READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE FROMA.D. 717 TO 1453
BOOK II
THE BASILIAN DYNASTY
PERIOD OF THE POWER AND GLORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE
CHAPTER VII.
PERIOD OF CONSERVATISM ON THE EVE OF DECLINE, AD
1025-1057
Sect. I
CONSTANTINE VIII A.D.1025-1028
THE conquest of the Sclavonians in the
Thracian, Macedonian, and Illyrian mountains gave a degree of security to the
Eastern Empire which it had not enjoyed since the time of Justinian I. If at
this period the government had known how to adopt measures for developing the
resources of the country, or the Greek people had possessed the energy and
moral convictions necessary to force the court to respect their rights as men
and citizens, the whole of the provinces lying to the south of Mount Haemus
might have become thickly peopled by the natural increase of the Greek
race. Land of the best quality was everywhere ready to receive a better
cultivation from new colonists; but improvement was checked, on the part of the
government, by exactions similar to those which arrest the progress of society
in all arbitrary governments; and the Greeks were now destitute of the
sentiment of national patriotism; they were as selfish as their government was
rapacious. Exorbitant taxes, severe fiscal restrictions, and obstructive social
trammels, bore heavily on the agricultural classes, and left them, as their
share of the fruits of their labour, little more than was sufficient for
perpetuating their race, and supplying a due succession of peasants to labour
the lands on which their predecessors toiled. Great part of the extensive
provinces, depopulated by the destructive system of hostilities pursued by
Basil and Samuel, remained long uncultivated, and were gradually invaded by
nomadic tribes, who were allowed to pasture their flocks and herds over the
richest plains on paying tribute to the Byzantine authorities.
The position of the empire on the death of Basil required a judicious
and economical sovereign to organise the civil administration on such a scale,
as not to absorb too large a portion of the funds required for the maintenance
of the large army with which it was necessary to guard the extensive frontiers,
and yet on a footing that would insure an equitable and prompt administration
of justice to the subjugated Slavonians. Unfortunately, Constantine VIII,
though he was averse to war and military parade, had no taste for order, and no
care for justice. In his personal appearance he bore a strong resemblance to
his brother, but any similarity of disposition that ever showed itself was only
in defects. His tall robust figure proclaimed the same strength of body and
health of constitution, but he was destitute of the activity, fortitude, and
courage of Basil. After he assumed the government, he continued to live as he
had done while his brother kept him secluded from public business. In the
interior of the palace he was surrounded by musicians, singers, dancing girls,
and parasites, and he rarely quitted it except to indulge in the chase, or to
celebrate public spectacles in the hippodrome for his own amusement and that of
the idle populace of the capital. He left all public business to be transacted
by his domestic servants, and he shunned the military pageants in which the
emperors usually took an active part. Indeed, he appeared to dread the array of
troops as more likely to suggest the idea of internal revolutions than foreign
wars. His fears rendered him a suspicious and cruel tyrant; and his distrust of
all men of talent and influence induced him to intrust the principal offices of
the state to the eunuchs of his household: men bred up amidst scenes of
dissipation, gambling, and hunting, and utterly destitute of all experience in
public business, were suddenly charged with the most important duties in the
empire.
The dignities of chamberlain, keeper of the wardrobe, and commander of
the watch, were intrusted to three eunuchs of the domestic establishment of
Constantine, and each received the title of President of the Senate. The
command of the foreign mercenaries was conferred on a fourth. The Byzantine
emperors, like other despots, preferred intrusting strangers with the
guardianship of their persons. A fifth, named Spondyles,
was appointed duke of Antioch, and intrusted with the command of the troops
charged to resist the ambitious projects of the Fatimite caliphs in Syria. The
object of the nomination was to furnish the army with a leader incapable of
pretending to the throne, not to supply it with an able general. The sixth of
this domestic band, named Niketas, became duke of
Iberia. The Emperor Basil II must have beaten down the pride of the aristocracy
during the latter part of his reign and effected a great change in the position
they had held in the time of Basilios the chamberlain and the rebellions of
Skleros and Phokas, or the direction of the government would not have been
allowed to remain long in the hands of six eunuchs. The spirit of conservatism
already pervaded society to such a degree as to form a firm support of
despotism. The patience with which Constantine’s measures were endured gives us
some insight into the social as well as the administrative changes effected by
the long reign of his brother. We see that his policy had proved quite as
successful in breaking the power of the great families, and in diminishing the
influence of the generals of themes, as in destroying the Bulgarian kingdom and
subjugating the Sclavonian people. All the power the
emperor had taken from others was accumulated in his own person; nothing was
done to confer any rights on the people, nor to secure them against injustice
on the part of the imperial agents. The emperor’s power was made absolute in
practice as in theory, and thus the worthless creatures of Constantine VIII
were enabled to commit acts of greater oppression than the aristocratic
officials whose power Basil had curtailed. Conservatism was now a principle of
Byzantine policy, and it is usually a factitious phrase to delude the people
from a devotion to order and justice.
Basil II is accused by the Byzantine historians of fiscal severity. In
this accusation there is reason to suspect that we learn rather the murmurs of
the nobles and populace of Constantinople than the deliberate expression of the
public opinion of the whole empire. Basil endeavoured to levy from the rich
their due proportion of the public burdens, and to put a stop to the absorption
of the estates of the poor by the aristocracy, while at the same time he
refrained from lavishing immense sums on the shows in the hippodrome. But
whatever may have been the extent of his avarice, we see signs of true
liberality in his exertions to lighten the burdens of the industrious classes,
and real humanity in his endeavours to spare the poor. It has been already
noticed that the taxes were two years in arrear when he died. The proceedings
of Constantine form a contrast to those of his brother. On one hand, he exacted
the arrears of the public taxes with the greatest severity, while, on the
other, he lavished the money thus extorted from the provinces in wasteful
expenditure in the capital. During his reign of three years he collected and
expended the revenue of five. His palace, like that of a Saracen caliph, was
filled with foreign slaves and eunuchs, whose strange appearance and barbarous
language astonished the natural-born subjects of the empire.
Though no dangerous insurrection broke out, the general discontent could
not be mistaken, and it excited the fears of Constantine and his creatures.
Many eminent men, representatives of families renowned in the annals of the empire,
were seized, and condemned to lose their sight, because the services of their
ancestors in past generations appeared to give them too much influence on
public opinion. It is difficult to determine, in each case, whether this was a
measure of precaution, or a punishment for political imprudence or actual
conspiracy. The names of some of the sufferers deserve a record, because they
indicate the position of several distinguished families at the time. Nicephorus Comnenos, the governor of Media or Aspourakan, had bravely defended his province against the
incursions of the Saracens; but his troops having given him some signs of
indiscipline and timidity, he had invited them to take an oath that they would
never desert him on the field of battle. This excited the jealousy of the
emperor, who recalled Comnenos to Constantinople,
where he was condemned to lose his sight for administering unlawful oaths to
the army. Constantine, the son of Michael Burtzes,
who took Antioch, was also deprived of sight; but in his case it was notorious
that the punishment was an act of revenge, as this patrician had informed Basil
of some unseemly practices of his brother, in order that they might be
restrained. The grandsons of the rivals, Bardas Skleros and Bardas Phokas, were
united in misfortune. These two patricians lost their sight on some vague
accusations brought against them by the eunuchs of the imperial palace.
Basilios Skleros had quarrelled with Prusian, the son of Ladislas,
the last king of Achrida. Prusian, who held the rank of magister, and was
governor of the theme Boukellarion, fought a duel
with Skleros; for the pride of the Byzantine military aristocracy displayed
itself with as much courage, if not with as much gallantry, as was ever shown
by the chivalry of western Europe. The two duellists were exiled to different
islands of the Princes’ group; but Basilios was soon deprived of his sight, on
pretext that he was plotting to escape. Romanos Kurkuas, a member of a distinguished Armenian family, which had supplied the
empire with many able generals, and of which the Emperor John Zimiskes was a
scion, also lost his sight, as well as several individuals who bear names not
unknown in Byzantine history, and others whose barbarous appellations prove
that the Bulgarian and Slavonian aristocracy divided with the Greeks and
Armenians a competent share of political influence at the court of
Constantinople.
The extent of the disorder caused in the provinces by the creatures sent
to govern them by Constantine and his eunuchs, is attested by the notice we
possess of some occurrences at Naupactos. The
government of that province was intrusted to an officer called, from his
violence, Mad George, who, by his tyrannical conduct, drove the people to
despair; and in an insurrection which ensued, Mad George was slain, and his
palace plundered by the populace. This insurrection was soon quelled; but
Constantine took severe vengeance on the inhabitants of Naupactos.
Even the archbishop was deprived of his sight, for attempting to protect the
people against the exactions of their tyrant.
Foreign nations soon heard how Constantine conducted the government, and
hastened to profit by the disorderly state of public affairs. In 1027, the
Patzinaks made an irruption into Bulgaria, where they laid waste everything on
their line of march. A Saracen fleet cruised among the Cyclades, visiting the
islands one after another, and collecting booty from all. But the spirit
infused by Basil into the army and navy was not extinct, though their direction
had fallen into unworthy hands. Diogenes, the governor of Sirmium, being
created duke of Bulgaria, defeated the Patzinaks, and drove them back beyond
the Danube. The governors of Samos and Chios assembled a naval force, with
which they attacked the Saracen fleet, and captured twelve of the enemy's ships
with all the crews.
Constantine VIII was suddenly attacked by a disease which was evidently
mortal. When he was near his end, he fixed his eyes on Constantine Dalassenos as his successor. The choice was judicious; and
a eunuch of the palace was despatched to summon Dalassenos from his residence in the Armeniac theme, when Simeon, the commander of the
watch, expecting to find a weaker and more docile sovereign in Romanus Arghyros, who was connected with the imperial family,
prevailed on the emperor to recall his first order, and transfer the empire to
Romanus. The destined sovereign, on reaching the palace, was informed by
Constantine that he was selected to mount the throne, but that he must divorce
his wife, and marry one of the imperial princesses. Romanus hesitated to become
emperor on this condition; but Constantine, to quicken his decision, informed
him that he must either ascend the throne or lose his eyesight, and gave him a
few hours to reflect on the choice. The wife of Romanus, learning the
alternative, immediately ordered her head to be shaved, and entered a
monastery; thus generously relieving her husband from the odium of sacrificing
his honour to his timidity or ambition. Constantine had destined Theodora, the
youngest of his three daughters, to be the wife of Romanus; but she refused to
participate in the throne by marrying the husband of another woman. The emperor
was compelled, therefore, to make his second daughter Zoe empress, for the
eldest had retired into a monastery. The daughters of Constantine were already
of mature age. Their education had been shamefully neglected by their father;
and Zoe had taken advantage of the want of all moral restraint in which she
lived. She had attained the age of forty-eight when she became a bride; but the
posterity of Romanus II and Theophano were all remarkable for health, vigour,
and longevity. Her marriage with Romanus III and their coronation was
celebrated on the 19th November 1028. On the 21st of the month Constantine VIII
expired.
Sect. II.
THE REIGNS OF THE HUSBANDS OF ZOE
Romanus III. AD 1028-1034
For twenty-nine years the empire was ruled by a succession of princes
who owed their position on the throne to the daughters of Constantine VIII.
Under such circumstances, it is natural that the affairs of the court of
Constantinople attract more than usual attention in a review of Byzantine
history. Every class of society in the empire appears during this period
to have slumbered in prosperity, consuming its revenues in a firm conviction
that no external power could disturb the internal security of the state. In no
other portion of the civilized world did the inhabitants enjoy an equal degree
of wealth and security for life and property; and the military power and
financial resources of every neighbouring government appeared far inferior to
those of the Byzantine Empire. Conservative lethargy was natural
under such circumstances.
Romanus III was sixty years old when accident made him an emperor. He
was allied to several of the oldest and most illustrious of the aristocracy,
and is a type of the kind of sovereign a respectable Byzantine noble of
conservative tendencies made, during a time when the political horizon was
peculiarly tranquil in the East. He enjoyed the reputation of possessing both
accomplishments and learning; but his vanity somewhat obscured the lustre of
his talents. Feeling that his sudden elevation would excite the ambition of
many of the nobility, he adopted measures to conciliate the favour of every
class of his subjects. The church was propitiated by bestowing on the clergy of
St. Sophia’s an annual revenue of eighty pounds’ weight of gold,
secured as a permanent charge on the imperial treasury. To gain the nobility
and the higher ecclesiastical dignitaries, he abolished the Allelengyon,
or mutual responsibility of the rich for the taxes due by the poor in their
district. It appears that this law, as established by Basil II, had been
executed with such severity that several bishops had been reduced to poverty.
He also granted a full pardon to all persons who had been persecuted by the
jealousy of Constantine VIII. He purchased popularity among the people by
releasing all who were confined in the public prisons for debt; and in order to
combine justice with charity, he paid their debts to private individuals when
he remitted those to the fisc. He redeemed the captives
taken by the Patzinaks in their recent invasion of the empire; and, in short,
he endeavored in many ways to render himself so generally popular as to deter
any rival from aspiring at the throne. These measures for securing popularity
were of themselves well chosen, but their favourable effect was greatly
increased by a coincidence beyond the emperor’s control. The year of his
accession proved one of singular fertility every species of grain was abundant
in the capital, and a rich harvest of olives supplied the people of the
provinces both with oil and money.
The piety of Romanus displayed itself in the usual superstition of his
age. Considering the failure of his Syrian campaign as a punishment for his
sins, and not a consequence of his ignorance of military affairs, he sought to
propitiate Heaven by a lavish expenditure on ecclesiastical objects. He founded
a new monastery of the Virgin called Semneion, on the
church of which he laid out money with profusion. He endowed the monastery with
such enormous revenues that even Byzantine ecclesiastics, in recording his
liberality, blame the incongruity of placing monks in the position of luxurious
nobles, and complain of the emperor seeking to acquire merit with God by
exactions that ruined his subjects. Romanus also covered the capital of the
columns in the churches of St Sophia’s and Blachern with gilding, and enriched the buildings with expensive ornaments. He is said
likewise to have obtained permission from the Fatimite caliph Daher to rebuild
the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem, which had been destroyed by
Caliph Hakem in the year 1010. Subsequent disputes
with the Egyptian government appear to have delayed the commencement of the
work until the reign of Michael IV, and it was not completed until that of
Constantine IX (Monomachus), in the year 1048.
Whenever early education has failed to implant moral feelings in the
hearts of men, laws prove ineffectual to supply the want, whether in the case
of individuals or nations. The people of the Byzantine Empire were now
beginning to have the same hankering after hereditary succession which has
lately been manifested by the continental nations of Europe for representative
government; but in both cases there appears to have been a want of those firm
convictions required for attaining any desired end. As usually happens in
political matters, the fault lay with the higher and educated classes of
society, who allowed themselves to quit the line of duty to pursue any lure
held out to their prejudices or passions. Hence we find conspiracies and
rebellions continuing to occur in rapid succession in the Byzantine Empire,
where they were regarded as an unavoidable evil in the lot of man. Conservative
tendencies were the most powerless political feeling that ever swayed the
counsels of Constantinople. But we must not forget that the Byzantine Empire
was a government without a nation.
