, consisting
chiefly of cavalry, was more particularly placed under the orders of Manuel
Phokas, the emperor's cousin, a daring officer. The troops were landed on the
eastern coast, and Manuel rashly advanced, until he was surrounded by the enemy
and slain. Niketas also had made so little
preparation to defend his position, that his camp was stormed, and he himself
taken prisoner and sent to Africa. Nicephorus, who had a great esteem for Niketas in spite of this defeat, obtained his release by
sending to Moez the sword of Mahomet, which had
fallen into his hands in Syria. Niketas consoled
himself during his captivity by transcribing the works of St. Basil, and a MS.
of his penmanship still exists in the National Library at Paris.
The affairs of Italy were, as usual, embroiled by local causes. Otho,
the emperor of the West, appeared at the head of an army in Apulia, and having
secured the assistance of Pandulf, prince of Beneventum, called Ironhead,
carried on the war with frequent vicissitudes of fortune. Ironhead was taken
prisoner by the Byzantine general, and sent captive to Constantinople. But the
tyrannical conduct of the Byzantine officials lost all that was gained by the
superior discipline of the troops, and favoured the progress of the German
arms. Society had fallen into such a state of isolation, that men were more
eager to obtain immunity from all taxation than protection for industry and
property, and the advantages of the Byzantine administration ceased to be
appreciated.
The European provinces of the empire were threatened with invasion both
by the Hungarians and Bulgarians. In 966, Nicephorus was apprised of the intention
of the Hungarians, and he solicited the assistance of Peter, king of Bulgaria,
to prevent their passing the Danube. Peter refused, for he had been compelled
to conclude a treaty of peace with the Hungarians, who had invaded Bulgaria a
short time before. It is even said that Peter took advantage of the difficulty
in which Nicephorus appeared to be placed, by the numerous wars that occupied
his troops, to demand payment of the tribute Romanus I had promised to Simeon.
Nicephorus, in order to punish the insolence of one whom he regarded as his
inferior, sent Kalokyres, the son of the governor of
Cherson, as ambassador to Russia, to invite Swiatoslaff,
the Varangian prince of Kieff, to invade Bulgaria,
and entrusted him with a sum of fifteen hundred pounds’ weight of gold, to pay
the expenses of the expedition. Kalokyres proved a
traitor : he formed an alliance with Swiatoslaff,
proclaimed himself emperor, and involved the empire in a bloody war with the
Russians.
Unpopular as Nicephorus II was in the capital, his reign was unusually
free from rebellions of the troops or insurrections in the provinces. His life
was terminated in his own palace by domestic treachery. His beautiful wife
Theophano, and his valiant nephew John Zimiskes, were his murderers. Theophano
was said to have been induced to take part in the conspiracy from love for
Zimiskes, whom she expected to marry after he mounted the throne. Zimiskes
murdered his friend and relation from motives of ambition. A band of
conspirators, selected from the personal enemies of the emperor, among whom was Burtzes, accompanied John Zimiskes at midnight to the
palace wall overlooking the pont of Bukoleon, and the female attendants of the empress hoisted
them up from their boat in baskets. Other assassins had been concealed in the
palace during the day, and all marched to the apartment of the emperor.
Nicephorus was sleeping tranquilly on the floor—for he retained the habits of
his military life amidst the luxury of the imperial palace. Zimiskes awoke him
with a kick, and one of the conspirators gave him a desperate wound on the
head, while Zimiskes insulted his uncle with words and blows: the others
stabbed him in the most barbarous manner. The veteran, during his sufferings,
only exclaimed, “O God! grant me thy mercy”. John I was immediately proclaimed
emperor by the murderers. The body of Nicephorus was thrown into the court, and
left all day on the snow exposed to public view, that everybody might be
convinced he was dead. In the evening it was privately interred.
Thus perished Nicephorus Phokas on the 10th December 969—a brave
soldier, an able general, and, with all his defects, one of the most virtuous
men and conscientious sovereigns that ever occupied the throne of
Constantinople. Though born of one of the noblest and wealthiest families of
the Eastern Empire, and sure of obtaining the highest offices at a proud and
luxurious court, he chose a life of hardship in pursuit of military glory; and
a contemporary historian, who wrote after his family had been ruined by
proscription, and his name had become odious, observes, that no one had ever
seen him indulge in revelry or debauchery even in his youth.
REIGN OF JOHN I ZIMISKES
John I was a daring warrior and an able general. He was thoughtless,
generous, and addicted to the pleasures of the table, so that, though he was by
no means a better emperor than Nicephorus, he was far more popular at
Constantinople: hence we find that his base assassination of his sovereign and
relative was easily pardoned and forgotten, while the fiscal severity of his
predecessor was never forgiven. The court of Constantinople was so utterly
corrupt, that it was relieved from all sense of responsibility; the aristocracy
knew no law but fear and private interest, and no crime was so venial as
successful ambition. The throne was a stake for which every courtier held it
lawful to gamble, who was inclined to risk his eyes or his life to gain an
empire. Yet we must observe that both Nicephorus and John were men of nobler
minds than the nobles around them, for both respected the rights and persons of
their wards and legitimate princes, Basil and Constantine, and contented
themselves with the post of prime-minister and the rank of emperor.
The chamberlain Basilios had been rewarded by Nicephorus, for his
services in aiding him to mount the throne, with the rank of President of the
Council, a dignity created on purpose. He was now entrusted by John with the
complete direction of the civil administration. The partisans of Nicephorus were
removed from all offices of trust, and their places filled by men devoted to
Zimiskes, or hostile to the family of Phokas. All political exiles were
recalled, and a parade of placing the young emperors, Basil and Constantine, on
an equality with their senior colleague was made, as an insinuation that they
had hitherto been retained in an unworthy state of inferiority. At the same
time, measures were adopted to prevent the rabble of the capital from
plundering the houses of the wealthy nobles who had been dismissed from their
appointments, which was a usual proceeding at every great political revolution
in Constantinople.
The coronation of John I was delayed by the Patriarch for a few days,
for Polyeuktes lost no opportunity of showing his authority. He therefore
refused to perform the ceremony until Zimiskes declared that he hart not imbued
his hands in the blood of his sovereign. He pointed out his
fellow-conspirators, Leo Valantes and Atzypotheodoros, as the murderers, and excused himself by
throwing the whole blame of the murder on the Empress Theophano. The officers
thus sacrificed were exiled, and the empress was removed from the imperial
palace. John was then admitted to the favour of the Patriarch, on consenting to
abrogate the law of Nicephorus, providing that the candidates for
ecclesiastical dignities should receive the emperor's approbation before their
election, and promising to bestow all his private fortune in charity. After his
coronation, he accordingly distributed one-half of his fortune among the poor
peasants round Constantinople, and employed the other in founding an hospital
for lepers, in consequence of that disease having greatly increased about this
time. He also increased his popularity by remitting the tribute of the Armeniac
theme, which was his native province, and by Priding to the largesses which it was customary for the emperor to distribute.
The Patriarch Polyeuktes died about three months after the coronation,
and Zimiskes selected Basilios, a monk of Mount Olympus, as his successor; and
without paying any respect to the canons which forbid the interference of the
laity in the election of bishops, he ordered him to be installed in his
dignity. The monk proved less compliant than the emperor expected. After
occupying the patriarchal chair about five years, he was deposed for refusing
to appear before the emperor to answer an accusation of treason. The Patriarch
declared the emperor incompetent to sit as his judge, asserting that he could
only be judged or deposed by a synod or general council of the church. He was nevertheless banished to a monastery he had built on the
Scamander, and from which he is called Scamandrinos. Antonios, the abbot of Studio; was appointed Patriarch in
his place.
The family of Phokas had so long occupied the highest military commands,
and disposed of the patronage of the empire, that it possessed a party too
powerful to be immediately reduced to submission. The reign of John was
disturbed by more than one rebellion excited by its members. Leo, the brother
of Nicephorus, had distinguished himself by gaining a great victory over the
Saracens in the defiles of Kylindros, near Andrassos, while his brother was occupied with the conquest
of Crete. During the reign of Nicephorus he held the office of curopalates, but had rendered himself hated on account of
his rapacity. His second son, Bardas Phokas, held the office of governor of Koloneia and Chaldia when
Nicephorus was murdered, and was banished to Amasia.
Bardas was one of the best soldiers and boldest champions in the Byzantine
army. In the year 97o he escaped from confinement, and rendered himself master
of Caesarea, where he assumed the title of Emperor. In the meantime his father,
escaping from Lesbos, and his elder brother Nicephorus from Imbros, attempted
to raise a rebellion in Europe. These two were soon captured, and John,
satisfied that he had ruined the family when he murdered the Emperor
Nicephorus, spared their lives, and allowed the sentence which condemned them
to lose their eyes to be executed in such a way that they retained their
eyesight. Bardas, however, gave the emperor some trouble, and it was necessary
to recall Bardas Skleros from the Russian war to take the command against him.
Phokas, when deserted by his army, escaped to a castle he had fortified as a
place of refuge, where he defended himself until Skleros persuaded him to
surrender, on a promise that he should receive no personal injury. Zimiskes,
who admired his daring courage, condemned him to reside in the island of Chios,
and adopt the monastic robe. His father Leo, who escaped a second time from
confinement, and visited Constantinople in the hope of rendering himself master
of the palace during the absence of the emperor, was discovered, and dragged
from St. Sophia’s, in which he sought an asylum. His eyes were then put out,
and his immense estates confiscated.
John, in order to connect himself with the Basilian dynasty, married
Theodora, one of the daughters of Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus. Another more
important marriage is passed unnoticed by the Byzantine writers. Zimiskes,
finding that he could ill spare troops to defend the Byzantine possessions in
Italy against the attacks of the Western emperor, released Pandulf of
Beneventum, after he had remained three years a prisoner at Constantinople, and
by his means opened amicable communications with Otho the Great. A treaty of
marriage was concluded between young Otho and Theophano, the sister of the
Emperors Basil and Constantine. The nuptials were celebrated at Rome on the
14th of April 972; and the talents and beauty of the Byzantine princess enabled
her to act a prominent and noble part in the history of her time.
A curious event in the history of the Eastern Empire, which ought not to
pass unnoticed, is the transportation of a number of heretics, called by
historians Manicheans, from the eastern provinces of Asia Minor, to increase
the colonies of Paulicians and other heretics already established round
Philippopolis. This is said to have been done by the Emperor John, by advice of
a hermit named Theodoros, whom he elevated to the dignity of Patriarch of Antioch.
The continual mention of numerous communities of heretics in Byzantine history
proves that there is no greater delusion than to speak of the unity of the
Christian church. Dissent appears to have been quite as prevalent, both in the
Eastern and Western churches, before the time of Luther, as it has been since.
Because the Greeks and Italians have been deficient in religious feeling, and
their superior knowledge enabled them to affect contempt for other races, the
history of dissent has been neglected, and religious investigation decried
under the appellation of heresy.
The Russian war was the great event of the reign of John Zimiskes. The
military fame of the Byzantine emperor, who was unquestionably the ablest
general of his time, the greatness of the Russian nation, whose power now
overshadows Europe, the scene of the contest, destined in our day to be again
the battlefield of Russian armies in a more successful campaign, and the
political interest which attaches to the first attempt of a Russian prince to
march by land to Constantinople, all combine to give a practical as well as a
romantic interest to this war.