The Empress Zoe never forgave her sister Theodora that superiority of
character which had induced their father to offer her the empire, if she would
accept the husband of his choice; and Romanus III disliked her for refusing his
hand, and feared her on account of her talents. He set a spy over her conduct
by drawing from his retreat John, one of the ministers of Basil II, who had deemed
it prudent to retire into a monastery on the accession of Constantine VIII.
John was now appointed syncellus, and intrusted with the superintendence
of Theodora’s household. Prusian, the Bulgarian prince who had fought a duel
with Romanus Skleros, the brother-in-law of the Emperor Romanus III, was
accused of plotting with Theodora to seize the imperial crown. Whether true or
false, the jealousy of Zoe and the aversion of Romanus were sure to obtain for
this accusation a favourable reception. The emperor had already restored his
brother-in-law to his former rank as magistros;
he now revenged him by condemning Prusian to lose his sight, and by banishing
his mother, the late queen of Bulgaria, to the monastery of Mantineion in the Boukellarian theme. Subsequently, when the
court was alarmed at the prospect of a Bulgarian and Slavonian rebellion under
the direction of Constantine Diogenes, Prusian was compelled to embrace the
monastic life. It seems strange that the project of transferring the
sovereignty of the Byzantine empire to a Bulgarian should be recorded by the
Byzantine writers, without the smallest notice that such an event was likely to
wound either the Roman pride of the aristocracy of Constantinople, or the
national vanity of the Greek race; but we must recollect that the founder of
the Basilian dynasty was generally considered to have been a Slavonian groom.
Another conspiracy, which was formed soon after that of Prusian, was
connected with the same interests, and counted on the same feelings for
success. Constantine Diogenes, the governor of Sirmium and duke of Bulgaria,
had married a niece of the Emperor Romanus III, and had been appointed governor
of Thessalonica. While there, it was discovered that he was engaged in frequent
communications with the leaders of the Bulgarian and Slavonian population of
the empire, and it was deemed necessary to transfer him to the government of
the Thrakesian theme before arresting him. He was found guilty of conspiracy
against the emperor, and condemned to be incarcerated as a monk in the
monastery of Studion. John the syncellus, who seems to have been gained over by
Theodora, whom he had been appointed to watch, Eustathios Daphnomeles, the governor of Achrida, two
grandchildren of Michael Burtzes, the conqueror of
Antioch, and George and Varasvatzes, nephews of the
patrician Theudatos, were all condemned for
participating in this conspiracy. They were publicly scourged, and then
banished. Theodora, who was accused of being privy to their plots, was driven
from her palace, and imprisoned in the monastery of Petrion. Some time after, the Empress Zoe visited her sister,
and compelled her to assume the monastic habit. Constantine Diogenes was also
accused by the archbishop of Thessalonica of plotting to escape into Illyria,
in order to assume the title of emperor. To avoid the loss of his eyesight, and
the disgrace of being scourged through the streets of the capital, he threw
himself from a window, and was killed on the spot. He was buried in the place
appropriated to those who committed suicide, A.D. 1032.
The negligence of Constantine VIII had weakened the military force of
the empire. Spondyles, the eunuch intrusted with the
government of Antioch, finding that the Saracen emirs who had been rendered
tributary by Nicephorus II and John Zimiskes refused to pay tribute, undertook
to re-establish the imperial authority. His rashness and incapacity led to the
complete defeat of the Byzantine army on the 31st of October 1029, by which all
the imperial possessions of Syria were exposed without defence to the attacks
of the emirs of Aleppo and Tripolis, who pushed their
incursions up to the walls of Antioch, and rendered themselves masters of the
fort of Menik, which had been recently constructed in
its immediate vicinity.
Romanus III resolved to redeem the honour of the empire at the head of
his armies. His brother-in-law, Constantine Karantenos,
was sent forward to supersede Spondyles. When the
emperor reached Philomilion in Pisidia, he was met by
an embassy from the emir of Aleppo, who offered to recognise the supremacy of
the empire, and to pay the same tribute he had paid to Basil II. The wisest
councillors of Romanus recommended him to accept these terms, for the season
was ill suited for invading Syria, where the heat and want of water rendered
great part of the country better adapted for the operations of the light-armed
cavalry of the Arabs, than for the military tactics of the Byzantine troops,
covered with heavy armour. The emperor was so destitute of military experience,
that he believed it would be a matter of little difficulty to rival the
exploits of Nicephorus, Zimiskes, and Basil, and he marched forward to take
possession of Aleppo. He had arrived at a strong fortress called Azaz, about
two days’ march from that city, when his outposts were attacked and driven in
by the Arabs, who prevented his cavalry from collecting forage, and his troops
from approaching the water in the neighbourhood. The position of the Byzantine
camp was ill chosen; an attempt to repulse the Arabs led to an unpremeditated
engagement, in which a considerable body of troops was defeated, and the fugitives,
rushing into the camp, spread disorder far and wide. No measures were adopted
for restoring order, and the victorious Arabs advanced up to the intrenchments,
and kept the imperial army closely blockaded. The emperor was utterly helpless,
and under such a commander there was no choice but to retreat to Antioch. This
operation was conducted in the most disgraceful manner. At daylight Romanus
abandoned the camp, leaving his own tents and baggage, and the warlike
machines, tents, and baggage of the army, a prey to the enemy; and this booty
fortunately detained the Arabs so long that a great part of the flying army
gained Antioch in safety, August 1030.
Romanus, cured of his passion for military fame, hastened back to
Constantinople. The generals he left in command of the army proved as incapable
as their sovereign, and Menik, the fort in the
vicinity of Antioch, remained in the hands of the Saracens. The emperor,
however, at last sent Theoktistos, the commander of the foreign mercenaries,
with a considerable reinforcement of native and foreign troops, and this
officer having formed an alliance with the emir of Tripolis,
who was alarmed at the progress of the Egyptian power in Syria, succeeded in
taking the fort of Menik. Alach,
the son of the emir of Tripolis, visited the court of
Romanus, and so lax were the political and religious ideas of the Byzantines,
in spite of their ecclesiastical bigotry, that he was honoured with the rank of
a Roman patrician.
Shortly after the defeat of the Emperor Romanus at Azaz, an incident
occurred which deserves notice, principally because it brought into notice an
officer who soon took a prominent part in the military affairs of the empire,
both in Asia and Europe. George Maniakes was governor of the small province
called Telouch. After the flight of the army to
Antioch, a body of eight hundred Arabs appeared before the walls of the
fortress in which he was residing, announcing the death of the emperor, and the
overthrow of the Byzantine power in Syria. They ordered Maniakes to evacuate
the place, or they threatened to storm it next day, and put every person within
its walls to the sword. Maniakes considered that the nature of their summons
indicated either their weakness or their determination to fall on his troops by
treachery; he therefore asked to be allowed to remain the night in the
fortress, to make preparations for his retreat. The Arab camp was supplied with
food and refreshments in abundance, and at midnight Maniakes led out the
garrison to attack the enemy, who were found plunged in sleep without a guard.
The greater part were slain, and two hundred and eighty camels, laden with the
spoil of Romanus’s camp, were recaptured. This prize was sent as a present to
the emperor, accompanied with the noses and ears of the vanquished.
To reward the valour of Maniakes, he was appointed governor of Lower
Media, of which Samosata was the capital. The following year the Saracens
invaded Mesopotamia, and plundered the country as far as Melitene; but in 1032,
Maniakes contrived to bribe the governor of Edessa, who was subject to the emir
of Miarfekin (Martyropolis),
to deliver up the town. But as soon as the Byzantine troops got possession of
three towers in the wall, they were assailed by the Saracen inhabitants, and
Maniakes was soon attacked by Apomerman, the emir of Miarfekin, who hastened to expel him from his position. The
Saracens, finding it impossible to regain possession of the towers, and
learning that fresh troops were marching to the assistance of Maniakes,
abandoned Edessa; but before quitting it they burned most of the houses, and
destroyed the great church. Though the Saracens had time to carry off the
greater part of the wealth of the city they left behind them what was
infinitely more valuable in the eyes of the Christians of that age than the
whole wealth of the caliphate. The people of Edessa had long boasted that they
possessed a letter written by our Saviour to Abgarus,
king of Edessa; this precious relic was now brought to Maniakes, and by him
transmitted to Constantinople. It is not known at what period this precious
document was fabricated. From the city and territory of Edessa a tribute of 50
Ib. of gold was annually remitted to the Byzantine treasury.
The disorganised state of the caliphate of Bagdad, and the power
acquired by the Turkish mercenaries, induced several Saracen emirs to solicit
the protection of Romanus. The emir of Aleppo, in spite of his victory, became tributary
to the empire. Aleim, the emir of Perkrin a fortress of great importance, on account of its position delivered up that
place to the emperor; and a body of six thousand Byzantine troops, under a
Bulgarian patrician, was stationed to defend this advanced post. Aleim was, however, dissatisfied with the reward he
received, and opened communications with the Persians, whom he contrived to
introduce into Perkrin. The Byzantine garrison was
surprised and put to the sword; but a powerful body of native troops and
Russian mercenaries soon regained possession of the place, which was taken by
assault, and Aleim was put to death.
The Saracens of Africa and Sicily were still in the habit of sending out
the fleets to plunder the coasts of the empire. In the year 1031, these pirates
laid waste Illyria and the island of Corfu, but they were defeated by the
people of Ragusa and the governor of Nauplia, who
destroyed the greater part of their fleet. Next year they returned with a large
force, and, if we believe the accounts of the Byzantine writers, their fleet
consisted of a thousand vessels, and transported ten thousand troops. Two
divisions of this great armament were defeated by Nicephoras Karantenos, the governor of Nauplia,
and upwards of a thousand prisoners were sent to Constantinople. In 1033, the
imperial fleet, under the command of the protospatharios Tekneas, made a descent on the coast of Egypt, and
after collecting considerable booty, and carrying off many prisoners, the
expedition returned to Constantinople. Every government at this time found it
much easier to plunder the territories of its rivals than to defend its own,
for most sovereigns had adopted the policy of disarming the great body of their
subjects, fearing that, if they possessed arms, they would employ their
strength in delivering themselves from the fiscal exactions of their princes.
During the reign of Romanus III, several parts of Asia Minor suffered
very severely from earthquakes, locusts, famine, and pestilence; and in a
stationary condition of society these calamities often destroy an amount of
capital which is never replaced, and become, therefore, an immediate cause of a
rapid depopulation.
For two years before his death the emperor was afflicted by a disease
which gradually wasted his frame, and caused his hair and beard to fall off.
Many ascribed the disorder to the use of aphrodisiacs, which he took to an
immoderate extent, in the hope of leaving an heir to the empire; but others
believed that the disease originated in a slow poison administered either by
the Empress Zoe or by John the orphanotrophos, who
expected to raise his brother Michael to the throne.
This John was a eunuch and a monk, who had entered the household of
Romanus while he was yet in a private station, but who, after he became
emperor, received the rank of orphanotrophos, or
minister of charitable institutions, an office which proves the existence of a
high degree of civilization in the Byzantine administration. John had several
brothers, one of whom, named Michael, commenced life as a goldsmith and
money-changer, but while still young, received a place in the imperial
household. The face of Michael had the beauty of a perfect statue; his figure
was full of grace, and his manners were attractive and dignified, but the young
man was liable to sudden and violent attacks of epilepsy. Zoe, though upwards
of fifty, is said to have fallen in love with her handsome servant, and to have
carried on an intrigue with him by the assistance of his brother John. Romanus,
though informed of his wife's conduct, paid no attention to the accusations,
which the epilepsy of Michael seemed to render improbable. In the meantime, the
health of the emperor rapidly declined, and on the nth of April 1034 he was
taken from the bath in a dying state. While life yet remained, he was visited
by Zoe and some of the officers of the court, but he was already speechless,
and the empress quitted his side to take measures with the orphanotrophos for placing her epileptic paramour on the throne.
The moment that life was extinct in the body of Romanus III, Zoe
assembled the officers of state in the palace, and invested Michael IV with the
imperial robes. He was immediately proclaimed Emperor of the Romans, and seated
himself on the vacant throne beside Zoe. The promptitude with which this
singular step of raising a domestic to the throne was conceived and executed
prevented its encountering the slightest opposition. The Patriarch Alexios was summoned to the palace, where he learned the
death of Romanus, and was, to his great astonishment, ordered to crown Michael
the Paphlagonian, and celebrate his marriage with the
widowed empress. The Patriarch would willingly have delayed making this open
display of contempt for decency, but he saw Michael seated on the throne, and
he was aware of the power and ability of his brother the orphanotrophos;
so, admitting that reasons of state might overrule the dictates of virtue, he
celebrated the marriage to avoid greater scandal. Thus a single night saw the
aged Zoe the wife of two emperors, a widow and a bride, and Michael a menial
and a sovereign. In order to render the sudden elevation of a domestic of the
palace less strange in the distant provinces, John, who became his brother's
prime-minister, despatched letters to all the governors, announcing that
Michael had been selected by the deceased emperor for his successor, and
crowned before his death.
Michael IV, the Paphlagonian, A.D.
1034-1041
The new emperor, though he ascended the throne in the most disgraceful
manner, possessed some good qualities; and his natural good disposition appears
neither to have been corrupted by his education as a money-changer, though
calumny accused him of having been a fabricator of false coin; nor by his
menial service at a corrupt and vicious court, of which he was a depraved
member. After he mounted the throne, he soon lost the gaiety of
disposition and tranquillity of mind which had increased the beauty of his
figure and the grace of his manner. In spite of his constitutional infirmity,
he was not destitute of considerable strength of character, and with his vices
he united a strong sense of justice. The conduct of Zoe awakened in his mind
feelings of distrust for his own safety, and he had spirit enough to dismiss
from her service many of the eunuchs of her father’s household, who seemed fit
agents for new plots. His conscience was soon troubled by his treachery to his
benefactor, and during his whole reign he suffered the pangs of remorse. He
sought pardon from heaven by praying at the shrines of different saints, and he
wasted the revenues of the empire in building monasteries and chapels, and in
making lavish donations to priests and monks. But as he continued to enjoy
every advantage he had purchased by his crimes, the historians of his reign
justly observe that he seemed to trust in the blindness of God for the
forgiveness of his sins, as if divine justice could regard good deeds done at
the expense of his subjects as any atonement for his private sins, or as any
proof of sincere repentance on the part of the imperial sinner. It must be
owned that there is more truth in this observation than is agreeable either to
the Papal or the Greek Church. The anxiety produced by the cares of his
situation soon increased the emperor's malady to such a degree that he became
liable to sudden attacks; and even at public ceremonies, when he was seated on
the throne, it was necessary to have the canopy of state hung round with
curtains, which the chamberlains could let fall to hide him from the assembly
as soon as his countenance indicated the approach of the terrible convulsions
to which he was liable. When his malady seized him, his features were distorted
into hideous expressions, his eyes rolled in wild agony, and he often struck
his head against the wall until he fell exhausted on the floor. Though his
malady was known to be of old date, the people persisted in regarding it as a
judgment for his conduct to his benefactor Romanus, and appealed to it as a
visible interposition of divine power, which abandoned him from time to time to
be tormented by demons as a punishment for his treachery.
Under these circumstances, it appears strange that Michael retained the
throne with so little difficulty, and met with no dangerous rival. It is true,
he possessed an able prime minister in his brother, the Orphanotrophos,
whose interests were completely identified with his own, and who was a
statesman competent to relieve him from all the details of administrative labour.
Michael could entertain no distrust of his brother John, who could neither
supplant him on the throne nor covet it for his posterity. But though the Orphanotrophos was a faithful brother and an able minister,
he was rapacious and tyrannical, and his administration, though serviceable to
Michael, was injurious to the wealth and resources of the empire. He is said to
have commenced life as a travelling doctor. While Romanus III was in a private
station, he intrusted John with the direction of his household; but after he
became emperor, his intendant, with the modest title of Orphanotrophos,
and in the humble garb of a monk, directed the whole business in the imperial
cabinet. When his brother ascended the throne, he openly assumed the duties of
president of the imperial council, and though suffering under the loathsome
disease of a cancer in the mouth, the energetic eunuch humbled the aristocracy
and ruled the people with a rod of iron.
The administration of John the Orphanotrophos deserves attention, not only from forming a principal feature in the reign of
Michael IV, but also from marking the era of a mischievous change in the
financial system of the Byzantine government. The taxes were everywhere
augmented, and collected in a more arbitrary manner. An additional charge of
from four to twenty byzants was imposed on every landed estate, according to
its extent. John’s avidity compelled the collectors of the revenue in the
provinces to increase their exactions, for when they were regular in their
remittances to the treasury, and liberal in their presents to the Orphanotrophos, their oppressive conduct to the provincials
was easily overlooked. This system of extortion caused several serious
insurrections during the reign of Michael IV. At its commencement the people of
Antioch murdered the collector of taxes in that city, and, alarmed at the
vengeance John was likely to take for such an offence, shut their gates against
his brother Niketas, whom he sent to be their duke. Niketas succeeded in entering the city, where his first act
was to put to death a hundred of the inhabitants, and confiscate the wealth of
eleven of the richest families. The people of Aleppo also expelled the imperial
commissioner sent to reside among them for fiscal purposes, and their position
secured them from the vengeance of the Byzantine minister. When Maria, the
emperor’s sister, and mother of the future emperor, Michael V, visited the city
of Ephesus on a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. John the Evangelist, she was
struck with compassion at the sight of the excessive misery she beheld in all
the country on her road. When she returned to Constantinople, she urged her
brother, the Orphanotrophos, by every feeling of
humanity and religion, to moderate the financial exactions which were rapidly
depopulating the empire. The Orphanotrophos replied
with a smile “You reason like a woman, ignorant of the necessities of the
imperial treasury”. His conduct, however, proved in the end unprofitable as a
financial operation, for it caused an extensive insurrection of the Bulgarian
and Slavonian population, which cost more to suppress than had been wrung from
them. Even the Greeks found their fiscal sufferings so great that they seemed
disposed to join the Slavonians in an attempt to throw off the Byzantine yoke.
The collector of the revenues of the theme of Nicopolis was torn in pieces by the people, and the western parts of Greece welcomed the
Bulgarian troops.
A government so unpopular as that of Constantinople at this time
required not only great talents to direct the central administration, but also
a numerous body of firm supporters dispersed through all the provinces,
interested to defend the system with all its abuses. This was effected by
filling every office with men dependent on the family of Michael IV, and
crowding the senate with creatures of the Orphanotrophos.
On the death of Niketas, Constantine, who was almost
as able and active as his brother John, was appointed duke of Antioch, and
became afterwards grand domestikos. George was
appointed protovestiarios, their brother-in-law
Stephen was intrusted with the command of the fleet, and subsequently named
commander-in-chief in Sicily; while his son Michael, called, from his father's
early profession, Kalaphates, or the Caulker, was
appointed by his uncle Caesar, which was almost tantamount to proclaiming him
heir-apparent to the Byzantine empire.
John even carried his ambition so far as to make an attempt to place
himself at the head of the church as well as the state. Having gained over a
party among the bishops to object to the appointment of the Patriarch Alexios as uncanonical, on the ground that he had been
intruded on the church by the nomination of Basil II, John proposed to depose Alexios. The Patriarch, however, encountered the attack
with courage. He openly discussed the question, and asked what measures were to
be taken if all the ordinations which he had made, during the twelve years he
had governed the church, were now unexpectedly declared void; and he boldly
reminded John, that even the coronation and marriage of the reigning emperor
would thus be pronounced null. This boldness alarmed the emperor: and John was
compelled to lay aside the hope of becoming Patriarch during the life of Alexios.
Avarice was always a pervading fault of Byzantine society; and the
rapacity of the clergy at this period often rivalled the extortions of the
fiscal agents of the imperial administration. Two anecdotes, that contrast the
moral feelings of a Greek bishop with those of a troop of Varangian soldiers,
deserve notice.
Theophanes, the metropolitan of Thessalonica, carried his avarice so far
that he held back the payment of the salaries due to the clergy of his chapter;
and even during a year of famine refused to pay them their arrears. The Emperor
Michael happened to visit Thessalonica, and the starving priests complained to
him of the conduct of their bishop; but even the reproof of the emperor failed
to obtain justice to the claims of the clergy. Michael then determined to
punish the bishop; but, in order to expose his avarice and meanness in a public
manner, he sent one of his household to borrow a hundred pounds' weight of
gold, promising to repay the money immediately on his arrival at
Constantinople. The bishop excused himself on the score of poverty, declaring,
with the most solemn oaths, that he had only thirty pounds' weight of gold in
his palace. The emperor immediately sent a commission to search the palace, and
the sum of three thousand three hundred pounds' weight of gold was found.
Theophanes was banished to a country farm, and Prometheos named his successor.
The Varangian guard was dispersed in winter-quarters in the Thrakesian
theme, where one of the soldiers, attempting to use violence on the person of a
country-woman, she drew his sword and stabbed him. The man died on the spot;
but as soon as the foreign troops heard the true history of the affair, instead
of insisting on revenge, they applauded the woman's conduct, put her in
possession of all the property her assailant had left in his quarters, and
exposed his body without burial, as if he had committed suicide.
The only noble whose great wealth and high character excited the fears
of Michael IV, and the jealousy of the Orphanotrophos,
was Constantine Dalassenos, the man who had been
first selected as the husband of Zoe. Dalassenos was
residing on his immense estates in the Armeniac theme when he heard of the
election and marriage of Michael. The contemptuous words he was said to have
uttered sank deep in the mind of the new emperor; and Dalassenos soon received an invitation from the Orphanotrophos to visit Constantinople. He, however, declined trusting his person in the
capital until he received a solemn assurance of his safety from the emperor.
The guarantees he ventured to demand, and which Michael consented to give,
afford a curious picture of the proud position of the great nobles, and a sad
evidence of the prevalence of falsehood and treachery in the highest ranks of
society. A member of the emperor's household, in high office, was sent to Dalassenos with a piece of the holy cross, with the napkin
on which the figure of Christ was miraculously imprinted, with the autograph
letter of Christ, and with the portrait of the Virgin Mary, painted by the hand
of St. Luke; and on these sacred relics this officer swore that he had
witnessed the Emperor Michael IV take an oath that Constantine Dalassenos should suffer no injury if he visited the
capital. On this assurance Dalassenos repaired to
Constantinople, where he was well received by the emperor, and received the
title of Proconsul. But shortly after, Niketas, the
emperor’s brother, who was duke of Antioch, accused him of being privy to the
insurrection in which the imperial tax-gatherers had been slain; and on this
improbable charge Dalassenos was confined in the
island of Plate. His son-in-law Dukas was thrown into
prison, and three nobles of great wealth had their estates confiscated, for
complaining that this proceeding was a violation of the emperor's oath.
During the Bulgarian rebellion in 1040, a conspiracy was formed to
dethrone Michael. Many of the chief men in Constantinople were accused of being
privy to the plot; and though they escaped with their lives, the fortunes of
the wealthy were confiscated. Among the conspirators was Michael Ceroularios, whose guilt compelled him to protect his
person by becoming a monk. He afterwards attained the dignity of Patriarch, and
displayed the same unquiet intriguing spirit at the head of the church as he had
done in a private station.
Some seditious proceedings in the Asiatic army were suppressed by the
emperor's brother, Constantine, who put out the eyes of several officers; and
not venturing to punish their chief, Gregory the Taronite,
who was a patrician, by a local tribunal, sent that dignitary to
Constantinople, sewed up in the hide of a newly-slain ox, with only holes cut
in it for his eyes, and for breathing.
The military power of the empire was not tarnished by the conduct of
Michael IV, though he was sneered at by the aristocracy as a Paphlagonian money-changer. The Saracens vainly endeavored
to recover the possessions which had been conquered by the Christians in Syria
and Mesopotamia. The emperor’s brother, Constantine, while governor of Antioch,
displayed some military talents. He relieved Edessa when attacked by a Saracen
army. The possession of Edessa by the Byzantine emperors was a source of
continual annoyance to the Mohammedans, and their endeavours to regain it were
incessant. In the year 1038, two years after it had been relieved by
Constantine, they made use of a stratagem which has obtained immortality as an
Eastern tale, though, as a fact, it remains buried in the dullness of Byzantine
history. Varasvatzes, a Georgian, commanded in Edessa
when twelve Arabians of rank presented themselves before the gates, attended by
an escort of five hundred horse, and followed by a train of five hundred
camels, declaring that they were going on an embassy to the emperor with rich
presents from the caliph. The wary Georgian, however, distrusted their numerous
escort; and though he gave the chiefs a hospitable reception, and prepared for
them a sumptuous entertainment in his palace, he ordered the escort and the
train of camels to be encamped without the walls, and sharply watched. While
the banquet was proceeding in the city, a poor Armenian, well versed in the
Arabic language, offered his services to the travellers, and was permitted to
wander about the encampment. While standing near the wicker baskets with which
the camels had been laden, he overheard a man conversing with another, and
perceived that a band of armed men, for the purpose of surprising Edessa, was
the only present for the emperor which the camels carried. Hastening to the
palace of the governor, he succeeded in revealing the secret to the watchful
Georgian, who found an excuse for quitting his guests. A body of the garrison
was sent to overpower the cavalry, while Varasvatzes,
proceeding in person to the encampment, ordered the wicker baskets with the
presents for the emperor to be opened, and slew the concealed soldiers as they
were found. He then returned to his palace, where he ordered his guests to be
seized, and informed them of the issue of their treachery. Eleven were put to
death, and the chief, mutilated by the loss of his hands, ears, and nose, was
sent to announce the result of the adventure to the court of Bagdad.
The ravages of the Saracen fleets from Africa and Sicily were now more
destructive than the incursions of their armies in Asia. Myra in Lycia,
and many towns in the Cyclades, were plundered in 1034; but in the following
year, when two separate fleets returned to renew these devastations, they were
both defeated by the governors of the Thrakesian and Kibyrraiot themes, and the
prisoners were treated as pirates, and impaled along the Asiatic coast from Adramyttium to Strobilos.
To prevent the recurrence of these plundering expeditions, it was
resolved to carry the war into Sicily with the greatest vigour. Maniakes, who
had distinguished himself as governor of Vaspourakan,
was charged with the task of expelling the Saracens from the island. Abulaphar, the emir of Sicily, having formed an alliance
with the empire, received the title of Magistros; but
his authority was contested by his brother Abucab,
and Sicily was involved in a civil war. In the meantime, the independence of
the Sicilian chiefs was so great, that many continued their piratical
expeditions against the Christians, in spite of the friendly relations
established with the emirs. The civil war, however, enabled the Byzantine
troops to enter Sicily as allies of Abulaphar, and
they met with such success that the two brothers became alarmed, and,
forgetting their differences, united to get rid of allies who promised soon to
become masters. The moment appeared favorable for
expelling the Saracens from the island; and Michael ordered Maniakes, who
commanded the Byzantine forces in Italy, to cross the straits of Messina, and
sent a powerful fleet, under his brother-in-law Stephen, to assist the
operations of the army. Among the troops that Maniakes had assembled in
Calabria were three hundred Norman mercenaries, whose skill in arms had already
obtained for them the highest military reputation, AD 1038.
Messina was taken by storm, and though a large army of Saracens arrived
from Africa to defend their countrymen, the Sicilians were completely defeated
by Maniakes at a place called Remata. This victory
enabled the Byzantine general to subdue the greater part of the island, and he
employed the winter in constructing citadels in the towns he had conquered, in
order to keep the inhabitants in check; for the number of Saracen proprietors
settled in the island, and their spirit of local independence, combined with
the financial exigencies of the Byzantine administration, threatened the
Byzantine government with a violent opposition. The importance of the exploits
of Maniakes, and the solidity of his buildings, are attested by the renown of
his name and the relics of his works. The thick walls and massive round towers
of the citadel he constructed at Syracuse still bear the name of the Castle of
Maniakes, and show us how much of the strength and stability of Roman
architecture survived in the Byzantine system of fortification in the eleventh
century. The site of another of his works retains his name, situated on the
roots of Mount Etna; but all the remains have disappeared in constructing the
modern town of Bronte.
In the spring of 1040, another African army arrived in Sicily, to
support the Mohammedan domination. Maniakes made his dispositions for a battle
with his usual talent, and, confident of success, he ordered Stephen, the
admiral of the fleet, to make dispositions for cutting off the retreat of the
Africans. The Byzantine army was worthy of its general, and the invaders were
completely routed at a place called Draginas; but the
incapacity and misconduct of Stephen allowed the beaten troops to escape on
board their fleet, and put to sea. Maniakes was indignant at this proof of
negligence or cowardice. On meeting Stephen, he lost all command over his
temper, and reproached the emperor’s brother-in-law with his unfitness for his
station; and when the admiral ventured to reply in an insolent manner, the
proud Maniakes, recollecting the caulker, and forgetting the prince, struck him
on the head with the seiromast (a kind of
javelin) in his hand. This outbreak of passion caused the loss of Sicily.
Stephen complained to the Orphanotroph of the
aristocratic insolence of Maniakes, and accused him of a design to rebel; which
appeared no improbable accusation, when brought against a man who dared to
strike the emperor’s brother-in-law in the presence of many officers of the
army. Maniakes was arrested, and sent prisoner to Constantinople, and Stephen
was appointed his successor in the government of Sicily. Under a leader so
incompetent, the affairs of the Christians soon fell into confusion. Fresh
bands of Saracens arrived from Africa; the Byzantine authorities were driven
from the towns conquered by Maniakes; the army under the command of Stephen was
everywhere worsted; and in a short time Messina alone preserved its allegiance
to the government at Constantinople, being preserved by the valour of its
governor Katakalon.
The Patzinaks renewed their invasions of the European provinces in the
year 1034, when they extended their ravages almost to the walls of
Thessalonica. Two years after, they again invaded the empire and wasted Thrace
with unusual barbarity, carrying off five imperial officers of high rank as
prisoners.
In the year 1040, Servia, which had submitted to the Emperor Basil II,
became so discontented with the fiscal measures of the Orphanotrophos,
that the people rose in rebellion and shook off the Byzantine yoke. Stephen Bogislav placed himself at the head of his countrymen and
expelled the imperial authorities. The success of his rebellion was promoted by
the seizure of a vessel, with a thousand pounds’ weight of gold
belonging to the imperial treasury, which was driven on the coast of Illyria.