The first Russian naval expedition against Constantinople in 865 would
probably have been followed by a series of plundering excursions, like those
carried on by the Danes and Normans on the coasts of England and France, had
not the Turkish tribe called the Patzinaks rendered themselves masters of the
lower course of the Dnieper, and become instruments in the hands of the
emperors to arrest the activity of the bold Varangians. The northern rulers of
Fief were the same rude warriors that infested England and France, but the
Russian people was then in a more advanced state of society than the mass of
the population in Britain and Gaul. The majority of the Russians were freemen;
the majority of the inhabitants of Britain and Gaul were serfs. The commerce of
the Russians was already so extensive as to influence the conduct of their
government, and to modify the military ardour of their Varangian masters. But
this commerce, after the fall of the Khazar Empire, and the invasion of Europe
by the Magyars and Patzinaks, was carried on under obstacles which tended to
reduce its extent and diminish its profits, and which it required no common
degree of skill and perseverance to overcome. The wealth revealed to the
rapacious Varangian chiefs of Kiev by the existence of this trade invited them
to attack Constantinople, which appeared to be the centre of immeasurable
riches.
After the defeat in 865, the Russians induced their rulers to send
envoys to Constantinople to renew commercial intercourse, and invite Christian
missionaries to visit their country; and no inconsiderable portion of the
people embraced Christianity, though it continued long after better known to
the Russian merchants than to the Varangian warriors. The commercial relations
of the Russians with Cherson and Constantinople were now carried on directly,
and numbers of Russian traders took up their residence in these cities. The
first commercial treaty between the Russians of Kiev and the Byzantine Empire
was concluded in the reign of Basil I. The intercourse increased from that
time. In the year 902, seven hundred Russians are mentioned as serving on board
the Byzantine fleet with high pay; in 935, seven Russian vessels, with 415 men,
formed part of a Byzantine expedition to Italy; and in 949, six Russian
vessels, with 629 men, were engaged in the unsuccessful expedition of Gongyles against Crete. In 966, a corps of Russians
accompanied the unfortunate expedition of Niketas to
Sicily. There can be no doubt that these were all Varangians, familiar, like
the Danes and Normans in the West, with the dangers of the sea, and not native
Russians, whose services on board the fleet could have been of little value to
the masters of Greece.
But to return to the history of the Byzantine wars with the Russians. In
the year 907, Oleg, who was regent of Kiev during the minority of Igor the son
of Rurik, assembled an army of Varangians, Slavonians, and Croatians, and,
collecting two thousand vessels or boats of the kind then used on the northern
shore of the Euxine, advanced to attack Constantinople. The exploits of this
army, which pretended to aspire at the conquest of Tzaragrad,
or the City of the Caesars, were confined to plundering the country round
Constantinople; and it is not improbable that the expedition was undertaken to
obtain indemnity for some commercial losses sustained by imperial negligence,
monopoly, or oppression. The subjects of the emperor were murdered, and the
Russians amused themselves with torturing their captives in the most barbarous
manner. At length Leo purchased their retreat by the payment of a large sum of
money. Such is the account transmitted to us by the Russian monk Nestor, for no
Byzantine writer notices the expedition, which was doubtless nothing more than
a plundering incursion, in which the city of Constantinople was not exposed to
any danger. These hostilities were terminated by a commercial treaty in 912,
and its conditions are recorded in detail by Nestor.
In the year 941, Igor made an attack on Constantinople, impelled either
by the spirit of adventure, which was the charm of existence among all the
tribes of Northmen, or else roused to revenge by some violation of the treaty
of 912. The Russian flotilla, consisting of innumerable small vessels, made its
appearance in the Bosphorus while the Byzantine fleet was absent in the
Archipelago. Igor landed at different places on the coast of Thrace and
Bithynia, ravaging and plundering the country; the inhabitants were treated
with incredible cruelty; some were crucified, others were burned alive, the
Greek priests were killed by driving nails into their heads, and the churches
were destroyed. Only fifteen ships remained at Constantinople, but these were
soon fitted up with additional tubes for shooting Greek fire. This force,
trifling as it was in number, gave the Byzantines an immediate superiority at
sea, and the patrician Theophanes sailed out of the port to attack the Russians.
Igor, seeing the small number of the enemy's ships, surrounded them on all
sides, and endeavoured to carry them by boarding; but the Greek fire became
only so much more available against boats and men crowded together, and the
attack was repulsed with fearful loss. In the meantime, some of the Russians
who landed in Bithynia were defeated by Bardas Phokas and John Kurkuas, and
those who escaped from the naval defeat were pursued and slaughtered on the
coast of Thrace without mercy. The Emperor Romanus ordered all the prisoners
brought to Constantinople to be beheaded. Theophanes overtook the fugitive
ships in the month of September, and the relics of the expedition were
destroyed, Igor effecting his escape with only a few boats. The Russian
Chronicle of Nestor says that, in the year 944, Igor, assisted by other
Varangians, and by the Patzirt, prepared a second
expedition, but that the inhabitants of Cherson so alarmed the Emperor Romanus
by their reports of its magnitude, that he sent ambassadors, who met Igor at
the mouth of the Danube, and sued for peace on terms to which Igor and his
boyards consented. This is probably merely a salve applied to the vanity of the
people of Kiev by their chronicler; but it is certain that a treaty of peace
was concluded between the emperors of Constantinople and the princes of Kiev in
the year 945. The stipulations of this treaty prove the importance attached to
the commerce carried on by the Russians with Cherson and Constantinople. The
two Russo-Byzantine treaties preserved by Nestor are documents of great
importance in tracing the history of civilization in the east of Europe. The
attention paid to the commercial interests of the Russian traders visiting
Cherson and Constantinople, and the prominence given to questions of practical
utility instead of to points of dynastic ambition,
may serve as a contrast to many modern treaties in the west of Europe. The
trading classes would not have been powerful enough to command this attention
to their interests on the part of the warlike Varangians, had a numerous body
of free citizens not been closely connected with the commercial prosperity of
Russia. Unfortunately for the people, the municipal independence of their
cities, which had enabled each separate community to acquire wealth and
civilization, was not joined to any central institutions that insured order and
a strict administration of justice, consequently each city fell separately a
prey to the superior military force of the comparatively barbarian Varangians
of Scandinavia. The Varangian conquest of Russia had very much the same effect
as the Danish and Norman conquests in the West. Politically, the nation
appeared more powerful, but the condition of all ranks of the people socially
was much deteriorated. It was, however, the Tartar invasion which separates the
modem and the medieval history of Russia, and which plunged the country into
the state of barbarism and slavery from which Peter the Great first raised it.
The cruelty of the Varangian prince Igor, after his return to Russia,
caused him to be murdered by his rebellious subjects. Olga, his widow, became
regent for their son Swiatoslaff. She embraced the
Christian religion, and visited Constantinople in 957, where she was baptized.
The Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus has left us an account of the ceremony
of her reception at the Byzantine court. A monk has preserved the commercial
treaties of the empire, an emperor records the pageantry that amused a Russian
princess. The high position occupied by the court of Kiev in the tenth century
is also attested by the style with which it was addressed by the court of
Constantinople. The golden bulls of the Roman emperor of the East, addressed to
the prince of Russia, were ornamented with a pendent seal equal in size to a double
solidus, like those addressed to the kings of France.
We have seen that the Emperor Nicephorus II sent the patrician Kalokyres to excite Swiatoslaff to invade Bulgaria, and that the Byzantine ambassador proved a traitor and
assumed the purple. Swiatoslaff soon invaded Bulgaria
at the head of a powerful army, which the gold brought by Kalokyres assisted him to equip, and defeated the Bulgarian army in a great battle, AD
968. Peter, king of Bulgaria, died shortly after, and the country was involved
in civil broils; taking advantage of which, Swiatoslaff took Presthlava the capital, and rendered himself
master of the whole kingdom. Nicephorus now formed an alliance with the
Bulgarians, and was preparing to defend them against the Russians, when Swiatoslaff was compelled to return home, in order to
defend his capital against the Patzinaks. Nicephorus assisted Boris and
Romanus, the sons of Peter, to recover Bulgaria, and concluded an offensive and
defensive alliance with Boris, who occupied the throne. After the assassination
of Nicephorus, Swiatoslaff returned to invade
Bulgaria with an army of 6o,000 men, and his enterprise assumed the character
of one of those great invasions which had torn whole provinces from the Western
Empire. His army was increased by a treaty with the Patzinaks and an alliance
with the Hungarians, so that he began to dream of the conquest of
Constantinople, and hoped to transfer the empire of the East from the Romans of
Byzantium to the Russians. It was fortunate for the Byzantine empire that it
was ruled by a soldier who knew how to profit by its superiority in tactics and
discipline. The Russian was not ignorant of strategy, and having secured his
flank by his alliance with the Hungarians, he entered Thrace by the western
passes of Mount Haemus, then the most frequented road between Germany and
Constantinople, and that by which the Hungarians were in the habit of making
their plundering incursions into the empire.
John Zimiskes was occupied in the East when Swiatoslaff completed the second conquest of Bulgaria and passed Mount Haemus, expecting to
subdue Thrace during the emperor's absence with equal ease, AD 97o. The empire
was still suffering from famine. Swiatoslaff took
Philippopolis, and murdered twenty thousand of the inhabitants. An embassy sent
by Zimiskes was dismissed with a demand of tribute, and the Russian army
advanced to Arcadiopolis, where one division was
defeated by Bardas Skleros, and the remainder retired again behind Mount
Haemus.
In the following spring, 971, the Emperor John took the field at the
head of an army of fifteen thousand infantry and thirteen thousand cavalry,
besides a bodyguard of chosen troops called the Immortals, and a powerful
battery of field and siege engines. A fleet of three hundred galleys, attended
by many smaller vessels, was despatched to enter the Danube and cut off the
communications of the Russians with their own country.
Military operations for the defence and attack of Constantinople are
dependent on some marked physical features of the country between the Danube
and Mount Haemus. The Danube, with its broad and rapid stream, and line of
fortresses on its southern bank, would be an impregnable barrier to a military
power possessing an active ally in Hungary and Servia; for it is easy to
descend the river and concentrate the largest force on any desired point of
attack, to cut off the communications or disturb the flanks of the invaders.
Even after the line of the Danube is lost, that of Mount Haemus covers Thrace;
and it formed a rampart to Constantinople in many periods of danger under the
Byzantine emperors. It was then traversed by three great military roads
passable for chariots. The first, which has a double gorge, led from
Philippopolis to Sardica by the pass called the Gates of Trajan (now Kapou Dervend), throwing out
three branches from the principal trunk to Naissos and Belgrade. The great pass forms the point of communication likewise with the
upper valley of the Strymon, from Skupi to Ulpiana, and the northern parts of Macedonia. Two secondary
passes communicate with this road to the north-east, affording passage for an
army—that of Kezanlik, and that of Isladi; and these form the shortest lines of communication
between Philippopolis and the Danube about Nicopolis,
through Bulgaria. The second great pass is towards the centre of the range of
Haemus, and has preserved among the Turks its Byzantine name of the Iron Gate.
It is situated on the direct line of communication between Adrianople and Roustchouk. Through this pass a good road might easily be
constructed. The third great pass is that to the east, forming the great line
of communication between Adrianople and the Lower Danube near Silistria (Dorystolon). It is
called by the Turks Nadir Dervend. The range of
Haemus has several other passes independent of these, and its parallel ridges
present numerous defiles. The celebrated Turkish position at Shoumla is adapted to cover several of these passes,
converging on the great eastern road to Adrianople.