The emperor demanded the restitution of this sum, and when it was refused, sent
George Provatas with a large army to reduce Stephen
to obedience. The Byzantine troops were defeated through the incapacity of
their general, and the independence of Servia firmly established and tacitly
recognised.
The fiscal exactions of John the Orphanotrophos produced another rebellion, which threatened to deprive the empire of the
fruits of the long campaigns of Basil II. The land-tax or tribute of the
Slavonian population had been left, by their conqueror, on the footing it had
been established by Samuel when he founded the kingdom of Achrida, and
consisted of a moderate payment in kind annually for each yoke of oxen and each strema of vineyard. Michael IV, at the advice
of his brother, ordered a tax to be levied in money in lieu of the established
payments, and the discontent caused by the measure prepared the population for
revolt. While everything proclaimed an approaching rebellion, a Bulgarian
slave, named Peter Deleanos, fled from his master at
Constantinople, and, on reaching Belgrade on the Danube, announced himself to
be the grandson of Samuel, king of Achrida. He was soon joined by numbers of
discontented Bulgarians, and was proclaimed king. His hopes of being able to
resist the power of the Byzantine government lay in the Slavonian population of
Macedonia and Epirus, not in the Bulgarians of the plains between the Danube
and Mount Haemus. He succeeded in making himself master of many strong places
in the theme of Dyrrachium, and he commenced the revolution by murdering all
the Greeks who fell into his hands. Basil Synnadenos,
the governor of Dyrrachium, advanced against him, hoping to extinguish the
revolt in its birth; but some intrigues at Constantinople caused him to lose
his place, and one of his officers, who was named his successor, proved
incapable of executing the plan of operations already traced out. The new
governor threw everything into confusion; and a large body of troops in the
province consisting of Slavonians, they cast off their allegiance to the
emperor, and proclaimed one of their own officers, Teichomeros,
king of Bulgaria. Deleanos and Teichomeros agreed to act as allies, and divide the territory from which they might be able
to expel the Byzantine officers; but when the two Slavonian armies formed a
junction, Deleanos succeeded in persuading the
soldiers to put Teichomeros to death in order to
preserve the unity of the kingdom.
The rebels were now sufficiently powerful to advance against
Thessalonica, where the Emperor Michael had fixed his residence, in order to
pay his devotions at the celebrated shrine of St. Demetrius. Alarmed at the
threatening aspect of the revolution, and the unprepared state of the central
authorities in Macedonia and Greece, he hastened to Constantinople to expedite
warlike preparations, leaving a Bulgarian named Ibatzes in charge of his baggage, with orders to follow him to the capital. Ibatzes fled to Deleanos, and
delivered all the treasure intrusted to his care to the new monarch. In the
meantime, Alusianos, the younger brother of Ladislas, the last king of Achrida, witnessing the rapid
progress of the rebellion, and disgusted with the avarice and injustice of the Orphanotrophos, quitted Theodosiopolis,
of which he was governor, and joined Deleanos in his
camp at Ostrovos. He was intrusted with the command
of a division of the Bulgarian army, and ordered to undertake the siege of
Thessalonica, where he conducted his military operations so ill, that he was
very soon defeated by the imperial troops, and lost about 15,000 men. The
splendour of the victory was of course attributed to St. Demetrius, who was
reported to have taken the command of the Greeks in person. The failure before
Thessalonica was in some degree compensated by the capture of Dyrrachium, which
had already fallen into the hands of Kaukanos, one of
the Bulgarian generals. While these operations were going on in the north, a Sclavonian army under Anthimos invaded Greece, and
endeavored to rouse their countrymen in the Peloponnesus to take up arms. The
inhabitants of Thebes, which was then a wealthy and populous manufacturing
city, boldly took the field to defend the cause of the Greek population, but
were defeated with great loss.
The oppressive conduct of the Byzantine fiscal agents had been so
general, that the Greeks were in some places more inclined to favour the
Bulgarian revolution than to support the central government of
Constantinople. The people in the theme of Nicopolis murdered Koutzomytes, the tax-collector of the
province, and invited the Bulgarians to their assistance, who easily rendered
themselves masters of all western Greece. The city of Naupaktos (Lepanto) was alone preserved in its allegiance by the presence of its
garrison.
It was fortunate for the Byzantine empire that the political government
of the rebels was directed by men destitute of talent and honesty, for the
minds of the Greek population were in general so alienated, and the amount of
the imperial forces in Greece was so trifling, that it would not have been a
difficult matter to have subdued the whole country. But in place of attending
to the public cause, Deleanos and Alusianos turned all their attention to intrigue. The first felt that, if he could not
destroy his rival, he should lose his throne; and the other feared that his
royal blood and his recent defeat would cost him his life. At last Alusianos found an opportunity of seizing the king by
treachery, and, putting out his sovereign’s eyes, he assumed the vacant crown.
But bred up amidst the luxuries of Byzantine civilization, and caring little
for Slavonian nationality, he preferred enduring the insolence of the Orphanotrophos to encountering the hardships of a
revolutionary war. He deserted his countrymen, resigned the title of king, and
made his peace with the court of Constantinople.
The Emperor Michael IV was now suffering under a severe attack of
dropsy, in addition to repeated paroxysms of his old malady; but he displayed
the greatest energy from the moment that the Bulgarian rebellion broke out. He
was well aware that he could not hope to survive for any length of time, but
his mind seemed to gain vigour from his anxiety to transmit the sceptre he held
without degradation to his successor. He assembled an army at Thessalonica, and
accompanied its movements, though his disease had made such progress that he
was lifted from his horse every evening utterly exhausted. The Bulgarian army,
left without a leader by the treachery of Alusianos,
was defeated and destroyed. The blind Deleanos and
the deserter Ibatzes were both taken prisoners, and
in one campaign the dying emperor reduced all the Bulgarians and Sclavonians who had taken arms to submission, and restored
tranquillity in Macedonia, Epirus, and Greece. This vigorous and noble conduct
closed the reign of Michael. He returned to Constantinople to die.
The people, who looked on his original malady as a divine judgment, were
confirmed in this superstition by the prodigies they witnessed during his
reign. Hailstones fell which killed men at their work; earthquakes followed one
another with fearful rapidity; meteors blazed in the sky so bright, that the
stars were rendered invisible at midnight; and a pestilence visited various
parts of the empire with such terrible mortality that the living found it
difficult to bury the dead. Taxation
also began to press with increasing severity on a stationary society, so
that, in spite of Michael’s charitable works his building churches,
monasteries, and hospitals his death was awaited with impatience by his
subjects, in the hope that it would deliver the empire from the effects of
divine wrath. Michael himself participated in the superstition of the people,
and when he felt his end approaching, he retired from the imperial palace to
the monastery of St. Anarghyros, where he assumed the
habit of a monk. He died a few days after, on the 10th of December 1041, having
reigned seven years and eight months.
Reign of Michael V Kalaphates,
or the Caulker, A.D. 1042
The Empress Zoe now assumed the direction of the administration as the
lawful heiress of the empire, and in virtue of the will of her deceased
husband, and she attempted to carry on her government with the assistance of
the eunuchs of her household. But a few days' experience of the toils
which were imposed on the sovereign by the Byzantine system of administration
soon showed her both the inconveniences and dangers of her position. Though the
Athenian Irene had ruled the empire as absolute mistress for some years, and
several female regents had presided over the government at different times,
still the traditional aversion of the Roman state to female sway was not
entirely extinct. Zoe, therefore, immediately perceived the necessity of giving
the empire a male sovereign, and she took only three days to choose between
adopting a son or marrying a husband. Michael the son of Stephen, the unlucky
governor of Sicily, had been raised to the rank of Caesar by his uncle Michael
IV, and he had the reputation of being a man of capacity and energy; but his
uncle, who seems to have formed a more correct judgment of his disposition than
the world at large, had seen so much to distrust in his character that he had
excluded him from all share of public business, and given him no hope of
mounting the throne as his successor. Zoe, too, displayed more confidence in
his talents than in his principles; for before placing the crown on his head,
she required him to swear in the most solemn manner that he would ever regard
her as his benefactress, and treat her as his mother. She also required him to
banish the Orphanotrophos, Constantine the domestikos, and George the protovestiarios.
Michael promised everything and obtained the crown.
But as soon as he felt himself firmly established in power, he revealed
his meanness of soul, and treated his benefactress with insolence as well as
ingratitude. He recalled the Orphanotrophos to his
counsels, and conferred on him the high dignity of despot; but he soon
neglected his advice, and placed all his confidence in Constantine, whom he honoured
with the rank of nobilissimus. He then began to
intrigue against the Patriarch Alexios. After
receiving the Patriarch with honour, and bestowing on him a donation of four
lb. of gold, he appointed a meeting with him at a monastery on the Bosphorus,
intending to exclude him from the city, and get a new Patriarch elected during
his absence. At last he carried his presumption so far as to send the
Empress Zoe to Prince’s Island, and compel her to adopt the monastic habit. But
when the people heard of this last instance of his ingratitude, which he had
the insolence to announce in a public proclamation, their fury burst through
every restraint. They assailed the imperial heralds and paraded the city,
exclaiming that “the caulker” had ceased to reign, and that they
would scatter his bones abroad like dust. An assembly was held in the Church of
St. Sophia, to which Theodora was brought from the monastery of Petrion, and proclaimed empress with her sister. In the
meantime the emperor, alarmed at the progress of the sedition, brought Zoe back
to the palace, and attempted to pacify the people by persuading her to appear
at a balcony overlooking the hippodrome. The sight of Michael, however, who
endeavoured to address the assembly, revived the popular fury, and preparations
were made to storm the palace. The emperor now showed himself a coward as well
as a tyrant, and wished to fly to the monastery of Studion. His uncle
Constantine, however, made him understand that his only hope of life was in
preserving the throne, and roused him to take measures for defending the
palace.
The attack was made on the following day, and after a long defence the
people, who assaulted it in three divisions from the hippodrome, the court of
guard, and the tchukanisterion, stormed the palace.
Katakalon, who saved Messina, had just returned from Sicily, and happening to
be at the palace, directed the defensive arrangements, while Constantine the nobilissimus, assembling all his household in arms, added
to the strength of the guards. The fury of the people overcame all resistance;
but it is said that three thousand were slain before they forced their entrance
into the interior of the building. Everything was then plundered, and the
public registers were destroyed. Michael V and his uncle Constantine succeeded
in escaping to the monastery of Studion during the confusion. Zoe immediately
assumed the ensigns of the imperial power, and endeavoured to force her sister
Theodora back into retirement, but the senate and people insisted that the two
sisters should reign conjointly. Though Zoe was eager to tyrannize over her
sister, she showed a disposition to spare her own tyrant Michael. She was,
however, compelled by Theodora and the senate to join in his condemnation, for
the populace shouted incessantly, “Let him be impaled, let him be
crucified, let his eyes be put out!” Officers were therefore sent to drag him
from his asylum and put out his eyes. When placed beside his uncle in the Sigma
to suffer his sentence, he meanly entreated the executioners to put out the
eyes of Constantine first; and that daring eunuch submitted to the punishment
with the greatest firmness, while the dethroned emperor excited the contempt of
the people by his cries and moans. They were then sent to pass the remainder of
their lives as monks in the monastery of Elegmos.
Michael the Caulker sate on the imperial throne four months and five days.
The joint government of Zoe and Theodora lasted less than two months. We
need not wonder, therefore, that it is praised by all historians, for the
salutary effects of a violent display of popular indignation were sure to
extend over the whole period. Byzantine officials moderated their exactions in
alarm, and the two empresses were reminded by the empty chambers of their
palace that public opinion was not always to be despised with impunity. In
order to secure the support of the imperial council of state, and of the
municipality of Constantinople or of the Roman senate and people, as these
bodies proudly styled themselves numerous promotions were made and large
donations lavished. An ordinance was published prohibiting the sale of official
situations, for this species of traffic had been rendered an ordinary source of
revenue by the eunuchs of the imperial household, who had possessed themselves
of most of the highest offices of the state. At the same time strict orders
were issued to enforce the administration of justice with impartiality, and to
restrain oppressive conduct on the part of the fiscal agents of government.
The unprincipled manner in which the adventurers and eunuchs, who had
been introduced into the public service since the death of Basil II,
appropriated the funds in the imperial treasury to their own use, deserves particular
notice. Great deficiencies were detected in the accounts of the short financial
administration of the nobilissimus Constantine; and
the ministers of Zoe and Theodora found it necessary to examine him personally,
in order to discover how the money had been employed. The blind monk, knowing
that he had no chance of ever quitting the monastery in which he was confined,
candidly informed the new ministers that he had abstracted the sum of 5300 lb.
of gold from the treasury for his own use, and deposited it in a vaulted
cistern attached to his palace, near the Church of the Holy Apostles.
The two sisters appeared always together at the meetings of the senate,
and when they held courts of justice, or gave public audiences; but it was
evident their union would not prove of long duration. Zoe was jealous of her
sister, and though she was eager to be relieved of the burden of public
business, she was determined not to allow Theodora to conduct it alone probably
the more so, because Theodora showed great aptitude in state affairs, and took
great pleasure in performing her administrative duties. Zoe, therefore,
bethought herself of looking out for a third husband, to whom she might resign
the throne, and thus deprive her sister of the influence she was rapidly acquiring.
Zoe was now sixty-two years old, and, the age of passion having passed away,
her memory reverted to the merits of Constantine Dalassenos,
who had been destined by her father to be her first husband. She invited that
proud noble to an interview in the imperial palace, in order to judge of his
character before revealing her purpose. But in place of the splendid and
gallant nobleman of her imagination, she met a stern old man, who expressed
strongly his disapprobation of the whole system of the imperial administration
since the death of Basil II; who openly blamed the vices of the court, and
hardly concealed his contempt for her own conduct. Such a husband might have
infused new vigour into the lethargic system of government, but Zoe was not
inclined to submit her actions to the control of so severe a master.
She turned, therefore, to one of her former lovers, Constantine Artoklinas; but when his wife heard of the honor to which he was destined, she displayed none of the
meekness of the wife of Romanus III. Artoklinas suddenly sickened and died, and his wife was supposed to have poisoned him,
either from jealousy, or from her aversion to be immured in a convent Zoe was
easily consoled. She again selected an old admirer, Constantine Monomachos, who had been banished to Mitylene by the jealousy of Michael IV, but recalled on the accession of Zoe and
Theodora, and named Judge of Greece. A swift-rowing galley was despatched to
convey him to the capital, where, on his arrival, he was invested with the
Imperial robes. His marriage with Zoe was celebrated by one of the clergy, for
the Patriarch Alexios declined officiating at a third
marriage of the empress, which was doubly uncanonical, since both the
bridegroom and the bride had been twice married. Nevertheless, on the day after
the marriage ceremony, the Patriarch crowned the emperor with the usual
solemnities.
Constantine IX Monomachus. A.D.
1042-1054
The reign of Constantine IX demands more attention from the historian of
the Byzantine Empire than the worthless character of the man or the feeble
policy of his cabinet appears at first glance to require. It typifies the
moral degradation into which Byzantine society had fallen, for his vices were
tolerated, if not approved of, by a large portion of his subjects. His open
profligacy expresses the immorality of the age; his profusion indicated the
general manner of living among all classes of his subjects; and while he
destroyed the civil organisation of the government, and undermined the
discipline of the Roman armies, they wasted the national capital and diminished
the resources of the empire.
The domestic profligacy of Zoe had been concealed from the public by the
household of eunuchs that surrounded her, and by whom the inhabitants of the
palace were kept completely separated from the world without its walls. But her
third husband, Constantine Monomachos, was so
indifferent to all feelings of self-respect as to make an open parade of his
vices at the public ceremonies of the court. After he had buried two wives, he
obtained the favour of a beautiful young widow belonging to the powerful and
wealthy family of Skleros. She was the granddaughter of that celebrated Bardas,
who had disputed the empire with Basil II, and the daughter of Romanes Skleros,
the brother-in-law of the Emperor Romanus III. The eminence of her family
eclipsed the name of her husband, and she was called Skleraina.
Infatuated by love for Constantine Monomachos, she
openly assumed the position of his mistress, and shared his banishment at Mitylene. It is, however, only justice to the character of
the fair Skleraina to observe that, in the opinion of
the bigoted members of the Greek church, her position of mistress, as being
less uncanonical, was more respectable than it would have been had she become
the third wife of her lover. When Zoe raised Constantine to the throne, he
bargained to retain his mistress, and the people of Constantinople were treated
to the singular spectacle of an emperor of the Romans making his public
appearance with two female companions dignified with the title of empress, one
as his wife and the other as his mistress. Skleraina was regularly saluted with the title of Augusta, and installed in apartments in
the palace, with a separate court as empress, and a rank equal to that held by
Theodora. Zoe and she lived together on the best terms, and the want of
jealousy of the aged wife is less surprising than her want of self-respect. The
disposition of the beautiful Skleraina was extremely
amiable, and she was respected to a certain degree for the constancy of her
attachment to her lover in his misfortunes, which contrasted with the behaviour
of Zoe, who had never allowed any passion, however violent, to retain permanent
hold of her heart. She soon lost whatever popularity she enjoyed with the
people, on account of the lavish expenditure of the emperor. She had possessed
an ample fortune when Constantine was an impoverished exile, and her wealth had
been consumed to gratify her lover’s luxurious habits. The good-natured sensualist
now strove to repay Skleraina with unbounded
liberality. Her apartments were rendered more splendid than any Constantinople
had yet seen, her elegant manners created round her a graceful court, which
seemed more brilliant from its contrast with the dull ceremony that reigned in
the apartments of Zoe and Theodora. As the populace can rarely be so completely
corrupted in their moral feelings as their superiors, the extravagant
expenditure of the emperor on his concubine awakened the public indignation.
They felt the financial oppression more grievous when they saw their money
employed to insult their feelings, and they began to fancy that the lives of
Zoe and Theodora might be in danger in a palace where vice was honoured, and
where secret murder was supposed to be an ordinary occurrence.
Constantine IX had pursued his career of voluptuous extravagance for two
years, without a thought of his duties either to God or to his subjects, when
he was suddenly awakened to a sense of the danger of his situation by a furious
sedition of the people. On the feast of the Forty Martyrs it was usual for the
emperor to walk in solemn procession to the Church of our Saviour in Chalke,
from whence he proceeded on horseback to the Church of the Martyrs. But as the
procession was about to move from the palace, a cry was raised, “Down with Skleraina; we will not have her for empress! Zoe and
Theodora are our mothers we will not allow them to be murdered!”. The fury of
the populace was ungovernable, and they made an attempt to lay hands on the
emperor, to tear him to pieces. Many persons were trodden to death in the
tumult, and Constantine was in imminent danger of his life, when the sudden
appearance of Zoe and Theodora at a balcony drew off the attention of the
crowd, and allowed the emperor to escape. The sisters assured the people that
they were not in the smallest danger, and as no leaders stepped forward to
direct the populace, tranquillity was easily restored; but the emperor did not
accompany the procession to the Church of the Forty Martyrs in the year 1044.
There are some articles in the expenditure of Constantine IX which
indicate that he lived in an enlightened age, and reigned over a civilized
people. To solace his conscience, he constructed houses of refuge for the aged
and hospitals for the poor, as well as monasteries and churches for the clergy.
He also raised the most distinguished literary men of his time to high offices.
He completed the rebuilding the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem, and
augmented the endowments of the clergy of St. Sophia’s, in order that service
might be performed with due pomp every day.
In order to fill the treasury, when he had drained it by his lavish
expenditure, he adopted a measure which proved ruinous to the empire, and was
an immediate cause of the success of the Seljouk Turks in Asia Minor. The frontier provinces of the East had been exempted from
the payment of direct taxes to the central government, and the dependent states
in alliance with the empire in that quarter had been relieved from tribute, on
the condition of maintaining bodies of regular militia constantly under arms, to
defend their territories. Constantine IX consented to relieve them from these
obligations, on their paying a sum of money into his exhausted treasury. By
this impolitic proceeding, an army of fifty thousand men on the Iberian and
Armenian frontiers was disbanded, and the Asiatic provinces left open to the
invasion of the Seljouk Turks, whose power was
rapidly increasing. The money remitted to Constantinople was quickly despatched
in luxury and vice.
The death of the Patriarch Alexios, who died
in the year 1043, after having ruled the Byzantine Church upwards of seventeen
years with some reputation, afforded a sad confirmation of the depraved state
of society, and the frightful extent to which avarice had corrupted the Eastern
clergy. The emperor, who knew that the Patriarch had heaped up considerable
sums of money in a monastery he had constructed, sent and seized this treasure,
which was found to amount to the sum of 2500 lb. of gold. Michael Keroularios, who had been compelled to enter a monastery on
account of the part he had taken in a conspiracy against Michael IV, was
appointed Patriarch, and distinguished himself by his violent proceedings in
the disagreement between the sees of Rome and
Constantinople.
Theodora, though by her sister’s marriage she was deprived of all direct
influence over the administration, still possessed the power of violating the
law with impunity. John the Orphanotrophos was seized
by her order while living tranquilly in banishment at Marykatos,
and deprived of sight. It was said by some that this cruel deed was executed
without the emperor’s permission, but others attributed it to revenge on the
part of Constantine, who ascribed his long exile at Mitylene to the malice of the Orphanotrophos. We must
recollect, however, that Theodora was of a sterner and more unforgiving temper
than her brother-in-law, and that she had probably good reason for complaining
of the conduct of the orphanotrophos, even when he
was minister of Romanus III. In any case, it is a sufficient proof of the
disorganization of the administration that the act is ascribed to Theodora by
Zonaras, who was himself a minister, and that it was inflicted without even the
formality of a legal sentence.
A weak and lavish court, surrounded by a proud and wealthy aristocracy,
under the government of an absolute sovereign, is the hotbed of rebellion.
Constantine IX had ascended the throne, without any merit of his own, by the
shameless preference of a worthless old woman. It is not surprising, therefore,
that many nobles should have attempted to wrench the sceptre from his hand; but
it is a strong proof of the original excellence of the organization of the
Byzantine system of administration that all these attempts proved unsuccessful.
The conservative tendencies of society, which had grown out of the system of
government, presented a passive resistance to all revolutionary endeavours to
disturb the established order of things. A sedition in Cyprus, however,
occurred even before Constantine IX, mounted the throne. No sooner was it known
throughout the empire that Michael V had been dethroned by a popular
insurrection, and that the government of Zoe and Theodora was not likely to
prove of long duration, than Theophilos Erotikos, the governor of Cyprus, formed the project of gaining
possession of that rich island for himself during the threatened confusion. Theophilos was a turbulent and presumptuous man, of ability
far inferior to his ambition. Two years previous to his rebellion in Cyprus he
had been driven from Servia, which he then governed, by Stephen Bogislav; he now incited the people to attack
Theophylaktos, the intendant of finance, on the ground that this officer
collected the taxes with undue rigor. Theophylaktos was slain, and the governor
expected that, in removing a check on his plot, he had succeeded in
compromising the inhabitants so far as to secure their support to his ambitious
project. Constantine IX, however, immediately on assuming the government,
despatched a force to suppress the revolt, and as the Cypriots had no idea of
waging war against the central government at Constantinople, or of aiding Theophilos to assume the imperial crown, they offered no
resistance, and the governor was arrested and sent a prisoner to the capital.
The insurrection was considered so contemptible that Theophilos was exhibited to the people at the public games in a female dress, and escaped
with the confiscation of his estates.
The rebellion of Maniakes, which occurred in the first year of the reign
of Constantine IX, would in all probability have deprived him of the throne,
had it not been suddenly terminated by one of those strokes of fortune by which
Heaven deranges the wisest plans and destroys the most powerful expeditions.
Maniakes was released from confinement at the death of Michael IV, and
reappointed to the command of the Byzantine possessions in Italy. He found the
Italians everywhere in rebellion, and the chief military power in the hands of
the Norman mercenaries, who had formed themselves into an independent community:
the cities of Bari, Brindisi, Otranto, and Tarento were alone occupied by Byzantine garrisons. The moment Maniakes landed, he
commenced his military operations with the vigour and skill for which he was so
remarkable. He defeated the Normans in a well-contested battle between Monopoli and Matera; and as these two towns had shown a
hostile disposition, he allowed them to be plundered by his troops, and even
ordered two hundred of the principal inhabitants of the latter to be
decapitated for favouring the Normans. The animosity between the Greeks and
Italians was now so violent that the success of the Normans and the separation
of the two churches were produced rather by the hatred of the parties than by
the superior valour of the Normans, or by any religious arguments of the
clergy. Though the Italians were destitute of the virtue and endurance
necessary to gain their independence, they possessed at this time an able and
active leader, Arghyros, the son of Mel, and it was
in moral far more than in military qualities that they were inferior to the
northern mercenaries.
The progress of Maniakes was suddenly arrested by the news that
Constantine Monomachos, the lover of Skleraina, was named emperor, for Maniakes was engaged in
violent contests with her brother, Romanes Skleros, concerning the limits of
their hereditary estates in Asia Minor. Romanes, who had the courage to contend
personally with the fiery Maniakes, as his father had contended with Prusianos, the Bulgarian prince, had received some deep
insults, for which he now avenged himself by seducing his enemy's wife and
seizing the disputed property. Maniakes knew that there was no hope of
obtaining justice from the emperor, over whom Skleraina exercised unbounded influence; he resolved, therefore, to administer justice in
his own cause. He immediately recruited his army with all the Norman and other
mercenaries he was able to collect in Italy, and proclaimed himself emperor.
Constantine IX, the moment he heard of the rebellion, sent an officer with a
body of troops to arrest Maniakes, expecting that it would be as easy to do so
on this occasion as it had proved in Sicily. But Maniakes fell on the Byzantine
troops at the moment of their arrival, routed them, and, gaining possession of
the treasure they had brought, embarked his own army at Otranto, and landed at
Dyrrachium, in the month of February, 1043. The emperor sent an army, under the
command of one of Zoe’s eunuchs, named Stephen, to arrest the progress of the
rebel. Maniakes, despising the unwarlike character of his opponent, attacked
the imperial army near Ostrovos. His charge bore down
everything, and victory seemed assured to his standard, when an arrow from an
unknown hand pierced him to the heart. His death left his followers without a
cause, as well as without a leader, and they instantly retired from the field
of battle. The Norman, Frank, and Italian mercenaries in the rebel army entered
the Byzantine service, and continued for many years to make a prominent figure
in the wars of the empire. The victorious eunuch made his public entry into
Constantinople mounted on a white charger, with the head of Maniakes borne
before him on a lance.
Stephen’s accidental success awakened his ambition, and when he found,
on his return to the capital, that the emperor did not estimate his services as
highly as he considered was their due, he began to plot against him. He
selected Leo, the governor of Melitene, as the future emperor, but his
intrigues were discovered. Leo and his son Lampros were deprived of sight, but Stephen was only immured in a monastery after his
estates were confiscated.
In the year 1047, Constantine IX was again in danger of losing his
throne by the rebellion of his own relation, Leo Tornikios. The character of
Leo rendered him extremely popular at Adrianople, where he resided. To remove
him from the seat of his influence, the emperor named him governor of Iberia,
where he was soon accused of aspiring to the throne. Constantine IX, jealous of
his talents and popularity, ordered him to resign his governorship and adopt
the monastic life; but the friends of Tornikios put him on his guard in time to
enable him to escape to Adrianople, where he was immediately proclaimed
emperor. At the head of the garrison of that city, and such motley forces as he
could assemble on the spur of the occasion, he marched to Constantinople. He
hoped to render himself master of the capital by the favour of the citizens,
counting more on their aversion to the emperor's conduct than on the military
force under his own orders. But the inhabitants feared a military revolution
far more than they hated their sovereign. Constantine also, on receiving the
first information of the revolt, despatched orders to a Saracen eunuch, who
commanded a corps of Byzantine troops in Iberia, to march rapidly to the
capital, with all the forces he could concentrate on the way.
Tornikios encamped before the walls in the month of September, and being
unable to invest the line of the fortifications from the port to the Sea of
Marmora, established himself before the gate of Blachern.
The emperor, who, in spite of his warlike surname, was utterly ignorant of
military affairs, ordered a party of a thousand men to intrench themselves
outside this gate. The operation was undertaken against the advice of his
military counsellors; and, to see the result of his own tactics, the emperor placed
himself in a balcony overhanging the walls, in mil view of the position of his
advanced, guard. Tornikios immediately took advantage of the imperial folly; he
stormed the intrenchment, and the rebel archers, sending a flight of arrows at
the balcony, compelled the emperor and his court to abandon their position with
ludicrous celerity, amidst the derisive cheers of the citizens as well as of
the enemy. But Tornikios, proud of the day’s exploit, and trusting always to
the delusive hope that the inhabitants would open the gates, delayed pressing
the assault as the fugitives were entering within the walls. Next day, when he
found the people would hold no communication with him, he ordered a general
assault. The garrison had employed the whole night in making preparations to
meet it; and as the defence was intrusted to experienced officers, and the
citizens supported the regular troops, to save their property from the danger
to which it would be exposed if a victorious enemy entered the city, Tornikios
was defeated with considerable loss. He now found it necessary to raise the
siege and retire to Arcadiopolis. Shortly after, he
attacked the city of Rhedestos, and the bishop
keeping the inhabitants firm in their allegiance, he was again defeated. His
cause now became desperate; for the news reaching his camp that the Asiatic
troops had arrived at Constantinople, his followers quitted his standard, and
he was forced to seek refuge in a church, from which he was taken by force, and
sent to the emperor in chains. On Christmas Eve he was deprived of his sight.
In the year 1050, several nobles of distinction were accused of
conspiring to dethrone the emperor. The accusation may have been nothing more
than a court intrigue or a fiscal measure, for only one was punished by the
confiscation of his estates.
Another plot shows the contemptible condition to which the imperial
power had fallen in the estimation of the courtiers. Boilas,
a man of low birth, had gained the favour of Constantine IX by his talents for
buffoonery and his capacity for business. He amused the emperor by his wit, and
relieved him from much embarrassment by his application. Boilas being utterly destitute of all principle, and possessing little judgment with a
daring character, conceived the preposterous idea of making himself emperor. He
knew that he was fitter to fill the throne than the reigning emperor, and he
thought the court so worthless that he expected to succeed in his design. He
applied to several persons in high office to secure their assistance, and found
intriguers and malcontents who were willing to make him an instrument in their
hands, while he believed he was using them as the servants of his own ambition.