The Emperor John marched from Adrianople just before Easter, when it was
not expected that a Byzantine emperor would take the field. He knew that the
passes on the great eastern road had been left unguarded by the Russians, and
he led his army through all the defiles of Mount Haemus without encountering
any difficulty. The Russian troops stationed at Presthlava,
who ought to have guarded the passes, marched out to meet the emperor when they
heard he had entered Bulgaria. Their whole army consisted of infantry; but the
soldiers were covered with chain armour, and accustomed to resist the light
cavalry of the Patzinaks and other Turkish tribes. They proved, however, no
match for the heavy-armed lancers of the imperial army; and, after a vigorous
resistance, were completely routed by John Zimiskes, leaving eight thousand
five hundred men on the field of battle. On the following day Presthlava was taken by escalade, and a body of seven
thousand Russians and Bulgarians, who attempted to defend the royal palace,
which was fortified as a citadel, were put to the sword after a gallant
defence. Sphengelos, who commanded this division of
the Russian force, and the traitor Kalokyres,
succeeded in escaping to Dorystolon, where Swiatoslaff had concentrated the rest of the army; but
Boris, king of Bulgaria, with all his family, was taken prisoner in his
capital.
The emperor, after celebrating Easter in Presthlava,
advanced by Pliscova and Dinea to Dorystolon, where Swiatoslaff still hoped for victory, though his position was becoming daily more dangerous.
The Byzantine fleet entered the Danube and took up its station opposite the
city, cutting off all the communications of the Russians by water, at the same
time that the emperor encamped before the walls and blockaded them by land.
Zimiskes, knowing he had to deal with a desperate enemy, fortified his camp
with a ditch and rampart according to the old Roman model, which was
traditionally preserved by the Byzantine engineers. The Russians enclosed
within the walls of Dorystolon were more numerous than
their besiegers, and Swaitoslaff hoped to be able to
open his communications with the surrounding country, by bringing on a general
engagement in the plain before all the defenses of
the camp were completed. He hoped to defeat the attacks of the Byzantine
cavalry by forming his men in squares, and, as the Russian soldiers were
covered by long shields that reached to their feet, he expected to be able, by
advancing his squares like moving towers, to clear the plain of the enemy. But
while the Byzantine legions met the Russians in front, the heavy-armed cavalry
assailed them with their long spears in flank, and the archers and slingers
under cover watched coolly to transfix every man where an opening allowed their
missiles to penetrate. The battle nevertheless lasted all day, but in the
evening the Russians were compelled, in spite of their desperate velour, to
retire into Dorystolon without having effected
anything. The infantry of the north now began to feel its inferiority to the
veteran cavalry of Asia sheathed in plate armour, and disciplined by long
campaigns against the Saracens. Swiatoslaff, however,
continued to defend himself by a series of battles rather than sorties, in
which he made desperate efforts to break through the ranks of his besiegers in vain,
until at length it became evident that he must either conclude peace, die on
the field of battle, or be starved to death in Dorystolon.
Before resigning himself to his fate, he made a last effort to cut his way
through the Byzantine army; and on this occasion the Russians fought with such
desperation, that contemporaries ascribed the victory of the Byzantine troops,
not to the superior tactics of the emperor, nor to the discipline of a veteran
army, but to the personal assistance of St. Theodore, who found it necessary to
lead the charge of the Roman lancers, and shiver a spear with the Russians
himself, before their phalanx could be broken. The victory was complete, and Swiatoslaff sent ambassadors to the emperor to offer terms
of peace.
The siege of Dorystolon had now lasted more
than two months, and the Russian army, though reduced by repeated losses, still
amounted to twenty-two thousand men. The valour and contempt of death which the
Varangians had displayed in the contest, convinced the emperor that it would
cause the loss of many brave veterans to insist on their laying down their
arms; he was therefore willing to come to terms, and peace was concluded on
condition that Swiatoslaff should yield up Dorystolon, with all the plunder, slaves, and prisoners in
possession of the Russians, and engage to swear perpetual amity with the
empire, and never to invade either the territory of Cherson or the kingdom of
Bulgaria; while, on the other hand, the Emperor John engaged to allow the
Russians to descend the Danube in their boats, to supply them with two medimni of wheat for each surviving soldier, to enable them
to return home without dispersing to plunder for their subsistence, and to
renew the old commercial treaties between Kiev and Constantinople, July, 971.
After the treaty was concluded, Swiatoslaff desired to have a personal interview with his conqueror. John rode down to
the bank of the Danube clad in splendid armour, and accompanied by a brilliant
suite of guards on horseback. The short figure of the emperor was no
disadvantage where he was distinguished by the beauty of his charger and the
splendour of his arms, while his fair countenance, light hair, and piercing
blue eyes fixed the attention of all on his bold and good-humoured face, which
contrasted well with the dark and sombre visages of his attendants. Swiatoslaff arrived by water in a boat, which he steered
himself with an oar. His dress was white, differing in no way from that of
those under him, except in being cleaner. Sitting in the stern of his boat, he
conversed for a short time with the emperor, who remained on horseback close to
the beach. The appearance of the bold Varangian excited much curiosity, and is
thus described by a historian who was intimate with many of those who were
present at the interview: the Russian was of the middle stature, well formed,
with strong neck and broad chest. His eyes were blue, his eyebrows thick, his
nose flat, and his beard shaved, but his upper lip was shaded with long and
thick mustaches. The hair of his head was cropped
close, except two long locks which hung down on each side of his face and were
thus worn as a mark of his Scandinavian race. In his ears he wore golden
earrings ornamented with a ruby between two pearls, and his expression was
stern and fierce.
Swiatoslaff immediately quitted Dorystolon, but he was obliged to
winter on the shores of the Euxine, and famine thinned his ranks. In spring he
attempted to force his way through the territory of the Patzinaks with his
diminished army. He was defeated, and perished near the cataracts of the
Dnieper. Kour, prince of the Patzinaks, became the
possessor of his skull, which he shaped into a drinking-cup, and adorned with
the moral maxim, doubtless not less suitable to his own skull, had it fallen
into the hands of others, “He who covets the property of others, oft loses his
own”. We have already had occasion to record that the skull of the Byzantine
emperor, Nicephorus I, had ornamented the festivals of a Bulgarian king; that
of a Russian sovereign now figured in the tents of a Turkish tribe.
The results of the campaign were as advantageous to the Byzantine empire
as they were glorious to the Emperor John. Bulgaria was conquered, a strong
garrison established in Dorystolon, and the Danube
once more became the frontier of the Roman empire. The peace with the Russians
was uninterrupted until about the year 988, when, from some unknown cause of
quarrel, Vladimir the son of Swiatoslaff attacked and
gained possession of Cherson by cutting off the water.
The Greek city of Cherson, situated on the extreme verge of ancient
civilization, escaped for ages from the impoverishment and demoralization into
which the Hellenic race was precipitated by the Roman system of concentrating
all power in the capital of the empire. Cherson was governed for centuries by
its own elective magistrates, and it was not until towards the middle of the
ninth century that the Emperor Theophilus destroyed its independence. The
people, however, still retained in their own hands some control over their
local administration, though the Byzantine government lost no time in
undermining the moral foundation of the free institutions which had defended a
single city against many barbarous nations that had made the Roman emperors
tremble. The inhabitants of Cherson long looked with indifference on the favour
of the Byzantine emperor, cherished the institutions of Hellas, and boasted of
their self-government.
A thousand years after the rest of the Greek nation was sunk in irremediable
slavery, Cherson remained free. Such a phenomenon as the existence of manly
feeling in one city, when mankind everywhere else slept contented in a state of
political degradation, deserved attentive consideration. Indeed, we may be
better able to appreciate correctly the political causes that corrupted the
Greeks in the Eastern Empire, if we can ascertain those which enabled Cherson,
though surrounded by powerful enemies and barbarous nations, to preserve
A Homer’s language murmuring in her streets,
And in her haven many a mast from Tyre.
In the reign of Diocletian, while Themistos was president of Cherson, Sauromates, king of Bosporos, passing along the eastern shores of the Euxine,
invaded the Roman Empire. He overran Lazia and Pontus
without difficulty, but on the banks of the Halys he
found the Roman army assembled under the command of Constantius Chlorus. On hearing of this invasion, Diocletian sent
ambassadors to invite the people of Cherson to attack the territories of the
king of Bosporus, in order to compel him to return home. Cherson, holding the
rank of an allied city, could not avoid conceding that degree of supremacy to
the Roman emperor which a small state is compelled to yield to a powerful
protector, and the invitation was received as a command. Chrestos had succeeded Themistos in the presidency; he sent an
army against Bosporos, and took the city. But the
Chersonites, though brave warriors, sought peace, not conquest, and they
treated the royal family and all the inhabitants of the places that had fallen
into their hands, in a way to conciliate the goodwill of their enemies. Their
successes forced Sauromates to conclude peace and
evacuate the Roman territory, in order to regain possession of his capital and
family. As a reward for their services, Diocletian granted the Chersonites
additional security for their trade, and extensive commercial privileges
throughout the Roman Empire.
In the year 332, when Constantine the Great, in his declining age, had
laid aside the warlike energy of his earlier years, the Goths and Sarmatians
invaded the Roman Empire. The emperor called on the inhabitants of Cherson, who
were then presided over by Diogenes, to take up arms. They sent a force well
furnished with field-machines to attack the Goths, who had already crossed the
Danube, and defeated the barbarians with great slaughter. Constantine, to
reward their promptitude in the service of the empire, sent them a golden
statue of himself in imperial robes, to be placed in the hall of the senate, accompanied
with a charter ratifying every privilege and commercial immunity granted to
their city by preceding emperors. He bestowed on them also an annual supply of
the materials necessary for constructing the warlike machines of which they had
made such good use, and pay for a thousand artillerymen to work these engines.
This subsidy continued to be paid in the middle of the tenth century, in the
time of Constantine Porphyrogenitus.
Years passed on, and Sauromates, the grandson
of him who invaded the empire in the time of Diocletian, determining to efface
the memory of his grandfather's disgrace, declared war with Cherson. He was
defeated by Vyskos, the president of Cherson, at Kapha, and compelled to conclude a treaty of peace, by
which Kapha was declared the frontier of the
territory of Cherson. Another Sauromates, having
succeeded to the throne of Bosporos, determined to
regain possession of Kapha, when Pharnakes was president of Cherson. A single combat between the gigantic king and the
patriotic president, in which Sauromates was slain,
terminated this war. The dynasty of the Sauromatan family ended, and Bosporos, becoming a free city in
alliance with Cherson, raised a statue to Phamakes as
a testimony of his moderation and philanthropy.
Again, after an interval of years, Lamachos was president of Cherson, but the people of Bosporos,
corrupted by the memory of a court, and loving pageantry better than liberty,
had elected a king named Asandros. The Bosporians proposed that the son of Asandros should marry the only daughter of Lamachos, in order
to draw closer the alliance between the two states; and to this the Chersonites
consented, but only on condition that the young Asander should take up his residence in Cherson, and engage never to return to Bosporos—not even to pay the shortest visit to the king his
father, or any of his relations—under pain of death. The marriage was
celebrated, and Asander dwelt with the young Gycia in
the palace of Lamachos, which was a building of regal
splendour, covering four of the quadrangles marked out by the intersection of
the streets in the quarter of Cherson called Sousa, and having its own private
gate in the city walls. Two years after the celebration of this marriage, Lamachos died; his daughter inherited the whole of his
princely fortune, and Zetho was elected president of
Cherson. At the end of a year, Gycia went out to decorate her father's tomb,
and wishing to honour his memory with the greatest solemnity, she received
permission from the president and senate to entertain the whole body of the
citizens of Cherson, with their wives and children, at a funeral banquet on the
anniversary of her father's death as long as she lived. The celebration of this
festival suggested to her husband a plan of rendering himself tyrant of
Cherson, and for two years he collected men and warlike stores secretly from Bosporos, by means of the ships employed in his commercial
affairs. These he concealed in the immense warehouses enclosed within the
walls of his wife's palace. Three of his own followers from Bosporos were alone entrusted with the secret of his plot. After a lapse of two years, Asander had collected two hundred Bosporians,
with their armour, in the palace of Gycia, and was waiting for the approaching
anniversary of the death of Lamachos to destroy the
liberty of Cherson.