The conspiracy was revealed on the very night it had been resolved to
assassinate Constantine; but it seems the emperor was never persuaded that his favourite
was really guilty, for he soon restored him to his office, in order to enjoy
his buffoonery.
The reign of Basil II marks the summit of the military power of the
Byzantine Empire. In the reign of Constantine IX the first traces of decay are
visible in the military system, which, for three centuries and a half, had
upheld a standing army equal to the Saracen forces in the East, and superior to
any troops the nations of Europe had been able to maintain permanently in the
field. The alliance of the Servians and Armenians was
now lost; the Normans were allowed to acquire an independent existence in
Italy; and though the Russians and Patzinaks were defeated, the Seljouk Turks began to undermine the whole fabric of the
Byzantine power in Asia.
The disorders which attended the dethronement of Michael V induced
Stephen Bogislav, the sovereign of Servia, to invade
Illyria and Macedonia, from which he carried off immense booty, ravaging the
country like a wild beast rather than a man. Constantine IX, in order to
prevent his repeating his depredations, ordered the governor of Dyrrachium to
march into Servia with a large body of troops the garrisons of all the
neighbouring themes that could be immediately concentrated; and it was
pretended that the army consisted of sixty thousand men. The general, ignorant
of military science, trusted entirely to his numbers, which the Servians were unable to resist in the open field. He pushed
carelessly forward into the heart of the country, ravaging everything around,
and collecting booty, until he involved himself in the mountainous district,
full of narrow defiles and rugged roads. As no enemy was to be found, he here
gave the order to return to Dyrrachium; but no sooner was the retreat commenced
than the Servians resumed their activity, and Stephen
suddenly beset the passes with his army. The head and rear of the Byzantine
columns were assailed at the same time, the march was delayed, and the booty
lost. The Byzantine general, incapable of combining the movements of his
different divisions for their mutual support, and his lieutenants, ignorant of
one another's movements, were thrown into inextricable confusion. A general
attack of the Servians in one of the mountain passes
completed the rout of the army, and, if we believe the Byzantine writers, seven
generals and forty thousand men perished in this expedition.
We have already seen that the social condition of the inhabitants of
Russia in the preceding century was considerably more advanced than that of the
people in Western Europe. Their commerce with the Byzantine Empire, which had
been one of the causes of their progress in wealth and civilization, was
greatly extended during the present century; and after the conquest of Cherson,
and the decay of that flourishing city, a considerable number of Russian
merchants established themselves at Constantinople. The influence of these
traders soon became very great, for, besides the regular trade they carried on
between the north and south, they also acted as bankers for the Varangian and
Russian mercenaries in the Byzantine service, and as agents for many Bulgarian
and Slavonian landed proprietors, whose produce they purchased. About the
commencement of the year 1043, it happened that a Russian of rank was slain in
a tumult, and the sovereign of Kief, Yaroslaf, deemed
it a favourable occasion for making conquests in the Byzantine territory, as
the Normans had done in France, and the Danes in England. The Emperor
Constantine in vain offered all reasonable satisfaction; the Northmen and the
Russians were determined to try the fortune of war, for they wanted to obtain
something very different from indemnity for the consequences of a tumult in the
streets of Constantinople. An expedition, composed of Varangians and Russians,
under the command of Vladimir, son of Yaroslaf, who
had been elected prince of Novgorod by his father’s influence, and Viuchata, as his counsellor and lieutenant general, crossed
the Black Sea. The commerce of Russia was a matter of so much importance to the
capital, the Varangians and Russian mercenaries formed so valuable a part of
the imperial land-forces, and the indolent Constantine was so averse to war,
that he made a sacrifice of the punctilio of Byzantine diplomacy, and again
demanded peace when the hostile armament appeared off the entrance of the
Bosphorus. But the Russians, bent on plunder and conquest, rejected peace,
unless the emperor would engage to pay three pounds weight of gold to each
soldier in the expedition.
Constantine now made active preparations for repulsing the attack on his
capital. He had already arrested all the Russian merchants and soldiers in the
empire, and sent them into distant themes, to be guarded as prisoners until the
war should be terminated. The greater part of the Byzantine fleet was either
absent in the Archipelago or employed on the coast of Italy, but the ships in the
port of Constantinople were prepared for sea; and their size, as well as the
use of Greek fire, gave them such a superiority over the boats of the Russians
that the sailors were eager for a battle. The first naval engagement proved
indecisive, and the Russians contrived to destroy a part of the Greek fleet
which separated from the main squadron; but in another action the Russians
suffered great loss, and a storm shortly after completed the ruin of their
enterprise. In landing to plunder, their troops were also defeated. On their
retreat, a second storm overtook them in passing Varna, and their losses were
so great that, according to the accounts of their own historians, fifteen
thousand men perished. Three years elapsed before peace was re-established, but
a treaty was then concluded, and the trade at Constantinople placed on the old
footing. From this period the alliance of the Russians with the Byzantine
empire was long uninterrupted; and as the Greeks became more deeply imbued with
ecclesiastical prejudices, and more hostile to the Latin nations, the Eastern
church became, in their eyes, the symbol of their nationality, and the bigoted
attachment of the Russians to the same religious formalities obtained for them
from the Byzantine Greeks the appellation of the most Christian nation.
The Patzinaks, who still occupied the whole country from the Dnieper to
the Danube, had not repeated the ravages they committed in the year 1036. They
were occupied by wars with the Russians and with the Uzes,
a nomadic nation of Turkish race like themselves, but who proved their
irreconcilable enemies. Tyrach was at this time king
of the Patzinaks, and Keghenes, a man whose merits as
a soldier had raised him to rank, commanded the army. The fame of the general
excited the envy of the king, and Keghenes was forced
to seek shelter in the Byzantine Empire, to which he retired with a numerous
body of followers. From an island in the Danube, near Dorystolon,
in which he had intrenched himself, the Patzinak general solicited permission
to enter the empire, and Constantine IX, well pleased to gain the services of
so distinguished a warrior, gave orders that he should be honourably received. Keghenes embraced the Christian religion, and received the
title of a Roman patrician. His followers were established in forts on the
banks of the Danube, where they employed themselves in plundering the country
they had quitted. Tyrach called on the emperor to
restrain these forays, but, finding his reclamations neglected, he took
advantage of the severe winter of 1048 to cross the Danube on the ice, and
invade the empire with a numerous army. Bulgaria was ravaged, but the sudden
changes of plenty and privation to which the invaders were compelled to submit
spread disease through their ranks. The followers of Keghenes and the Byzantine troops concentrated round them, their numbers were thinned by
disease, famine, and incessant attacks, until Tyrach and his whole surviving army were compelled to surrender at discretion. Keghenes urged the Byzantine generals to put all their
prisoners to death, observing that it was wise to kill the viper when he was
benumbed, lest the returning warmth of the sun should enable him to escape and
use his venom; but the Byzantine empire was too civilised for such an act of
wholesale inhumanity, and the captive soldiers were established as agricultural
colonists on waste lands near Bardica and Naissos. It had always been one of the problems in the
Roman empire how to find the means of filling up the drain of the native
population that time seemed perpetually to sweep away with unsparing activity.
The king and many of the Patzinak nobles were sent to Constantinople, where
they embraced Christianity, and were well treated by the emperor.
In the meantime fifteen thousand of the ablest soldiers were selected from
among the prisoners, enrolled in the Byzantine army, and sent to join the
troops on the Armenian frontier, where an army was preparing to encounter a
threatened attack of the Seljouk Turks under
Togrulbeg. This body of Patzinaks was placed under the command of the patrician
Constantine Artovalan, but was formed into four
divisions under native officers. On reaching Damatrys, Kataleim, one of the Patzinak generals, persuaded his
countrymen to attempt forcing their way home. A rapid march enabled them to
reach the Bosphorus, but when they arrived at the monastery of St. Taraslos, on the narrowest part of the straits, they found
no boats to cross into Europe. Kataleim immediately
arranged a body of cavalry in order, and plunged into the stream at their head.
A sufficiency of boats was easily secured on the European side, and the whole
army transported over. Without any delay they pushed on to Sardica and Naissos, where they were joined by their countrymen, who
had been established in that country as agricultural colonists, and then,
hastening to the banks of the Danube, they occupied a strong position near the
mouth of the river Osmos. They also formed a second
camp at a place called the Hundred Hills, and from these stations plundered the
districts in their vicinity.
On hearing of this daring movement, the emperor summoned Keghenes and his followers to Constantinople. As these
troops lay encamped without the walls waiting for orders, three Patzinaks
attempted to assassinate Keghenes, but were secured
after inflicting on him some severe wounds. When brought before the emperor,
they accused Keghenes of treasonable correspondence
with the fugitives, and Constantine, with suspicious timidity, gave credit to
their improbable story, and ordered Keghenes to be
put under arrest. The immediate consequence of this false step was, that the
followers of the arrested general fled and joined their countrymen, who had
advanced to the neighbourhood of Adrianople. The emperor in his alarm released Tyrach, the Patzinak king, on receiving his oath to reduce
his countrymen to obedience; but that monarch, on regaining his liberty, laid
aside his Christianity, repudiated his promises, and placed himself at the head
of a powerful army, eager to avenge his former defeat. Two Byzantine armies
were routed with great slaughter.
Great exertions were used to assemble another army in order to repress
the ravages of the Patzinaks, who were devastating all the country between the
Danube and Adrianople. Nicephorus Bryennios took the command at the head of the
Frank and Varangian mercenaries, and the Asiatic cavalry from Telouch, Cilicia, and Mesopotamia. Keghenes was restored to favour, and sent to negotiate terms of peace with his
countrymen. The military operations circumscribed the forays of the enemy, and
the Byzantine army surprised and destroyed a number of the Patzinaks at Chariopolis; but Keghenes,
trusting himself among his countrymen, was treacherously murdered. After
many vicissitudes, the Patzinaks were forced to retreat, and concluded a
truce for thirty years.
In Italy the affairs of the empire went to ruin after the departure of
Maniakes. Constantine IX favoured Arghyros because he
had opposed Maniakes, and that chief rendered himself virtually independent,
and assumed the title of Prince of Bari and Duke of Apulia. The Normans, taking
advantage of the intrigues and dissensions that prevailed, quitted their
profession of mercenaries for that of feudal chieftains, and by taking such a
part in the wars between Arghyros and Guaimar, prince of Salerno, as their own interests
dictated, they succeeded in forming their captains into a confederation of
territorial barons, under a leader, who became count of Apulia. Their progress
excited the alarm of the emperor of Constantinople, the emperor of Germany, and
the Pope; but their services were so often in requisition by powerful rivals,
and their conduct was so prudent, that they prevented any coalition of their
enemies which might have crushed them in their early career. The Byzantine
troops were defeated, the intrigues of the emperor of Germany were baffled,
Pope Leo IX, who ventured to appeal to arms, was beaten and taken prisoner,
while the victors, as pious as politic, purchased the support of the See of
Rome from their captive by offering to hold all their conquests as a fief of
St. Peter’s chair. The schism of the Greek and Latin churches, which broke out
with great animosity about this time, increased the aversion of the Italians to
Byzantine domination, and tended quite as much as the military superiority of
the Norman troops to give stability to their government.
The capture of Otranto by the Normans under Robert Guiscard, in the year
1055, maybe considered as the termination of the Greek power in Italy.
While the Byzantine Empire was beginning to exhibit symptoms of decline
in the West, Constantine IX added to its territories in the East by destroying
the Armenian kingdom of the Bagratians, which had
long acted a brilliant part in the military history of Asia. No act, however,
could have been more unnecessary or imprudent than the annexation of the city
of Ani, the last capital of Armenian independence, to the empire, for the whole
of the Byzantine frontier was thus thrown open to the invasion of the Seljouk Turks, without the barrier of independent Christian
mountaineers that had hung on the flank of previous invaders. It has been
mentioned that the Emperor Basil II, during his campaign against the Iberians
in 1022, compelled Joannes Sembat to sign a treaty ceding, at his death, Ani and his whole kingdom to the
emperor. Constantine IX considered the moment favourable for calling on Gagik,
the nephew of Joannes, to fulfil the obligations of
this treaty; and when the Armenian objected, he formed an alliance with Aboulsewar, the Saracen emir of Tibium (Tovin), and sent a Byzantine army to attack Ani. The
treachery of the Armenian nobles aided the progress of the Byzantine and
Saracen arms. Gagik, a prince of some ability, finding it useless to struggle
with so powerful a combination, consulted the interests of his subjects by
submitting to the Christians. On receiving a safe-conduct for his person, he
repaired to plead his cause before the emperor at
Constantinople, and the city of Ani surrendered to the Byzantine troops, A.D.
1045. Gagik, finding there was no hope of preserving his ancestral kingdom,
accepted the rank of magistros, and received
extensive estates in Cappadocia. Thus the oldest Christian kingdom was erased
from the list of independent states by a Christian emperor. The only Armenian
district which continued to preserve its independence between the Byzantines
and Saracens was Kars, where Gagik Abas, a member of the family of the Bagratians, ruled as prince. The Byzantine government
carried its jealousy of the Armenians so far as to compel their Patriarch,
Peter, to quit the city of Ani and take up his residence at Arzen,
from whence they subsequently transferred him to Constantinople.
In the year 1048 the Seljouk Turks attacked
the empire. They were one of the hordes which formed itself out of the
fragments of that great Turkish Empire, whose commercial connection with
Constantinople occupied the attention of Roman statesmen in the time of
Justinian. Togrulbeg, called by the Byzantine historians Tangrolipix,
was its chief. The Turkish tribes of central Asia were now acting the part, in
the empire of the caliphs of Bagdad, which the Goths formerly acted in the
Roman Empire. Under Mahmoud the Gaznevid, the Turkish
hordes which furnished mercenaries to the caliphs founded for themselves an
empire, but the son of the Gasnevid was defeated by
new hordes, who elected Togrulbeg as their chief. This new sovereign, after
destroying the dynasty of the Bowides, became sultan
of Persia, and the limits of his dominions touched the frontiers of the
Byzantine conquests in Armenia. Togrulbeg visited Bagdad, assumed the title of
Defender of the Faith and Protector of the Caliph; and when he had rendered
himself completely master of the temporal power at Bagdad, he compelled the
haughty caliph to receive him as a son-in-law, by showing the representative of
the Prophet that he possessed the power of starving him on his sacred throne.
Eight years before Togrulbeg succeeded in establishing himself as a
sovereign in Baghdad, he sent his cousin Koutoulmish to attack the emir of Diarbekir. Koutoulmish was defeated, and compelled to
retreat to the Armenian frontier of Vasparoukan, where he solicited permission
to pass through the Byzantine territory, promising to maintain the strictest
discipline in his march. The governor of Vasparoukan refused the request of the
defeated general, and prepared to oppose the Turks, should they venture to pass
the frontier. Koutoulmish, who saw that only prompt and vigorous measures could
save him from being surrounded, attacked the Byzantine governor, routed his
army, and, carrying him away as a prisoner, sold him as a slave in Tabriz. On
his return, he vaunted so loudly the fertility of Vasparoukan, and spoke with
such contempt of the Byzantine troops, that Togrulbeg determined to invade the
empire. Hassan the Deaf was intrusted with the vanguard, amounting to twenty
thousand men, but was completely defeated near the river Stragna by Aaron the son of Ladislas, the last king of
Bulgaria, who was governor of Vasparoukan, and Katakalon the governor of Ani.
The main body of the Turkish army, however, under Ibrahim Inal,
the nephew of Togrulbeg, avenged the defeat. It was composed of Turks, Kaberoi, and Limnites. Katakalon,
an experienced general, wished to meet this army in the field, as it was
composed chiefly of infantry, or cavalry whose horses were unshod; but his
Bulgarian colleague appealed to the emperor’s instructions, which ordered his
army to await the arrival of Liparites the prince of Abasgia. The Turkish general, finding the greater part of
the wealth of the country secured in strong fortresses, advanced to attack the
populous city of Arzen, which was unfortified. The
inhabitants, trusting to their numbers and valour, had neglected to convey
their valuable effects into the impregnable fortress of Theodosiopolis,
in their neighbourhood. Arzen was at this time one of
the principal centres of Asiatic commerce, and was filled with warehouses
belonging to Syrian and Armenian merchants. The inhabitants defended themselves
against the Turks with courage for six days, by barricading the streets and
assailing the enemy from the roofs of the houses. Katakalon in vain urged his
colleague to march to the relief of the place. Ibrahim, however, felt the
danger of an attack on his rear, and, abandoning the hope of securing booty by
the taking of the place, thought only of destroying the resources it furnished
to the Byzantine government. He set fire to the place and reduced the whole of
this great commercial city to ashes. Never was so great a conflagration
witnessed before, and it has only since been rivalled by the burning of Moscow.
One hundred and forty thousand persons are said to have perished by fire and
sword, yet the Turks captured so many prisoners that the slave-markets of Asia
were filled with ladies and children from Arzen. The
Armenian historians dwell with deep feeling on this terrible calamity, for it
commenced a long series of woes which gradually destroyed all the capital
accumulated by ages of industry in the mountains of Armenia, rendering them one
of the richest and most populous districts in the East Indeed, the rain of Arzen was the first step to the dispersion of the Armenian
Christians and the desolation of Asia Minor.
As soon as Liparites effected the junction of
the Iberian and Abasgian troops with the Byzantine
army, a battle was fought with the Turks near Kapetron,
on the 18th September 1048. The loss on both sides was great and the results
indecisive, but Liparites was taken prisoner, and the
Byzantine troops retired. Ibrahim, however, found himself unable to continue
the campaign, and returned to Rey. Togrulbeg released Liparites without ransom, or rather he bestowed the ransom sent by the Byzantine emperor
on the Abasgian prince, recommending him to be always
a friend to the Turks. It is said by Arabian historians that Constantine IX, in
order to equal the generosity of Togrul, repaired the Mohammedan mosque at
Constantinople.
Negotiations were commenced between Constantine and Togrul, but they led
to no result, and Togrul invaded the Byzantine Empire in person. His first
attack was directed against the independent principality of Kars, and the
Armenians were defeated in battle, and their general, Thatoul,
taken prisoner. Thatoul was said to have wounded Arsouran, the son of the favourite minister of Togrul, and
when the captive general was led before his conqueror, the sultan told him that
if the young man died he should be put to death. To this Thatoul calmly replied, “Sultan, if the wound was inflicted by my hand, your warrior
will certainly die”. This proved true, and Togrul had the barbarity to execute
the brave Armenian, and send his head to the minister whose son had died, as a
proof that it could not slay another.
Togrul then directed his forces against the city of Manzikert, employing
in the siege an immense ballista which had been constructed by the Emperor
Basil II, which he had taken in the town of Bitlis.
This immense engine required four hundred men to drag it along, yet it proved
of little use to the Turks, for a Gaul in the Byzantine service destroyed it by
breaking over it three bottles of an inflammable mixture, while he was
approaching the camp of the besiegers as the bearer of a letter to the sultan.
The loss of this engine, however, did not abate the courage of the troops, and Alkan, the general of the Khorasmians,
promised the sultan to carry the place by assault. The governor of Manzikert
made preparations for giving the storming party a desperate reception. The
walls were garnished with engines, and the artillery was well supplied with
ponderous stones, gigantic arrows, and beams shod with iron, to launch on the
assailants. The defenders were ordered to remain carefully concealed behind the
battlements, and Alkan, after commencing the attack
with volleys of missiles, advanced to the foot of the wall, satisfied that he
had silenced the enemy. But when his men began to plant their ladders, a
tempest of stones, arrows, beams, boiling pitch, and smokeballs overwhelmed the
bravest, and the rest shrunk back. Their hesitation was the signal for a
furious sally, in which Alkan was taken prisoner, and
immediately beheaded on the city walls, in sight of the sultan. Togrul, finding
that he could not take Manzikert, gave up all hope of breaking through the
barrier of fortresses that defended the frontier of the empire, and retired
into Persia, AD 1050.
He again invaded the empire in 1052, but the Byzantine army having
received a strong reinforcement of Frank and Varangian mercenaries, showed
itself so superior to that of the Seljouk sultan in
military discipline, that Togrul thought it prudent to retire without hazarding
a battle. The military system established by Leo III and Constantine V, and
perfected by Nicephorus II, John I, and Basil II, still upheld the glory of the
Byzantine arms.
In looking back from modern times at the history of the Byzantine
empire, the separation of the Greek and Latin churches appears the most
important event in the reign of Constantine IX; but its prominency is owing, on the one hand, to the circumstance that a closer connection began
shortly after to exist between the Eastern and Western nations; and, on the
other, to the decline in the power of the Byzantine Empire, which gave
ecclesiastical affairs greater importance than they would otherwise have
merited. Had the successors of Constantine IX continued to possess the power
and resources of the successors of Leo III or Basil I, the schism would never
have acquired the political importance it actually attained; for as it related
to points of opinion on secondary questions, and details of ecclesiastical
practice, the people would have abandoned the subject to the clergy and the
church, as one not affecting the welfare of Christians, nor the interests of
Christianity. The Emperor Basil II, who was bigoted as well as pious, had still
good sense to view the question as a political rather than a religious one. He
knew that it would be impossible to reunite the two churches; he saw the
disposition of the Greek clergy to commence a quarrel, to avoid which he
endeavoured to negotiate the amicable separation of the Byzantine
ecclesiastical establishment from the papal supremacy. He proposed that the
Pope should be honoured as the first Christian bishop in rank, but that he
should receive a pecuniary indemnity, and admit the right of the Eastern Church
to govern its own affairs according to its own constitution and local usages,
and acknowledge the Patriarch of Constantinople as its head. This plan,
reasonable as it might appear to statesmen, had little chance of success. The
claim of the Bishop of Rome to be the agent of the theocracy which ruled the
Christian church was too generally admitted to allow any limits to be put to
his authority. The propositions of Basil II were rejected, but the open rupture
with Rome did not take place until 1053, when it was caused by the violent and
unjust conduct of the Greek patriarch, Michael Keroularios.
He ordered all the Latin churches in the Byzantine empire, in which mass was
celebrated according to the rites of the Western church, to be closed; and, in
conjunction with Leo, bishop of Achrida, the Patriarch of Bulgaria addressed a
controversial letter to the bishop of Trani, which
revived all the old disputes with the papal church, adding the question about
the use of unleavened bread in the holy communion. The people on both sides,
who understood little of the points contested by the clergy, adopted the simple
rule that it was their duty to hate the members of the other church; and the
Greeks, having their nationality condensed in their ecclesiastical
establishment, far exceeded the Western nations in ecclesiastical bigotry, for
the people in the western nations of Europe were often not very friendly to
papal pretensions. The extreme bigotry of the Greeks soon tended to make the
people of the Byzantine Empire averse to all intercourse with the Latins, as
equals, and they assumed a superiority over nations rapidly advancing in
activity, wealth, power, and intelligence, merely because they deemed them
heretics. The separation of the two churches proved, consequently, more
injurious to the Greeks, in their stationary condition of society, than to the
Western Christians, who were eagerly pressing forward in many paths of social
improvement.
The Empress Zoe died in the year 1050, at the age of seventy.
Constantine IX survived to the year 1054. When the emperor felt his end
approaching, he ordered himself, according to the superstitious fashion of the
time, to be transported to the monastery of Mangana,
which he had constructed. His ministers, and especially his prime-minister,
John the logothetes, and president of the senate, urged him to name Nicephorus
Bryennios, who commanded the Macedonian troops, his successor. The forms of the
imperial constitution rendered it necessary that the sovereign should be
crowned in Constantinople, and a courier was despatched to summon Bryennios to
the capital. But as soon as Theodora heard of this attempt of her
brother-in-law to deprive her of the throne she had been compelled to cede to
him, she hastened to the imperial palace, convoked the senate, ordered the
guards to be drawn out, and, presenting herself as the lawful empress, was
proclaimed sovereign of the empire with universal acclamations. The news of this
event embittered the last moments of the dying voluptuary, who hated Theodora
for the respect her conduct inspired.
Sect. III
REIGNS OF THEODORA AND MICHAEL VI
STRATIOTIKOS, OR THE WARLIKE, A.D. 1054-1057
Theodora, with a good deal of masculine vigour of character, possessed
the confined views and acrimonious passions of a recluse. Her first act
was to revenge on Bryennios the attempt which her brother-in-law had made to
deprive her of the throne. He and his partisans were banished, and his estates
confiscated. Her personal attention to the duties of a sovereign, and the
strictness with which she overlooked the general administration, proved that,
unlike her predecessor, she acted according to the dictates of her own
conscience in public affairs, and not as the passive instrument of those who
were willing, for their own ends, to relieve her from exertion. Yet she
followed the system by which the members of her family, in establishing their
despotic power, had undermined the fabric of the Byzantine administration.
Instead of selecting the ablest native senators to act as ministers and judges,
she intrusted the direction of every department of government to eunuchs of her
household, and her prime minister was Leo Strabospondyles,
an ecclesiastic, synkellos of the Patriarch of
Constantinople. She even sent one of her eunuchs to supersede Isaac Comnenos as commander-in-chief of the army placed on the
frontier to watch the movements of the Turks. Isaac belonged to one of those
great aristocratic families in Asia Minor whose wealth and power had long
excited the jealousy of the emperors; and Theodora now displayed much too
openly the distrust with which they were regarded by the central
administration. To preserve all power as much as possible in her own hands, she
presided in person in the cabinet and the senate, and even heard appeals as
supreme judge in civil cases. The performance of this last duty, though little
in harmony with the executive power, was in her age looked upon by her subjects
as a most laudable act.
Fortune favoured Theodora in the circumstances of her short reign, and
her popularity was in a great measure derived from events over which she
exercised no control. She was the last scion of a family which had upheld with
glory the institutions of the empire for nearly two centuries, which had
secured to its subjects a degree of internal tranquillity and commercial
prosperity far greater than had been enjoyed during the same period by any
equal portion of the human race, and the memory of which in succeeding years
excited deep regret in the breasts of the Greeks themselves, though the Greeks
were the body of their subjects treated with greatest neglect. During her
reign, the empire was disturbed by no civil war, nor desolated by any foreign
Invasion. The seasons were temperate, the fertility of the earth enabled the
people to enjoy the blessings of peace, and a pestilence which had previously
ravaged the principal cities of the empire suddenly ceased.
At the advanced age of seventy-six, Theodora felt herself so robust that
she looked forward to a long life; and the monks who swarmed in her palace,
observing her infatuated confidence in the vigour of her frame, flattered her
with prophecies that she was destined to reign for many years. The superstitious
feelings of the time, as well as the personal vanity of Theodora, caused her to
place implicit confidence in these ecclesiastical soothsayers; but in the midst
of her projects she was suddenly attacked by an intestine disorder that brought
her to the grave. To prevent the government falling into the hands of the
territorial aristocracy, she, with her dying breath, named Michael Stratiotikos as her successor. He had been a general of
some reputation, and an efficient member of the official establishment; but
advanced age had converted him into a decrepit general and doting senator. The
prime-minister and the eunuchs of Theodora had nevertheless suggested his
nomination, as it promised to place on the throne one who could not avoid being
an instrument in their hands. Theodora, hoping to recover her health, compelled
the new emperor to swear with the most tremendous imprecations that he would
always remain obedient to her orders, but she survived his nomination only a
few hours; and with her expired the race of Basil the Slavonian groom, and the
administrative glory of the Byzantine Empire, on the 30th of August, 1057.
The accession of Michael VI was no sooner known than the president of
the senate, Theodosios Monomachos,
nephew of Constantine IX, attempted to mount the throne, pretending a
hereditary claim to the imperial succession. To enforce his ridiculous
pretension, he armed his household slaves, who formed a numerous body,
collected assistance from his friends, assembled a mob, and, proceeding through
the streets of Constantinople at the head of this band, broke open the public
prisons and talked of revolution. His plan was to storm the palace; but the
moment his movements were made known to the officers of the native and
Varangian companies of guards on duty, they marched against him, and he was
immediately abandoned by all his followers. When he sought an asylum in St.
Sophia's, he found the doors of the church closed against him and was taken
with his son sitting on the steps. This sedition was so contemptible that the
people ridiculed the affair in a lampoon, and the emperor only banished its
leader to Pergamus.
Michael VI was a man of a limited capacity, and his faculties were now
dulled by age; yet accident intrusted him with the direction of the government
at a delicate crisis. He was called upon to maintain the integrity of the Roman
administrative system against the assaults of a territorial aristocracy, on
whom the manners of the age and the altered relations of society had conferred
powers at variance with the strict centralization of the empire. Yet the
incapacity of Michael must be regarded as having only accelerated a change
which it would have required the genius and energy of a great administrative
reformer like Leo III to avert, and which could only have been averted by
remodelling the constitution of the empire.
The administrative vigour of the government was diminished; its legal
supremacy had vanished; the connection between the provinces and the capital
was weakened; the people at a distance no longer respected the emperor as the
centre of social order and the fountain of impartial justice; ruined roads had
broken up the administrative unity of empire; great nobles governed their
immense estates as sovereign princes; and frontier communities, being often
compelled to defend themselves against foreign invaders by their own resources,
began to consider how far those resources could be rendered available to lessen
the fiscal extortions of the central government. The territorial aristocracy of
the Byzantine Empire had also at this time become warriors like the barons of
the feudal states, and as they joined learning to their military qualities,
they were able to perform the duties of judges and magistrates on their
estates. Jealousy of their power, and the corruption of society in the capital,
had led the emperors to intrust not only the direction of the civil
administration, but even the highest military commands, to eunuchs of the
imperial household, and a gradual hostility had grown up between this class and
the territorial aristocracy. This employment of slaves and domestics as
generals and statesmen seems strange to those who judge of the past by the
actual condition of society; but no feature in Eastern manners has been more permanent
than the high social position acquired by slaves in their masters' families.
Their education was often as carefully attended to, their character and
abilities more impartially estimated, and their faults more judiciously
eradicated, than those of the children of the house. The oldest records of
society show us the slave as superior to the hired servant; and the
administration of the Ottoman Empire, even in modern times, has been of easier
access to the slave than to the citizen. Despotism is also compelled to seek
rather for personal devotion than systematic service, and no stronger proof can
be adduced of the progress which the Byzantine government had made towards pure
despotism, than the power the emperors had acquired of ruling their subjects by
the members of their household.