It happened at this time that a favourite maid of Gycia, offending her
mistress, was ordered to be banished from her presence, and confined in a room
over the warehouse in which the Bosporians were concealed.
As the girl was sitting alone, singing and spinning, her spindle dropped, and
rolled along the floor till it fell into a hole near the wall, from which she
could only recover it by raising up one of the tiles of the pavement. Leaning
down, she saw through the ceiling a crowd of men in the warehouse below, whom
she knew by their dress to be Bosporians, and
soldiers. She immediately called a servant, and sent him to her mistress,
conjuring her to come to see her in her prison. Gycia, curious to see the
effect of the punishment on her favorite, visited her
immediately, and was shown the strange spectacle of a crowd of foreign soldiers
and a magazine of arms concealed in her own palace. The truth flashed on her
mind; she saw her husband was plotting to become the tyrant of her native city,
and every feeling of her heart was wounded.
She assembled her relations, and by their means communicated secretly
with the senate, revealing the plot to a chosen committee, on obtaining a
solemn promise that when she died she should be buried within the walls of the
city, though such a thing was at variance with the Hellenic usages of Cherson.
Whether from the danger of attacking two hundred heavy-armed men, or to avoid
war with Bosporos, the president and senate of
Cherson determined to destroy the conspiracy by burning the enemy in their
place of concealment, and Gycia willingly gave her ancestral palace to the
flames to save her country.
When the day of the anniversary of her father’s funeral arrived, Gycia
ordered the preparations for the annual feast to be made with more than
ordinary liberality, and Asander was lavish in his
distribution of wine; but due precautions had been taken that the gates of the
city should be closed at the usual hour, and all the citizens in their
dwellings. At the banquet in her own palace Gycia drank water out of a purple
goblet, while the servant who waited on Asander served him with the richest wines. To the delight of her husband, Gycia
proposed that all should retire to rest at an early hour, and she took a last
melancholy leave of her husband, who hastened to give his three confidants
their instructions, and then lay down to rest until the midnight should call
him to complete his treachery. The gates, doors, and windows of the palace were
shut up, and the keys, as usual, laid beside Gycia. Her maids had packed up all
her jewels, and when Asander was plunged in a sound
sleep from the wine he had drank, Gycia rose, locked every door of the palace
as she passed, and hastened out, accompanied by her slaves. Order was
immediately given to set fire to the building on every side, and thus the
liberty of Cherson was saved by the patriotism of Gycia.
The spot where the palace had stood remained a vacant square in the time
of the Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus, and Gycia during her lifetime would
never allow even the ruins to be cleared away. Her countrymen erected two
statues of bronze to honour her patriotism—one in the public agora, showing her
in the flower of youth, dressed in her native costume, as when she saved her
country; the other clad as a heroine armed to defend the city. On both
inscriptions were placed commemorating her services and no better deed could be
done at Cherson than to keep the bases of these statues bright and the
inscriptions legible, that the memory of the treachery of the king's son, and
the gratitude due to the patriotism of Gycia, might be ever fresh in the hearts
of the citizens.
Some years after this, when Stratophilos was
president, Gycia, suspecting that the gratitude of her countrymen was so
weakened that they would no longer be inclined to fulfil their promise of
burying her within the walls, pretended to be dead. The event was as she
feared; but when the procession had passed the gates, she rose up from the
bier and exclaimed, “Is this the way the people of Cherson keep their promise
to the preserver of their liberty?” Shame proved more powerful than gratitude.
The Chersonites now swore again to bury her in the city, if she would pardon
their falsehood. A tomb was accordingly built during her lifetime, and a gilded
statue of bronze was erected over it, as an assurance that the faith of Cherson
should not be again violated. In that tomb Gycia was buried, and it stood
uninjured in the tenth century, when an emperor of Constantinople, impressed
with admiration of her patriotism, so unlike anything he had seen among the
Greek inhabitants of his own wide extended empire, transmitted a record of her
deeds to posterity.
Cherson retained its position as an independent state until the reign of
Theophilus, who compelled it to receive a governor from Constantinople; but,
even under the Byzantine government, it continued to defend its municipal
institutions, and, instead of slavishly soliciting the imperial favour, and
adopting Byzantine manners, it boasted of its constitution and self-government.
But it lost gradually its former wealth and extensive trade; and when Vladimir,
the sovereign of Russia, attacked it in 988, it yielded almost without a
struggle. The great object of ambition of all the princes of the East, from the
time of Heraclius to that of the last Comnenos of
Trebizond, was to form matrimonial alliances with the imperial family. Vladimir
obtained the hand of Anne, the sister of the Emperors Basil II and Constantine
VIII, and was baptised and married in the Church of the Panaghia at Cherson. To
soothe the vanity of the empire, he pretended to retain possession of his
conquest as the dowry of his wife. Many of the priests who converted the
Russians to Christianity, and many of the artists who adorned the earliest
Russian churches with paintings and mosaics, were natives of Cherson. The
church raised Vladimir to the rank of a saint; the Russians conferred on him
the title of the Great.
John Zimiskes, having terminated the Russian war, compelled Boris to
resign the crown of Bulgaria, and accept the title of Magister, as a pensioner
of the Byzantine court. The frontier of the Eastern Empire was once more
extended to the Danube.
The Saracen war had been carried on vigorously on the frontiers of
Syria, while the Emperor John was occupied with the Russian campaign. The
continued successes of the Byzantine arms had so alarmed the Mohammedan
princes, that an extensive confederacy was formed to recover Antioch, and the
command of the army of the caliph was intrusted to Zoher,
the lieutenant of the Fatimites in Egypt. The
imperial army was led by the patrician Nikolaos, a man of great military skill,
who had been a eunuch in the household of John Zimiskes; and he defeated the
Saracens in a pitched battle, and saved Antioch for a time. But in the following
year (973) the conquest of Nisibis filled the city of Bagdad with such
consternation, that a levy of all Mussulmans was ordered to march against the
Christians. The Byzantine troops in Mesopotamia were commanded by an Armenian
named Temelek Melchi, who
was completely routed near Amida. He was himself
taken prisoner, and died after a year’s confinement.
With all his talents as a general, John does not appear to have
possessed the same control over the general administration as Nicephorus; and
many of the cities conquered by his predecessor, in which the majority of the
inhabitants were Mohammedans, succeeded in throwing off the Byzantine yoke.
Even Antioch declared itself independent. A great effort became necessary to
regain the ground that had been lost; and, to make this, John Zimiskes took the
command of the Byzantine army in person in the year 974. He marched in one
campaign from Mount Taurus to the banks of the Tigris, and from the banks of
the Tigris back into Syria, as far as Mount Libanon,
carrying his victorious arms, according to the vaunting inaccuracy of the
Byzantine geographical nomenclature, into Palestine. His last campaign, in the
following year, was the most brilliant of his exploits. In Mesopotamia he
regained possession of Amida and Martyropolis;
but these cities contained so few Christian inhabitants that he was obliged to
leave the administration in the hands of Saracen emirs, who were charged with
the collection of the tribute and taxes. Nisibis he found deserted, and from it
he marched by Edessa to Hierapolis or Membig, where
he captured many valuable relics, among which the shoes of our Savior, and the hair of John the Baptist, are especially
enumerated. From Hierapolis John marched to Apamea, Emesa, and Baalbec, without meeting
any serious opposition. The emir of Damascus sent valuable presents, and agreed
to pay an annual tribute to escape a visit. The emperor then crossed Mount Libanon, storming the fortress of Borzo,
which commanded the pass, and, descending to the seacoast, laid siege to Berytus, which soon surrendered, and in which he found an
image of the crucifixion that he deemed worthy of being sent to Constantinople.
From Berytus he marched northward to Tripolis, which he besieged in vain for forty days. The valor of the garrison and the strength of the
fortifications compelled him to raise the siege; but his retreat was ascribed
to fear of a comet, which illuminated the sky with a strange brilliancy. As it
was now September, he wished to place his worn-out troops in winter-quarters in
Antioch; but the inhabitants shut the gates against him. To punish them for
their revolt, he had the folly to ravage their territory, and cut down their
fruit-trees; forgetting, in his barbarous and impolitic revenge, that he was
ruining his own empire. Burtzes was left to reconquer
Antioch for the second time; which, however, he did not effect until after the
death of the Emperor John.
The army was then placed in winter-quarters on the frontiers of Cilicia,
and the emperor hastened to return to Constantinople. On the journey, as he
passed the fertile plains of Longias and Dryze, in the vicinity of Anazarba and Podandus, he saw them covered with flocks and
herds, with well-fortified farmyards, but no smiling villages. He inquired with
wonder to whom the country belonged, in which pasturage was conducted on so
grand a scale; and he learned that the greater part of the province had been
acquired by the president Basilios in donations from himself and his
predecessor, Nicephorus. Amazed at the enormous accumulation of property in the
hands of one individual, he exclaimed, “Alas! the wealth of the empire is
wasted, the strength of the armies is exhausted, and the Roman emperors toil
like mercenaries, to add to the riches of an insatiable eunuch!” This speech
was reported to the president. He considered that he had raised both Nicephorus
and John to the throne; his interest now required that it should return to its
rightful master, and that the young Basil should enjoy his heritage. The Emperor
John stopped on his way to Constantinople at the palace of Romanos,
a grandson of Romanus I; and it is said he there drank of a poisoned cup
presented to him by a servant gained by the president. Certain it is that John
Zimiskes reached the capital in a dying state, and expired on the 10th of
January 976, at the age of fifty-one.
Sect. II
REIGN OF BASIL II BULGAROKTONOS,
A.D. 976-1025.
Basil II was only twenty years of age when he assumed the direction of
public affairs, and for some time he continued to indulge in the pursuit of
pleasure, allowing the president Basilios to exercise the imperial power to its
fullest extent. Indeed, there can be no doubt that the prime-minister would
have attempted to occupy the place of Nicephorus and Zimiskes, had his
condition not effectually excluded him from the throne. For some time, however,
he ventured to exclude Basil from any active share in the details of
administration, and endeavoured to divert his attention to the pomp of the
imperial court, and to the indulgence of his passions, to which it was thought
the young man was naturally inclined. This conduct probably awakened suspicions
in the mind of Basil, who possessed a firm and energetic character, and he
watched the proceedings of his powerful minister with attention. His brother,
Constantine VIII, who was seventeen when John Zimiskes died, enjoyed the rank
of his colleague, but was allowed no share in the public administration, and
appeared well satisfied to be relieved from the duties of his station, as he
was allowed to enjoy all its luxuries. Basil soon gave up all idle amusements,
and devoted his whole time and energy to military studies and exercises, and to
public business. Indefatigable, brave, and stern, his courage degenerated into
ferocity, and his severity into cruelty. Yet, as he reigned the absolute master
of an unprincipled court, and of a people careless of honour and truth, and as
the greater part of his life was spent in war with barbarous enemies, we may
attribute many of his faults as much to the state of society in his age as to
his own individual character. He believed that he was prudent, just, and
devout; others considered him severe, rapacious, cruel and bigoted. For Greek
learning he cared little, and he was a type of the higher Byzantine moral
character, which retained far more of its Roman than its Greek origin, both in
its vices and its virtues. In activity, courage, and military skill he had few
equals.
Several of the great nobles of the empire considered that their power
entitled them to occupy the place left vacant by the death of Zimiskes; and as
the great qualities of Basil II were still unknown, they envied the influence
of the president Basilios. Among the leading members of the aristocracy, Bardas
Skleros, who commanded the army in Asia, gave the president most umbrage, from
his military reputation and great popularity. Skleros was accordingly removed
from the command of the army, and appointed duke or governor of Mesopotamia.
This step precipitated his rebellion. The two ablest generals in the empire
were Bardas Skleros and Bardas Phokas: both were men of illustrious families,
and both had filled high offices in the state. As early as the reign of Michael
I, a Skleros had been governor of the Peloponnesus; and for four generations
the family of Phokas had supplied the empire with a succession of military
leaders. Skleros and Phokas had already been opponents in the reign of John I.
These two men may be taken as types of the military nobles of the Byzantine
empire in the tenth century; and no tale of daring deeds or romantic
vicissitudes among the chivalrous adventurers of the West, who had no patrimony
but their swords, was more strange than many an episode in the lives of these
two nobles, nursed in silken raiment, whose youth was passed in marble palaces
on the soft shores of the Bosphorus, who were educated by pedantic grammarians,
and trained by Greek theologians, who deemed the shedding even of Saracen blood
a sin. Yet these nobles valued themselves as much on their personal skill in
arms and headlong daring as any Danish adventurer or Norman knight
Bardas Skleros no sooner reached Mesopotamia than he assumed the title
of Emperor, and invaded Asia Minor. He had made no preparations for his
rebellion; he trusted to his military reputation for collecting a small army,
and to his own skill to make the best use of the troops that joined his
standard: nor was he wanting to his fame. Some pecuniary assistance from the
emirs of Amida and Martyropolis recruited his finances, and a body of three hundred well-armed Saracen horse
was considered a valuable addition to his little army. Undismayed by partial
defeats and immense difficulties, he at last gained a complete victory over the
Byzantine army at Lapara, on the frontiers of
Armenia, and a second at Rageas, over a generalissimo
of the empire, who had been sent to repair the preceding disaster. Skleros then
marched to Abydos, took Nicaea, and sent his son Romanes into Thrace to make
preparations for the siege of Constantinople.
The rebellion of Bardas Phokas, and his exile to Chios, have been
already mentioned. He was now called from his retreat, and laid aside the monastic
dress, which he had worn for six years, to resume his armour. The old rivals
again met in arms, and at first fortune continued to favour Skleros, who was a
better tactician than Phokas. The imperial army was defeated at Amorium, but
the personal valour of Phokas covered the retreat of his soldiers, and
preserved their confidence; for when Constantine Gabras pressed too closely on the rear, Phokas, who was watching his movements,
suddenly turned his horse, and, galloping up to the gallant chief, struck him
lifeless with his mace-at-arms, and rejoined his own rearguard unhurt. A second battle was fought near Basilika Therma, in the theme Charsiana,
and Skleros was again victorious. Phokas retired into Georgia (Iberia), where
he received assistance from David, the king of that country, which enabled him
to assemble a third army on the banks of the Halys.
He found Skleros encamped in the plain of Pankalia.
An engagement took place, in which the superior generalship of the rebel emperor was again evident, and Phokas, reduced to despair, sought
to terminate the contest by a personal encounter with his rival. They soon met,
and their companions suspended the conflict in their immediate vicinity to view
the combat between two champions, both equally celebrated for their personal
prowess. Skleros was armed with the sword, Phokas with the mace-at-arms; the
sword glanced from the well-tempered armour, the mace crushed the helmet, and
Skleros fell senseless on his horse's neck. The guards rushing to the rescue,
Phokas gained an eminence, from which he could already see a portion of his
army in full retreat. But the fortune of the day was changed by an accident. As
the officers of Skleros were carrying their wounded leader to a neighbouring
fountain, his horse escaped and galloped through the ranks of the army, showing
the troops the imperial trappings stained with blood. The cry arose that
Skleros was slain. The tie that united the rebels was broken, and the soldiers
fled in every direction, or laid down their arms. On recovering, Skleros found
that nothing was left for him but to escape with his personal attendants into
the Saracen territory, where he was thrown into prison by order of the caliph.
Several of his partisans prolonged their resistance through the winter.
Bardas Phokas continued to command the imperial army in Asia for eight
years, carrying on war with the Saracens, and compelling the emir of Aleppo to
pay tribute to Constantinople. But as the Emperor Basil II advanced in years,
his firm character began to excite general dissatisfaction among the Byzantine
nobles, who saw that their personal influence, and power of enriching
themselves at the public expense, were likely to be greatly curtailed. The
attention the emperor paid to public business, and his strict control over the
conduct of all officials, began to alarm the president Basilios; while his
determination to command the army in person, and to regulate promotions,
excited the dissatisfaction of Phokas, who allowed his government to become the
refuge of every discontented courtier. The only campaign in which the emperor
had yet commanded was one against Samuel, king of Bulgaria, which had proved
signally disastrous, so that his interference in military matters did not
appear to be authorized by his experience in tactics and strategy. It seems
probable that the president excited Phokas to take up arms, as a means of
rendering the emperor more dependent on his influence and the support of the
aristocracy; but Phokas doubtless required very little prompting to make an
attempt to seize the throne. Assembling the leading men in his government, and
the principal officers of the army under his command, at the palace of Eustathios Maleinos, in the theme Charsiana,
he was proclaimed emperor on the 1sth of August 987.
Nearly about the same time, Bardas Skleros succeeded in escaping from
the Saracens and entering the empire. He had been released from his prison at
Bagdad, and intrusted with the command of a legion of Christian refugees, with
which he had distinguished himself in the civil wars of the Mohammedans. His
adventures in this service were not unlike those recorded of Manuel in the
reign of Theophilus. His sudden appearance in the empire, and his resumption of
his claim to the imperial throne, brought the two ancient rivals again into the
field, both as rebel emperors, and it seemed that they must decide by a new war
which was to march as victor against Basil at Constantinople. Phokas gained the
advantage by treachery. He concluded a treaty with his rival, by which a
division of Asia Minor was agreed on; and when Skleros visited his camp to hold
a conference, Phokas detained him a prisoner. Phokas then devoted all his
energy to dethrone his sovereign; and during the summer of 988, he subdued the
greater part of Asia Minor; but at the commencement of the following year, a
division of his army which he sent to the Bosphorus was defeated by the Emperor
Basil, who had just obtained an auxiliary corps of Varangians from his
brother-in-law Vladimir, the sovereign of Kiev. Phokas was at this time
besieging Abydos, which defended itself with obstinacy until the Emperors Basil
and Constantine arrived with the imperial army to relieve it. The imperial
troops arrived by sea, and, debarking near Abydos, formed their camp in the
plain. Phokas, leaving part of his force to continue the siege, drew out his
army to give battle to the emperors. When the two armies were taking up their
ground, Phokas rode along the field, seeking for an opportunity to decide the
fate of the war by one of those feats of arms in which his personal prowess was
so distinguished. His eye caught a sight of the Emperor Basil engaged in
ordering the movements of his army, and, dashing forward with his mace-at-arms,
he prepared to close in single combat with his sovereign. At the very moment
when the object of his sudden movement flashed on the minds of all, Phokas
wheeled round his horse, galloped to a little eminence, where he dismounted in
sight of both armies and lay down on the ground. A long interval of suspense
occurred. Then a rumour ran along the ranks of the rebels that their leader was
dead, and the troops dispersed without striking a blow. Phokas had drank a
glass of cold water as he mounted his horse, according to his usual custom, and
whether he perished by poison or by a stroke of apoplexy was naturally a
question not easily settled by the suspicious and vicious Constantinopolitans.
Thus ended the career of Bardas Phokas, by a death as strange as the events of
his romantic life. He died in the month of April 989.
Bardas Skleros regained his liberty on the death of his rival, but
resigned his pretensions to the imperial dignity on receiving the pardon of
Basil. The meeting of the emperor and the veteran warrior was remarkable. The
eyesight of Skleros had begun to fail, and he had grown extremely corpulent. He
had laid aside the imperial costume, but continued to wear purple boots, which
were part of the insignia of an emperor. As he advanced to the tent of Basil,
leaning on two of his equerries, Basil, surprised at his infirmity, exclaimed
to his attendants, “Is this the man we all trembled at yesterday?” But as soon
as he perceived the purple boots, he refused to receive the infirm old general
until they were changed. Skleros had then a gracious audience, and was
requested to sit down. He did not long survive.
The same attention to public business on the part of the emperor which
caused the rebellion of Phokas, produced the fall of the president Basilios,
whom Basil deprived of all his offices about the same time. His estates were
confiscated, his acts annulled, the populace of Constantinople were allowed to
plunder his palace, the sacred offerings and dedications he had made were
destroyed, and even the monastery he had founded was dissolved. The celebrated
minister died in exile, after having attained a degree of wealth and power
which marks an unhealthy condition of the body politic in the Byzantine Empire.
No such accumulation of fortune as Basilios is reported to have possessed,
could ever have been obtained by a public servant without the exertion of the
grossest oppression, either on the part of the individual or the government.
The riches of Basilios must almost have rivalled the wealth of Crassus; at
least, he came under the definition of a rich man, according to that wealthy
Roman, for he was able to maintain an army. At an early part of his political
career, he armed a household of three thousand slaves to aid in placing the
imperial crown on the head of Nicephorus II. The aristocracy of Constantinople
at this period bore some resemblance, in its social position, to that of Rome
at the fall of the Republic, both in wealth and political corruption. The
estates of Eustathios Maleïnos,
in whose house Phokas raised the standard of revolt, were not less extensive
than those of the ambitious president. Maleïnos was
fortunate enough to escape punishment for his share in the rebellion, but some
years after, as Basil was returning from a campaign in Syria (AD 995), he
stopped at the palace of Maleïnos in Cappadocia, and
was amazed at the strength of the building, and the wealth, power, and
splendour of the household. The emperor saw that a man of courage, in
possession of so much influence, and commanding such a number of armed
servants, could at any moment commence a rebellion as dangerous as that of
Skleros or Phokas. Maleïnos received an invitation to
accompany the court to the capital, and was never again allowed to visit his
estates in Cappadocia. At his death, his immense fortune was confiscated, and
most writers ascribed the legislative measures of Basil, to protect the landed
property of small proprietors from the encroachments of the wealthy, to the
impression produced on his mind by witnessing the power of Maleïnos in Cappadocia; but we must bear in mind that, from the time of Romanus I, the
Byzantine emperors had been vainly endeavouring to stem the torrent of
aristocratic predominance in the provinces; and both Constantine VII
Porphyrogenitus and Nicephorus II, though in general extremely dissimilar in
character and policy, agreed in passing laws to protect the poor against the
rich. Basil II fully appreciated all the evils which resulted from the tendency
of society to accumulate wealth in the hands of a few individuals, and he
endeavoured to aid the middle classes in defending their possessions; but all
the power he could exert was unable to prevent the constant diminution that was
going on in the number of the smaller landed proprietors, the middle classes in
the towns, and generally of the civilised races of mankind throughout the
greater part of his empire. The task was beyond the power of legislation, and
required an improvement in the moral as well as the political constitution of
society. The attempts of the emperor to arrest the progress of the evil may
have been useless, but they were unquestionably not disadvantageous to the
people. It is therefore strange to find the Patriarch, the higher clergy, and
the monks opposed to these measures, and engaged in endeavouring to turn him from
his purpose, particularly when he wished to render the rich responsible for the
taxes of the ruined poor of their district. The Greek Church has, however,
generally been a servile instrument either of the sovereign power or of the
aristocracy, and has contributed little either to enforce equity or civil
liberty, when the mass of the lower orders was alone concerned. The evil of
increasing wealth in the hands of a few individuals, and of a gradual
diminution of the intelligent population in the Byzantine Empire, went on
augmenting from the time of Basil II. Asia and Europe both lost their civilized
races; the immense landed estates of a few Byzantine aristocrats were
cultivated by Mohammedan slaves, or Slavonian, Albanian, and Vallachian serfs;
manufactures and trade declined with the population, the towns dwindled into
villages, and no class of native inhabitants remained possessing strength and
patriotism to fight for their homes when a new race of invaders poured into the
empire.