Michael VI was not blind to the hostile feelings of a powerful class of
his subjects, but he relied on the permanence of the established order of
things. The support of the senate, the obedience of the municipality of Constantinople,
the conservative feelings of the clubs of the hippodrome, and of the
corporations of the traders, seemed a complete guarantee against the success of
any revolution; and the emperor treated all these classes with liberality. He
felt, likewise, so confident in the attachment of the soldiers to their
military organization, that he imprudently wounded the pride and self-interest
of the principal officers of the army and the official nobility, by holding
back from them the promotions and donatives they were accustomed to receive at
Easter. Other measures, equally ill-judged, were adopted about the same time.
Katakalon, the most popular general in the empire, was deprived of the command
at Antioch on a charge of fraudulently enriching himself by diminishing the
number of soldiers in his government, and extorting money from the inhabitants.
The justice of the act was, however, suspected, as he was replaced by Michael
Ouranos, a nephew of the emperor. Michael VI, likewise, on re-establishing
Nicephorus Bryennios to the rank of which he had been deprived by Theodora,
refused to restore his private fortune, which had been unjustly sequestrated;
and when Bryennios urged his claim in person, the old emperor cut short his
solicitations by saying, “Finished work alone merits wages”. He had
already ordered the restored general to load a division of three thousand men
to reinforce the army in Cappadocia, and Bryennios now left the capital
inflamed with anger. Several of the most powerful nobles of Asia Minor had already
formed a plot to overthrow the existing government, and they availed themselves
of the offence given to Katakalon and Bryennios to establish secret
communications with these officers and engage them in the conspiracy. Isaac
Comnenus, Romanes Skleros, Michael Burtzes, and Nicephoras Botaneiates, who
resided at Constantinople in princely state, directed the plot and arranged the
plan of rebellion.
The attention of government was diverted from these conspirators by the
conduct of an officer with whom they had no connection. Hervé,
a Norman general, who had distinguished himself under Maniakes, had
subsequently served the empire with zeal and fidelity. On soliciting the rank
of magistros, his claim was treated by the emperor in
a way which irritated the pride of the Norman to such a degree that he quitted
Constantinople, and hastened to an estate he possessed at Dabarme in Armenia. Collecting three hundred of his countrymen from the garrisons in
the neighbourhood, he deserted to the Turks. He found, however, that the
Infidels were less inclined to tolerate the proud spirit of independence that
characterised the Normans than the Byzantines, and, separating from Samouch, the Seljouk leader, with
whom he quarrelled, heled his little band to the city of Aklat,
where he was surprised and made prisoner by the emir Aponasar.
The rashness of Bryennios was even greater than that of Hervé; and as he was one of the conspirators, his conduct
might have ruined their enterprise. The chiefs at Constantinople, having
settled their plans, decided that Isaac Comnenus was to be the future emperor;
and after plighting their mutual faith, with all the religious ceremonies and
horrid imprecations which were then considered necessary to bind the
conscience, retired to their estates to collect troops. Bryennios had, in the
meantime, reached Cappadocia, where he ordered the paymaster of the army to
make an advance of pay to the soldiers under his command. This was refused, as
being at variance with the emperor’s orders. John Opsaras,
who held the office of paymaster, was a patrician; yet, when he visited
Bryennios in his tent, that officer so completely lost all command over his
temper, that he struck him on the face, pulled his beard, threw him on the
ground, and then ordered him to be dragged to prison. Another patrician, Lykanthos, who commanded the troops of Pisidia and Lycaonia
in a separate camp, convinced that the conduct of Bryennios announced an
intention to rebel, hastened with his guards to the spot, delivered Opsaras from confinement, and arrested Bryennios, whose
eyes Opsaras ordered to be put out, and then sent
him a prisoner to Constantinople.
The principal conspirators, fearing that their plot was discovered,
repaired to Kastamona in Paphlagonia, where Isaac
Comnenus was waiting, at his family seat, until the preparations for the rebellion
were completed. The assembly of the conspirators having put an end to
concealment, Isaac Comnenus was conducted by his partisans to the plain of Gounavia, and proclaimed emperor, on the 8th June 1057.
Katakalon, finding some difficulty in joining his companions, forged an
imperial order, giving him the command of five legions, which he concentrated
in the plain of Nicopolis, pretending that he was to
lead them against Samouch, a Turkish chief who had
invaded the empire. By promises and threats, he succeeded in engaging the
officers of this force to join the rebellion; and, effecting a junction with
the troops Isaac had already assembled, the rebels crossed the Sangarius, and gained possession of Nice.
The Emperor Michael placed the imperial army under the command of
Theodore, a eunuch whom he had raised to the rank of Domestikos of the East, and the Bulgarian prince, Aaron, who, though a brother-in-law of
Isaac, was his personal enemy. The imperial generals broke down the
bridges over the Sangarius, in order to cut off the
communications of the rebels with the provinces in which their family influence
lay, and then approached Nicaea. Isaac Comnenus was encamped about twelve stades to the north of the city, and the foragers of the
two armies were soon in constant communication; the leaders on both sides
overlooking the intercourse, in the expectation of gaining deserters. The
imperialists urged their opponents not to sacrifice their lives for an
ambitious rebel, who exposed their lives and fortunes for his own profit; while
the rebels laughed at the idea of serving an old dotard, who intrusted the
command of his armies to eunuchs. Isaac, seeing that nothing was to be gained
by these conversations, gave strict orders to break off all communication; and
Theodore, attributing the measure to fear, advanced to Petroa,
only fifteen stades from the rebel camp.
A battle was thus inevitable. Isaac Comnenus drew out his army, which
was composed of veteran troops, at a place called Hades. Katakalon commanded the
left wing, and was opposed to Basil Tarchaniotes, the
general of the European troops, the ablest and most distinguished of the
Macedonian nobility. Romanos Skleros, at the head of
the right wing, was opposed to Aaron, who had under his orders the patrician Lykanthos and the Norman Randolph. Isaac and Theodore
directed their respective centres. The battle was not severely contested. Aaron
routed the right wing of the rebels, but his success led to no result; for
Katakalon, having defeated the Macedonian troops, stormed the imperial camp,
while Isaac overthrew their centre. The aristocratic constitution of society
displays itself in the incidents of this battle. The superior temper of the
arms of the chiefs gave their exploits as much importance as in the Homeric
battles. When the victorious troops of Isaac and Katakalon assailed the troops
of Aaron, Randolph found himself borne away among a crowd of fugitives.
Disengaging himself, he perceived Nicephorus Botaneiates leading the pursuers. Shouting his war-cry, the Norman knight met the Asiatic
noble; but his sword was broken on the well-tempered helmet of his enemy, and
he was led a prisoner to the rebel camp. Several officers of rank were slain in
the imperial army, and many made prisoners. The victors lost only one man of
rank. Isaac Comnenus advanced to Nicomedia, where he was met by envoys from the
Emperor Michael, who offered him the title of Caesar for himself, and a general
amnesty for his partisans, if they would lay aside their arms. Isaac knew that he
had no safety but as emperor, and Katakalon boldly opposed all terms of
arrangement. Michael Psellos, called the Prince of
Philosophers, was one of the envoys, and seeing how matters were likely to end,
he deserted the cause of his old master with more promptitude than might have
been expected from a learned pedant. The emperor, finding he had nothing to
expect from negotiation, attempted to fortify himself in Constantinople. He
compelled the senators to take an oath, and subscribe a declaration, that they
would never acknowledge Isaac Comnenus as emperor; and he lavished money,
places, promotions, and privileges, on the people and the municipality. Yet the
moment the victors reached the palace of Damatrys,
the senators rushed to St. Sophia’s, and begged the Patriarch to absolve them
from the oath they had just taken. The stern Patriarch, Michael Keroularios, affected to resist, but consented to be
himself the medium of communication with the new emperor. The cause of Michael
VI was now hopeless; Isaac was proclaimed emperor, and his predecessor was
ordered to quit the imperial palace, that it might be prepared for the
reception of the new sovereign. It is said the old man, before departing, sent
to ask the Patriarch what he would give him for his resignation; the intriguing
pontiff replied, with sarcastic humility, “The kingdom of heaven”. On the 31st
of August, Michael VI returned as a private individual to his own house, where
he lived undisturbed, dying two years after. On the 2nd of September, Isaac I received
the imperial crown in the Church of St. Sophia.
To contemporaries, this revolution presented nothing to distinguish it
from the changes of sovereign, which had been an ordinary event in the
Byzantine empire, and which were ascribed by the wisest statesmen of the time
to the decree of Heaven, and not to the working of political and moral causes,
which the will of God allows the intelligence of man to employ for effecting
the improvement or decline of human affairs. It would be an error to ascribe the
success of this rebellion to the weakness of the reigning emperor, and to the
defects of his administration, or to the ability of bold and rapacious
conspirators, without taking into account the apathy of the inhabitants of the
empire to a mere change in the name of their emperor. Perhaps no man then
living perceived that this event was destined to change the whole system of
government, destroy the fabric of the central administration, deliver up the
provinces of Asia an easy conquest to the Seljouk Turks, and the capital a prey to a band of crusaders.
General Observations
We have now traced the progress of the Eastern Roman Empire through an
eventful period of three centuries and a half. We have contemplated the
rare spectacle of a great empire reviving from a state of political anarchy and
social disorganisation; we have seen it reinvigorated by the establishment of a
high degree of order and security for life and property; and we have recorded
its progress to the attainment of great military power. We have endeavoured to
trace the causes that led to this change, as well as to record the events which
accompanied it. It would now be an instructive task to compare the condition of
the population living under this reformed Roman Empire with that of the
inhabitants of the countries which had once constituted the Empire of the West;
but scholars have not yet performed the preliminary work necessary for such an
inquiry, so that even a superficial examination of the subject would run into
discussions on vague details. Each student of history, therefore, who may
happen to turn over the pages of this volume, must institute the comparison for
himself in that branch of historical or antiquarian research with which he
is most familiar. Unfortunately the records of the Eastern Empire are
deprived of one great source of historical interest they tell us very little
concerning the condition of the mass of the population; and while they enable
us to study the actions and the policy of the emperors, and even to observe the
political consequences of their respective administrations, they leave us in
ignorance concerning many important questions relating to the composition of
the mass of society; they supply few facts for discriminating its separate
elements, or for forming a classification of its social ranks. We know that
freemen, serfs, and slaves were mingled together in every city and province;
and over the whole surface of the Byzantine dominions, heterogeneous races of
mankind were compressed into apparent unity by the powerful government that
ruled at Constantinople. But we are without the means of assigning to each
class of society, and to each discordant nationality, its exact share and
influence in the mass that composed the empire. We perceive that there was
no real unity among the people, and yet the unity created by the government was
so imposing, that both contemporary and modern historians have treated the
history of the Byzantine empire as if it represented the feelings and interests
of a Byzantine nation, and almost overlooked the indelible distinctions of the
Greek, Armenian, and Sclavonian races, which, while
forced into simultaneous action by the great administrative power that ruled
them, constantly retained their own national peculiarities.
Two grand social distinctions illuminate the obscurities of Byzantine
history during the period comprised in this volume. A regular administration of
justice, that secured a high degree of security for life and property, gave the
people an immeasurable superiority over the subjects of all contemporary
governments, and bound the various nations within the limits of the Eastern
Empire in willing submission to the central power.
Through all the darkness of the Byzantine annals, we perceive that a
middle class exerted some influence on society, and that it formed an element
of the population, independent of the heterogeneous national races from which
it was composed. But the nature of its composition explains sufficiently
why its political influence proved extremely insignificant when compared with
its numbers, wealth, and social importance. Local institutions were
reduced to such a state of subordination to the central authority, that they
wanted the power to train the different nations of which the middle class was
composed to similar political sentiments. All attempts of the people to reform
their own condition proved fruitless, and demands for redress of public
grievances could only prove successful by a revolution. Perhaps this evil may
be inherent in the nature of all governments which carry centralization so far
as to suppress the expression of public opinion in municipal bodies. In
such governments, whether monarchical or republican, the central authority
becomes so powerful, that public opinion is rendered inefficacious to effect
reform, and the people soon learn to regard revolutions as the only chance
of improvement
The middle class through the Byzantine Empire was a remnant of ancient
society an element that had survived from the days of municipal liberty and national
independence. Many free citizens still continued to till their lands many were
occupied in manufactures and commerce. It was the existence of this class which
filled the treasury of the emperors (taxation yields comparatively little in a
state peopled by great nobles and impoverished serfs); and it was the wealth of
the Byzantine government which gave it an ultimate superiority over all its
contemporaries for several centuries.
Military excellence was at that time as much the effect of individual strength
and activity in the soldier, as of discipline in the army or talent in the
general. The wealth of the Byzantine emperors enabled them to fill their armies
with the best soldiers in Europe; in their mercenary legions, knights and
nobles fought in the ranks, and the captains of their guards were kings and
princes. Nor were the native troops inferior to the foreign mercenaries. The
lance of the Byzantine officer was famous in personal encounters long before
the aristocracy of Western Europe sought military renown by imitating an
exercise in which sleight-of-hand rather than valour secured the victory.
It is not difficult to point out generally the causes which supplied the
Byzantine treasury with large revenues, at a period when the precious metals were
extremely rare in the west of Europe. A curious comparison might be made
between the riches and luxury of the court of Constantinople during the reign
of Theophilus, and the poverty and rudeness that prevailed at the court of
Winchester under his contemporary, Egbert. The difference of the value of the
precious metals is peculiarly striking. Theophilus gave two pounds’ weight
of gold, or a hundred and forty-four byzants, for a fine horse, of which the
market value appears to have been a hundred byzants; yet, among the Saxons,
about the same time, the price of a common horse was two-thirds of a pound
weight of silver. It is difficult to explain the rarity of the precious metals
in the West, when we remember that the tin of Egbert’s dominions found its way
to Constantinople, and that the byzants of the Eastern emperors were the
current gold coin throughout England. The subjects of fee Byzantine empire
supplied the greater part of western and the whole of northern Europe with
Indian produce, spices, precious stones, silk, fine woollen cloth, carpets,
cotton, what we now call morocco leather, dye-stuffs,
gums, oil, wine, and fruits; besides most manufactured articles, and all
luxuries. Yet, from the poverty of the Western nations, their consumption must
have been comparatively small. The profits of the trade, however exorbitant
they might have been on particular transactions, would not have formed an
important article of national wealth, unless a constant profit had been
realized by the difference of value of the precious metals in the various
countries with which dealings were carried on. Few of the Western nations
worked any mines, and yet they were constantly consuming a considerable amount
of gold and silver; the Byzantine Empire possessed considerable mines of silver
and we know that gold was always abundant in the treasury. Gold and silver coin
and slaves were consequently commodities on which a sure profit was always
realised. But in the eleventh century a great change took place in society in
Western Europe, coincident with the stationary condition of the Byzantine
Empire. In the West, the spirit of social reform infused a sentiment of justice
into the counsels of kings; in the East, a spirit of conservation, pervading
the imperial administration, withered the energies of society.
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT MODIFIED BY THE
DESTRUCTION OF THE POPULATION IN ASIA MINOR. A.D. 1057-1081
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