The reign of Basil II is the culminating point of Byzantine greatness.
The eagles of Constantinople flew during his life, in a long career of victory,
from the banks of the Danube to those of the Euphrates, and from the mountains
of Armenia to the shores of Italy. Basil's indomitable courage, terrific
cruelty, indifference to art and literature, and religious superstition, all
combine to render him a true type of his empire and age. The great object of
his policy was to consolidate the unity of the administration in Europe by the complete
subjection of the Bulgarians and Sclavonians, whom
similarity of language had almost blended into one nation, and had completely
united in hostility to the imperial government.
Four sons of a Bulgarian noble of the highest rank had commenced a revolutionary
movement in Bulgaria against the royal family, after the death of Peter and the
first victories of the Russians. In order to put an end to these troubles,
Nicephorus II had, on the retreat of Swiatoslaff,
replaced Boris, the son of Peter, on the throne of Bulgaria; and when the
Russians returned, Boris submitted to their domination. Shortly after the death
of John I (Zimiskes), the Bulgarian leaders again roused the people to a
struggle for independence. Boris, who escaped from Constantinople to attempt
recovering his paternal throne, was accidentally slain, and the four brothers
again became the chiefs of the nation. In a short time three perished, and
Samuel alone remained, and assumed the title of King. The forces of the empire
were occupied with the rebellion of Skleros, so that the vigour and military
talents of Samuel succeeded not only in expelling the Byzantine authorities
from Bulgaria, but also in rousing the Sclavonians of
Macedonia to throw off the Byzantine yoke. Samuel then invaded Thessaly, and
extended his plundering excursions over those parts of Greece and the
Peloponnesus still inhabited by the Hellenic race. He carried away the
inhabitants of Larissa in order to people the town of Prespa,
which he then proposed to make his capital, with intelligent artisans and
manufacturers; and, in order to attach them to their new residence by ties of
old superstition, he removed to Prespa the body of
their protecting martyr, St. Achilles, who some pretended had been a Roman
soldier, and others a Greek archbishop. Samuel showed himself, both in ability
and courage, a rival worthy of Basil; and the empire of the East seemed for
some time in danger of being transferred from the Byzantine Romans to the Sclavonian Bulgarians.
In the year 981, the Emperor Basil made his first campaign against the
new Bulgarian monarchy in person. His plan of operations was to secure the
great western passes through Mount Haemus, on the road from Philippopolis to
Sardica, and by the conquest of the latter city he hoped to cut off the
communication between the Bulgarians north of Mount Haemus and the Sclavonians in Macedonia. But his military inexperience,
and the relaxed discipline of the army, caused this well-conceived plan to
fail. Sardica was besieged in vain for twenty days. The negligence of the
officers and the disobedience of the soldiers caused several foraging parties
to be cut off; the besieged burned the engines of the besiegers in a victorious
sortie, and the emperor felt the necessity of commencing his retreat. As his
army was passing the defiles of Haemus, it was assailed by the troops Samuel
had collected to watch his operations, and completely routed. The baggage and
military chest, the emperor’s plate and tents, all fell into the hands of the
Bulgarian king, and Basil himself escaped with some difficulty to
Philippopolis, where he collected the relics of the fugitives. Leo Diaconus, who accompanied the expedition as one of the
clergy of the imperial chapel, and was fortunate enough to escape the pursuit,
has left us a short but authentic notice of this first disastrous campaign of
Basil, the slayer of the Bulgarians.
The reorganisation of his army, the regulation of the internal
administration of the empire, the rebellion of Phokas, and the wars in Italy
and on the Asiatic frontier, prevented Basil from attacking Samuel in person
for many years. Still a part of the imperial forces carried on this war, and
Samuel soon perceived that he was unable to resist the Byzantine generals in
the plains of Bulgaria, where the heavy cavalry, military engines, and superior
discipline of the imperial armies could all be employed to advantage. He
resolved, therefore, to transfer the seat of the Bulgarian government to a more
inaccessible position. He first selected Prespa as
his future capital, but he subsequently abandoned that intention, and
established the central administration of his dominions at Achrida. The site
was well adapted for rapid communications with his Slavonian subjects in
Macedonia, who furnished his armies with their best recruits. To Achrida,
therefore, he transferred the seat of the Bulgarian patriarchate, and to this
day the archbishop of that city, in virtue of the position he received from
Samuel, still holds an ecclesiastical jurisdiction over several suffragans
independent of the Patriarch of Constantinople. As a military position, also,
Achrida had many advantages: it commanded an important point in the Via Egnatia, the great commercial road connecting the Adriatic
with Bulgaria, as well as with Thessalonica and Constantinople, and afforded
many facilities for enabling Samuel to choose his points of attack on the
Byzantine themes of Macedonia, Hellas, Dyrrachium, and Nicopolis.
Here, therefore, Samuel established the capital of the Bulgaro-Sclavonian kingdom he founded.
The dominions of Samuel soon became as extensive as the European portion
of the dominions of Basil. The possessions of the two monarchs ran into one
another in a very irregular form, and both were inhabited by a variety of races,
in different states of civilization, bound together by few sympathies, and no
common attachment to national institutions. Samuel was master of almost the
whole of ancient Bulgaria, the emperor retaining possession of little more than
the fortress of Dorystolon, the forts at the mouth of
the Danube, and the passes of Mount Haemus. But the strength of the Bulgarian
king lay in his possessions in the upper part of Macedonia, in Epiras, and the southern part of Illyria, in the chain of
Pindus, and in mountains that overlook the northern and western slopes of the
great plains of Thessalonica and Thessaly. In all these provinces the greater
part of the rural population consisted of Sclavonians,
who were hostile to the Byzantine government and to the Greek race; and though
an Albanian and Vallachian population was scattered over some parts of the
territory, they readily united with Samuel in throwing off the Byzantine yoke,
and only opposed his government when he attempted to augment his monarchical
power at the expense of their habits of local independence. From the nature of
his dominions, his only hope of consolidating a regular system of civil
government was by holding out allurements to the local chieftains to submit
voluntarily to his authority. It was only by continual plundering expeditions
into the Byzantine territory, and especially into Greece, that this object
could be attained. He was, therefore, indefatigable in forming a large military
force, and employing it constantly in ravaging the plain of Thessaly, and
attacking the Greek cities.
In the year 990, Basil visited Thessalonica, to take measures for
arresting the progress of Samuel, and left Gregory the Taronite with a strong garrison to resist the Bulgarians, until he himself should be
able to turn the whole force of the empire against them. For several years
Gregory checked the incursions of Samuel, but at last he was slain in a
skirmish, and his son Ashot was taken prisoner. This
success secured Samuel from all danger on the side of the garrison of
Thessalonica, and he resolved to avail himself of the opportunity to complete
the conquest of Greece, or at least to plunder the inhabitants, should he meet
with opposition. He marched rapidly through Thessaly, Boeotia, and Attica, into
the Peloponnesus; but the towns everywhere shut their gates, and prepared for a
long defence, so that he could effect nothing beyond
plundering and laying waste the open country. In the meantime, the emperor,
hearing of the death of Gregory and the invasion of Greece, sent Nicephorus
Ouranos with considerable reinforcements to take the command of the garrison of
Thessalonica, and march with all the force he should be able to collect in
pursuit of Samuel. Ouranos entered Thessaly, and, leaving the heavy baggage of
his army at Larissa, pushed rapidly southward to the banks of the Sperchius, where he found Samuel encamped on the other
side, hastening home with the plunder of Greece. Heavy rains on Mounts Oeta and Korax had rendered the Sperchius which at the end of summer is only a brook an impassable torrent at the time
Samuel had reached its banks, and Ouranos encamped for the night in the
vicinity of the Bulgarian army, without his arrival causing any alarm. But the
people of the country had observed that the river was beginning to fall, and as
they were anxious that both armies should quit their territory as fast as
possible, they were eager to bring on a battle. In the night they showed
Ouranos a ford, by which he passed the river and surprised the Bulgarians in
their camp. Samuel and his son Gabriel escaped with the greatest difficulty to
the counter-forts of Oeta, from whence they gained Tymphrestas and the range of Pindus. The Bulgarian army was completely annihilated, and all
the plunder and slaves made during the expedition fell into the hands of
Ouranos, A.D. 996.
This great defeat paralyzed the military operations of Samuel for some
time, and it was followed by a domestic misfortune which also weakened his
resources. He had been induced to allow his daughter to marry Ashot the Taronite, whom he had
taken prisoner at Thessalonica, and in order to attach that brave and able
young officer to his service, he had intrusted him with the government of
Dyrrachium. But Ashot was dissatisfied with his
position, and succeeded in persuading the Bulgarian princess to fly with him to
Constantinople. Before quitting Dyrrachium, however, he formed a plot with the
principal men of the place, by which that valuable fortress was subsequently
delivered up to the emperor. This was a serious political, as well as a
grievous domestic wound to Samuel; for the loss of Dyrrachium interrupted the
commercial relations of his subjects with Italy, and deprived them of the
support they might have derived from the enemies of the Byzantine empire beyond
the Adriatic.
Basil had at length arranged the external relations of the empire in
such a way that he was able to assemble a large army for the military
operations against the kingdom of Achrida, which he determined to conduct in
person. The Sclavonians now formed the most numerous
part of the population of the country between the Danube, the Aegean, and the
Adriatic, and they were in possession of the line of mountains that runs from
Dyrrachium, in a variety of chains, to the vicinity of Constantinople. Basil
saw many signs that the whole Sclavonic race in these
countries was united in opposition to the Byzantine government, so that the
existence of his empire demanded the conquest of the Bulgaro-Sclavonian kingdom which Samuel had founded. To this arduous task he devoted himself with
his usual energy. In the year 1000, his generals were ordered to enter Bulgaria
by the eastern passes of Mount Haemus; and in this campaign they took the
cities of greater and lesser Presthlava and Pliscova, the ancient capitals of Bulgaria. In the
following year, the emperor took upon himself the direction of the army
destined to act against Samuel. Fixing his headquarters at Thessalonica, he
recovered possession of the fortresses of Vodena, Berrhoea, and Servia. By these conquests he became master
of the passes leading out of the plain of Thessalonica into the plains of Pelagonia, and over the Cambunian mountains into Thessaly, thus opening the way for an attack on the flank and
rear of the forces of the kingdom of Achrida. Vodena or Edessa, the ancient capital of the Macedonian princes, had become, like all
the cities of this mountainous district, Slavonian. Its situation on a rock
overhanging the river Lydias, the sublimity of the
scenery around, the abundance of water, the command of the fertile valleys
below, the salubrity of the spot, and the strength of
the position closing up the direct road between Thessalonica and Achrida all
rendered the possession of Vodena an important step
to the further operations of the Byzantine arms.
In the following campaign (1002), the emperor changed the field of
operations, and, marching from Philippopolis through the western passes of
Mount Haemus, occupied the whole line of road as far as the Danube, and cut
Samuel off from all communication with the plains of Bulgaria. He then formed
the siege of Vidin, which he kept closely invested during the spring and
summer, until at last he took that important fortress. Samuel formed a bold
enterprise, which he hoped would compel Basil to raise the siege of Vidin, or,
at all events, enable him to inflict a deep wound on the empire. Assembling an
army at Skoupies, on the upper course of the Vardar,
he marched into the valley of the Stebrus, and by the
celerity of his movements surprised the inhabitants of Adrianople at a great
fair which they held annually on the 15th of August, when the Greek Church
commemorates the death of the Virgin Mary. By this long march into the heart of
the empire, Samuel rendered himself master of great booty. His success rendered
it impossible for him to return as rapidly as he had advanced, but he succeeded
in passing the garrison of Philoppopolis and crossing
the Strymon and the Vardar in safety, when Basil suddenly overtook him at the
head of the Byzantine army. Samuel was encamped under the walls of Skoupies; Basil crossed the river and stormed the Bulgarian
camp, rendering himself master of the military chest and stores, and recovering
the plunder of Adrianople. He had thus the satisfaction of avenging the defeat
he had suffered from Samuel, one and twenty years before, in the passes of
Mount Haemus. The city of Skoupies surrendered after
the victory and its commander Romanus, the younger brother of Boris, the last
king of Bulgaria of the ancient line, whose misfortune prevented his becoming a
rival to Samuel, was honourably treated by the emperor. Basil then laid siege
to Pernikon, a fortress of great strength, from which
he was repulsed by the valour of the Bulgarian governor Krakas.
He then withdrew to Philippopolis.
The conquest of Vidin having enabled Basil to deprive Bulgaria of relief
from Samuel and the Slavonians of Macedonia, the Byzantine generals easily
completed the subjection of the whole of the rich country between Mount Haemus
and the Danube. The king of Achrida finding himself unable to encounter the
troops of Basil in the field, and seeing his territory constantly circumscribed
by the capture of his fortresses, determined to fortify all the passes in the
mountains that lead into Upper Macedonia. By stationing strong bodies of
troops, and forming magazines behind these entrenchments, he hoped to present
to his assailants the difficulties of a siege in situations where all their
supplies would require to be drawn from a great distance, and exposed to be
captured or destroyed on the way by the Bulgarian light troops and the
Slavonian inhabitants of the mountains. For several years a bloody and
indecisive war was carried on, which gradually weakened the resources of the
kingdom of Achrida, without affecting the power of the Byzantine Empire.
In the year 1014, Basil considered everything ready for a final effort
to complete the subjection of the Slavonian population of the mountainous
districts round the upper valley of the Strymon. On reaching the pass of Demirhissar, or the Kleisura,
then called Kimbalongo, or Kleidion,
he found it strongly fortified. Samuel had placed himself at the head of the
Bulgarian army prepared to oppose his progress. The emperor found the pass too
strong to be forced; sitting down, therefore, before it, he sent Nicephorus
Xiphias, the governor of Philippopolis, with a strong detachment, to make the
circuit of a high mountain called Valathista, which
lay to the south, that he might gain the rear of the Bulgarian position. This
manoeuvre was completely successful. On the 2gth of July, Nicephorus attacked
the enemy's rear, while Basil assailed their front, and the Bulgarians, in
spite of all the exertions of Samuel, gave way on every side. It was only in
consequence of the gallant resistance of his son Gabriel that the king of
Achrida was saved from being taken prisoner, and enabled to gain Prilapos in safety. The emperor is said to have taken
fifteen thousand prisoners, and, that he might revenge the sufferings of his
subjects from the ravages of the Bulgarians and Sclavonians,
he gratified his own cruelty by an act of vengeance, which has most justly
entailed infamy on his name. His frightful inhumanity has forced history to
turn with disgust from his conduct, and almost buried the records of his
military achievements in oblivion. On this occasion he ordered the eyes of all
his prisoners to be put out, leaving a single eye to the leader of every
hundred, and in this condition he sent the wretched captives forth to seek
their king or perish on the way. When they approached Achrida, a rumour that
the prisoners had been released induced Samuel to go out to meet them. On
learning the full extent of the calamity, he fell senseless to the ground,
overpowered with rage and grief, and died two days after. He is said to have
murdered his own brother to secure possession of his throne, so that his heart
was broken by the first touch of humanity it ever felt.
After his victory, Basil occupied the fort of Matzoukion,
and advanced on Strumpitza, where he ordered
Theophylaktos Botaniates, the governor of
Thessalonica, who had defeated a large body of Bulgarians, to join him by
marching northward, and clearing away the entrenchments constructed by Samuel
on the road leading from Thessaionlca directly to Strumpitza. In this operation Theophylaktos was surrounded
by the Bulgarians and slain, with the greater part of his troops, in the
defiles. This check compelled the emperor to retire by the Zagorian mountains to Mosynopolis, having succeeded in gaining
possession of the strong fortress of Melenik by
negotiation. At Mosynopolis, on the 24th October
1014, he heard of the death of Samuel, and immediately determined to take
advantage of an event likely to prove so favourable to the Byzantine arms.
Marching with a strong body of troops through Thessalonica and Vodena, he advanced into Pelagonia,
carefully protecting that fertile district from ravage, and destroying nothing
but a palace of the Bulgarian kings at Boutelion.
From thence he sent a division of the army to occupy Prilapos and Stobi, and, crossing the river Tzerna (Erigon) with the main
body, he returned by Vodena to Thessalonica, which he
reached on the 9th of January 1015.
The cruelty of Basil awakened an energetic resistance on the part of the Sclavonians and Bulgarians, and Gabriel Radomir, the brave son of Samuel, was enabled to offer
unexpected obstacles to the progress of the Byzantine armies. (Cruelty similar
to that of Basil was perpetrated on a smaller scale by Richard Coeur-de-Lion,
though of course it is not necessary to place strict reliance on the numbers
reported by the Byzantine historians. Richard, to revenge the loss of a body of
men, ordered three hundred French knights to be thrown into the Seine, and put
out the eyes of fifteen, who were sent home blind, led by one whose right eye
had been spared. Philip Augustus, nothing loath, revenged himself by treating
fifteen English knights in the same way. Putting out men's eyes was, for
several centuries, a common practice all over Europe, and not regarded with
much horror. As late as the reign of Henry IV, A.D. 1403, an Act of Parliament
was passed, making it felony for Englishmen to cut out one another's tongues,
or put out their neighbour’s eyes). Vodena revolted,
and expelled the imperial garrison, so that Basil was compelled to open the
campaign of 1015 with the siege of that place, which he reduced. The
inhabitants were transported to Beleros, to make way
for Greek colonists; and two forts, Kardia and St.
Elias, were built to command the pass to the westward. After receiving an
embassy from Gabriel, with proposals which he did not consider deserving of
attention, Basil joined a division of his army engaged in besieging Moglena under the immediate command of Nicephorus Xiphias
and Constantine Diogenes, who had succeeded Theophylaktos as governor of
Thessalonica. By turning the course of the river, the besiegers were enabled to
run a mine under the wall, which they supported on wooden props. When the mine
was completed, it was filled with combustibles, which reduced the props to ashes,
and as soon as the wall fell and opened a breach, Moglena was taken by assault. The whole of the Slavonian population capable
of bearing arms was by the emperor’s order transported to Vasparoukan in Armenia. The fort of Notia in the vicinity was also taken and destroyed.
Gabriel, the king of Achrida, though brave, alienated the favour of his
subjects by his imprudence, and his cousin, John Ladislas,
whose life he had saved in youth, was base enough to become his murderer, in
order to gain possession of the throne. Ladislas, in
order to gain time, both for strengthening himself on the throne and resisting
the Byzantine invasion, sent ambassadors to Basil with favourable offers of
peace; but the emperor, satisfied that the struggle between the Slavonians and
Greeks could only be terminated by the conquest of one, rejected all terms but
absolute submission, and pushed on his operations with his usual vigour, laying
waste the country about Ostrovos and Soskos, and marching unopposed through the fertile plains
of Pelagonia. The defeat of a portion of the
Byzantine army by Ibatzes, one of the Bulgarian
generals, compelled the emperor to march against him in person; and when Ibatzes retreated into the mountains, Basil returned to
Thessalonica, and shortly after established himself at Mosynopolis.
The conquest of eastern Macedonia was not yet completed : one division of the
Byzantine troops was placed under the command of David the Arianite,
which besieged and took the fortress of Thermitza on
Mount Strumpitza: another, under Nicephorus Xiphias,
crossing Mount Haemus from Philippopolis, took Boion,
near Sardica.
The Emperor Basil returned to Constantinople in the month of January
1016, in order to send an expedition to Khazaria, the
operations of which had been concerted with Vladimir
of Russia, his brother-in-law. He also availed himself of the opportunity to
arrange some difficulties relating to the cession of Vasparoukan.
When that part of Armenia was annexed to the empire, and the conquest of Khazaria terminated, he again joined the army at Sardica
and laid siege to Pernikon, which repulsed his
attacks, as it had done fourteen years before. He lost eighty-eight days before
the place, but was at last compelled to retire to Mosynopolis.
In the spring of 1017, Basil again turned his arms against Pelagonia. Kasloria, a town
situated on a rocky peninsula in a small lake, resisted his attacks, but the
booty collected in the open country was considerable; and this he divided into
three parts one he bestowed on the Russian auxiliaries who served in his army,
another he divided among the native Byzantine legions, and the third he
reserved for the imperial treasury. The operations of Basil in the west were
for a time arrested by news he received from the governor of Dorystolon, which threatened to render his presence
necessary in Bulgaria. Ladislas was concerting
measures with the Patzinaks to induce them to invade the empire; but after a
slight delay, Basil was informed the alliance had failed, and he resumed his
activity. After laying waste all the country round Ostxovos and Moliskos that was peopled by Sclavonians,
and repairing the fortifications of Berrhosa which
had fallen to decay, he captured Setaina, where
Samuel had formed great magazines of wheat. These magazines were kept well
filled by Ladislas, so that Basil became master of so
great a store that he divided it among his troops. At last the King of Achrida
approached the emperor at the head of a considerable army, and a part of the
imperial troops were drawn into an ambuscade. The emperor happened to be
himself with the advanced division of the army. He instantly mounted his horse
and led the troops about him to the scene of action, sending orders for all the
other divisions to hasten forward to support him. His sudden appearance at the
head of a strong body of the heavy-armed lancers of the Byzantine army, the
fury of his charge, the terror his very name inspired, and the cry, “The
emperor is upon us!” soon spread confusion through the Bulgarian ranks, and changed
the fortune of the day. After this victory, Basil, finding the season too far
advanced to follow up his success, returned to Constantinople, where he arrived
in the month of January 1018.
Ladislas,
whose affairs were becoming desperate, made an attempt to restore his credit by
laying siege to Dyrrachium, which he hoped to take before Basil could relieve
it. Its possession would have enabled him to open communications with the
enemies of Basil in Italy, and even with the Saracens of Sicily and Africa, but
he was slain soon after the commencement of the siege. He reigned two years and
five months. As soon as the emperor heard of his death, he visited Adrianople
to make preparations for a campaign, which he hoped would end in the complete
subjugation of the Bulgarian and Slavonian population of the kingdom of
Achrida. The Bulgarian leaders gave up all hope of resistance. Krakras, the brave chief of Pernikon,
who had twice foiled the emperor, surrendered that impregnable fortress and
thirty-five castles in the surrounding district Dragomoutzes delivered up the fortress of Strumpitza, and both he
and Krakras were rewarded with the patrician chair.
Basil marched by Mosynopolis and Serres to Strumpitza, where he received deputations from
most of the cities in Pelagonia, laying their keys at
his feet. Even David, the Patriarch of Bulgaria, arrived, bringing letters from
the widow of Ladislas, offering to surrender the
capital. The emperor continued to advance by Skopia, Stypeia, and Prosakon, and on
reaching Achrida he was received rather as the lawful sovereign than as a
foreign conqueror. He immediately took possession of all the treasures Samuel
had amassed; the gold alone amounted to a hundred centners, and with this he
paid all the arrears due to his troops, and rewarded them with a donative for
their long and gallant service in this arduous war. Almost the whole of the
royal family of Achrida submitted, and received the most generous treatment.
Three sons of Ladislas, who escaped to Mount Truoros, and attempted to prolong the contest, were soon
captured. The noble Bulgarians hastened to make their submission, and many were
honoured with high rank at the imperial court. Nothing, indeed, proves more
decidedly the absence of all Greek nationality in the Byzantine administration
at this period, than the facility with which all foreigners obtained favour at
the court of Constantinople; nor can anything be more conclusive of the fact
that the centralization of power in the person of the emperor, as completed by the
Basilian dynasty, had now destroyed the administrative centralisation of the
old Roman imperial system, for we have proofs that a considerable Greek
population still occupied the cities of Thrace and Macedonia, though Greek
feelings had little influence on the government.
The arrangement of the civil and financial administration of the
conquered territory, which had for so many years been separated from the
Byzantine Empire, occupied the emperor’s attention during the remainder of the
year. He also ordered two fortresses to be constructed to command the mountain
passes leading to Achrida, one in the lake of Prespa,
and the other on the road leading to Vodena and
Thessalonica. He then visited Diavolis, in order to
inspect the passage over the Macedonian mountains that afforded the easiest
communication with Northern Epirus. Nicephorus Xiphias was sent at the same
time to destroy all the mountain forts still in the possession of Slavonian
chieftains about Servia and Soskos. The taxation of
the Slavonian cultivators of the soil was arranged on the same footing on which
it had been placed by Samuel. Each pair of oxen for the plough paid annually a
measure of wheat, and one of millet, barley, or maize, and each strema of vineyard paid a jar or barrel of wine to the fisc.
Basil now resolved to re-establish the Byzantine influence on the coast
of Dalmatia. A division of the army was sent northward to complete the
subjection of the mountainous districts of the theme of Dyrrachium as far as
the Dalmatian and Servian frontiers; and an imperial fleet entered the Adriatic
to act in co-operation with the authorities on shore. The princes of Servia
agreed to acknowledge the supremacy of the emperor, and Constantine Diogenes,
the imperial general on the Danube, gained possession of the city of Sirmium by
an act of the basest treachery.
After passing the winter in his new conquests, Basil made a progress
through Greece. At Zeitounion he visited the field of
battle where the power of Samuel had been first broken by the victory of
Nicephorus Ouranos, and found the ground still strewed with the bones of the
slain. The wall that defended the pass of Thermopylae retained its antique
name, Skelos; and its masonry, which dated from Hellenic days, excited the
emperor's admiration. At last Basil arrived within the walls of Athens, and he
was the only emperor who for several ages honoured that city with a visit. Many
magnificent structures in the town, and the whole of the temples in the
Acropolis, had then hardly suffered any rude touches from the hand of time. If
the external painting and gilding which had once adorned the Parthenon of
Pericles had faded from their original splendour, the Church of the Virgin,
into which it was transformed, had gained a new interest from the mural paintings
of saints, martyrs, emperors, and empresses that covered the interior of the cella. The mind of Basil, though insensible to Hellenic
literature, was deeply sensible of religious impressions, and the glorious
combination of the variety of beauty in art and nature that he saw in the
Acropolis touched his stern soul. He testified his feelings by splendid gifts
to the city, and rich dedications at the shrine of the Virgin in the Parthenon.
From Greece the emperor returned to Constantinople, where he indulged
himself in the pomp of a triumph, making his entry into his capital by the
Golden Gate, and listening with satisfaction to the cries of the populace, who
applauded his cruelty by saluting him with the title of “The Slayer of the
Bulgarians”.
I have entered into the history of the destruction of the Bulgarian
monarchy of Achrida in some detail, because the struggle was national as well
as political; and the persevering resistance offered by the Slavonian
population of Macedonia to a warlike sovereign like Basil, proves the density
and flourishing condition of that people, and the complete annihilation of all
Hellenic influence in extensive provinces, where for ages the civilisation and the
language of Greece had been predominant. Against this national energy on the
part of the united Bulgarians and Slavonians, the government of Constantinople
had nothing to oppose but a well-disciplined army and a well-organised
administration. The Byzantine Empire had never less of a national character
than at the present period, when its military glory had reached the highest
pitch. Its Roman traditions were a mere name, and it had not yet assumed the
Medieval Greek characteristics it adopted at a later period when it was ruled
by the family of Comnenos. No national population
followed in the rear of Basil’s victories, to colonize the lands he
systematically depopulated by his ravages and cruelty; and hence it appears
that extensive districts, instead of being repeopled by Greek settlers,
remained in a deserted condition until a nomadic Vallachian population intruded
themselves. These new colonists soon multiplied so rapidly that about a century
later they were found occupying the mountains round the great plain of
Thessaly. The changes which have taken place in the numbers and places of
habitation of the different races of mankind, are really as important a branch
of historical inquiry as the geographical limits of political governments; and
the social laws that regulate the increase and decrease of the various families
of the human race, at the same period, and under the same government, are as
deserving of study as the actions of princes and the legislation of
parliaments, for they exert no inconsiderable influence on the rise and fall of
states.
After the conclusion of the Bulgarian war, the attention of Basil was
directed to the affairs of Armenia. Great political changes were beginning to
take place in Asia, from the decline of the empire of the caliphs of Bagdad;
but these revolutions lie beyond the sphere of Byzantine politics at this time,
though they began already to exert an influence on the sovereigns of Armenia.
Before Basil had taken the command of his armies in the Bulgarian war, he had
made a campaign in Armenia (AD 991), and gained possession of a considerable
portion of Iberia or Georgia. The whole kingdom had been left to him by the
will of David, its last sovereign; but George, the brother of the deceased
monarch, advancing his claim to the succession. Basil, in order to avoid a war,
agreed to leave George in possession of the northern part. It is not necessary
to enter into any details concerning the relations of the empire with the
different dynasties that then reigned in each of the principalities into which
Armenia was divided. Basil, in order to keep some check on the population of
Iberia and Armenia, transported colonies of Bulgarians and Slavonians into the
East, while at the same time he removed numbers of Armenians into Bulgaria.
In the year 995, Basil visited the East, in order to re-establish the
Byzantine influence in Syria, where it had fallen into discredit in consequence
of the defeat of the imperial army on the banks of the Orontes, in the
preceding year. The emperor soon succeeded in re-establishing his authority. He
took Aleppo, Hems, and Sheizar, and laid siege to Tripolis; but that city resisted his attacks, as it had
done those of John Zimiskes; and after his return to Constantinople, the
lieutenants of the Fatimite caliphs of Egypt recovered possession of Aleppo.
In the year 1021, the emperor was compelled to take the field in person,
to make head against a powerful combination of enemies on the Armenian
frontier. Senekarim, the prince of Vasparoukan, had been so alarmed by the threatening aspect
of the Mohammedan population on his frontiers that he had ceded his dominions
to Basil, and received in exchange the city of Sebaste and the adjacent country as far as the Euphrates, where he established himself
with many Armenian families who quitted their native seats. Basil undertook to
defend Vasparoukan against the Turkish tribes that
began to attack it, and Senekarim engaged to govern Sebaste as a Byzantine viceroy. After this cession had been
made, George, the sovereign of the northern part of Iberia and Abasgia, in conjunction with Joannes Sembat, the King of Ani, attacked the Byzantine
territory, and their operations rendered the presence of the emperor necessary.
They had formed secret relations with Nicephorus Xiphias, who, while governor
of Philippopolis, had distinguished himself in the Bulgarian war, and with
Nicephorus, the son of Bardas Phokas; and these two generals broke out into
open rebellion in Cappadocia, and endeavoured to incite all the Armenians to
take up arms. Basil was obliged to suppress this rebellion before he engaged a
foreign enemy, and he availed himself of the spirit of treachery inherent among
men in power in most absolute governments to effect his purpose. He sent
letters secretly to each of the rebel chiefs, offering pardon to him who would
assassinate his colleague. Phokas, who was bold and daring like his father,
immediately communicated the emperor's letter to Xiphias, who, concealing that
he had received one of similar import, availed himself of his friend’s
confidence to assassinate him at a private interview. The rebel army then
melted away, and Basil was able to turn all his forces against the sovereign of
Iberia. In the first battle the victory remained doubtful, but in a second the
Iberian and Abasgian troops were completely defeated
(11th September 1022). Liparit, the general of the Abasgians, was slain, and the kings of Iberia and Armenia
were obliged to sue for peace. A treaty was concluded on the banks of the lake Balagatsis, by which Joannes the
King of Armenia, who began to be alarmed at the progress of the Turks, ceded
his capital, Ani, to Basil after his death, on condition of retaining the
government in his own hands as long as he lived. During this campaign, Basil
displayed all his usual foresight and energy: he took measures for putting the
fortresses on the eastern frontier of the empire in a state to resist the
Turks, who threatened to invade the west of Asia; and some of the military
engines he ordered to be constructed were of such power and solidity, that when
the Seljouk Turks invaded the Byzantine territory in
the reign of Constantine IX Monomachos, they found
them still well suited for service.
The next object of Basil’s ambition was to expel the Saracens from
Sicily; and he was engaged in making great preparations for reconquering that
island, when he was seized with an illness, which quickly proved fatal. He
expired in December 1025, at the age of sixty-eight, after having governed the
empire with absolute power for fifty years. He extended the limits of the
Byzantine territory on every side by his conquests, and at the end of his reign
the Byzantine Empire attained its greatest extent and highest power.
The body of Basil was interred in the Church of the Evangelists, in the Hebdomon. Two centuries and a half had nearly passed away.
The Byzantine empire had been destroyed by the Crusaders, the Asiatic Greeks
were endeavouring to expel the Franks from their conquest, and Michael
Paleologos their emperor was besieging Constantinople, when some Greek
officers, wandering through the ruins of the church and monastery of the
Evangelists, admired the remains of its ancient magnificence, and lamented to
see that so splendid a monument of Byzantine piety had been converted into a stable
under the ruinous administration of the Frank Caesars. In a corner of the
building, a remarkable tomb that had been recently broken open arrested their
attention. A well-embalmed body of an old man lay in the sarcophagus, and in
his hand some idle herdsman had placed a shepherd’s pipe. An inscription on the
wall showed that the sarcophagus contained the mortal remains of Basil the
Slayer of the Bulgarians. The Emperor Michael VIII visited the spot, and when
he found it necessary to retire from before Constantinople for a time, he
ordered the body to be removed to Selymbria, and
interred in the monastery of our Saviour, AD 1260.
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