READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE FROMA.D. 717 TO 1453
CHAPTER IX.
THE DYNASTY OF COMNENUS
Sect. I
The reign of Alexius I. A.D 1081-1118.
No ordinary talents were required to enable Alexius
Comnenus to keep possession of the throne he had suddenly ascended, to the
disappointment of many earlier claimants. Surrounded by the families of
dethroned emperors, by a warlike nobility, and an army accustomed to rebellion,
his position required even greater aptitude as a diplomatist and administrator
than ability as a commander-in-chief.
(Two dethroned emperors, Michael VII and Nicephorus
III, were living in Constantinople, and four sons of emperors who had received
the imperial title during the reigns of their fathers. These were, Constantine Ducas Porphyrogenitus, the son of Constantine X; Leo and
Nicephorus Diogenes, sons of Romanus IV and Eudocia (Anna Comnena proves they were crowned, 19-266); and Constantine Ducas,
son of Michael VII, who was for some time the titular colleague of Alexius.
There were also several rebel emperors who had worn the crown and the red boots
for a time, like the Cesar John Ducas, Bryennius, Basilakes, and
Melissenos. The three blind kings’ sons were nothing to this congregation of
emperors).
That Alexius was a man of courage cannot be
doubted, though, even as a soldier, he trusted more to cunning and deceit than
to valour and tactics. There was also a mixture of vanity, presumption, and
artifice in his character, which seem to indicate that he was a lucky
adventurer, indebted in a great measure to the utter worthlessness of all his
competitors for his signal success. His talents, indeed, were chiefly employed in
balancing the personal interests of those around him, in neutralizing the
effect of their vices, and in turning the vicissitudes of public events to his
individual advantage. The mind of Alexius presents us with a Greek type, which
becomes predominant as we advance in Byzantine history. The Roman traits, which
had given a firmer political character to its earlier annals, had been long
fading away, and under the dynasty of Comnenus they disappeared. Alexius never
framed any permanent line of policy for improving the national resources, or
performing the duties incumbent on the imperial government; his conduct was
entirely directed by temporary contingencies and personal accidents; in short,
he was a politician, not a statesman. He never aspired beyond the game of
personal intrigue, and in that game he acted without principle, mistaking
deceit for wisdom, as his daughter, who records his actions, candidly testifies
by many an anecdote in her courtly ignorance of the value of common honesty.
Personal courage in the field, and low cunning in the cabinet, present so
incompatible a union in a great historical character, that we are apt to
consider the combination an anomaly of Byzantine society; but an impartial
examination of the authentic memoirs of modern courts would convince us that a
candid biography of many brilliant sovereigns, written by a daughter to display
her learning and eloquence, might afford curious revelations concerning the
moral obtuseness of other courts and greater princes.
In weighing the vices of Alexius we must not overlook
his merits. When he ascended the throne, the empire was in a state of anarchy
and rebellion—its territories were invaded by the Patzinaks, the Turks, and the
Normans—yet he succeeded in arresting its partition; and at a later period,
when Europe poured into his dominions innumerable hosts of crusaders, whose
military force set all direct opposition at defiance, his prudence and
administrative knowledge carried the empire through that difficult crisis in
safety. His admirers may truly say that, by activity, courage, and patience, he
conducted the government through a period of the greatest difficulty, and, like
Leo III, saved the empire on the very brink of ruin; but the historian must
add, that he made no attempt to reorganize the administration according to the
exigencies of a new state of society, nor did he seek to infuse new vigour
and moral principles into the decayed institutions of his subjects. Now, it was
by doing these things, more than by defeating the Saracens, that Leo III
merited the title of the saviour and second founder of the Eastern
Empire. Whether any measures Alexius could have adopted would have
effected a reform in the social and political evils which were destroying the
Byzantine power, and enabled it to prolong its existence, is not a question
which history can solve.
While Alexius was placing the imperial crown on his
head, his followers were transferring the wealth of the imperial city to their
knapsacks. But as soon as his prize was secured, he felt that, in order to
retain possession of it, he must immediately repress the disorders of the
troops and assuage the indignation of the people. The soldiers were bribed with
the little money which the extravagant administration of Nicephorus III had left
in the public treasury, to return to their standards and submit to discipline.
As it was impossible to make restitution to the plundered citizens, Alexius
sought to appease the general indignation by addressing himself to the
religious prejudices of the people. The Greek Church, unlike the Roman, has
generally been the servile instrument of princes. The emperor was sure of
obtaining its pardon, which he hoped would prove effectual in appeasing the
indignation of the laity. Those who had not suffered would be edified by the
emperor’s piety, and those who had been plundered would no longer venture to
complain loudly. Alexius openly accused himself as the unfortunate cause of the
disorders committed by the army, loudly expressed his sincere repentance, and humbly
implored the Patriarch and the synod to impose on him a penance to efface the
stain of his sin. The Greek clergy considered that Heaven would be appeased by
the emperor sleeping on the floor of his chamber with a stone for a pillow, by
his wearing a hair-cloth shirt, and by his eating only dry bread and herbs, and
drinking nothing but water, for a space of twenty days. To Alexius, who
was young, hardy, and temperate, this punishment was not very terrific; and
when he found that the pardon of Heaven could be so cheaply purchased, he
availed himself of his knowledge, when in great want of money after his defeat
by Robert Guiscard, to seize the wealth of the clergy. But the church, though
it pardoned the plunder of laymen without restitution, would not rest satisfied
with personal penance alone when the interests of the clergy suffered.
The Byzantine court operated so powerfully in
accelerating the decline of the empire, and in preventing any reform in the
government, that it is necessary to notice its constitution at the accession of
Alexius. Under the Basilian dynasty, eunuchs and slaves had acted as generals
and ministers, and the public administration had been conducted, as it
generally is in the absolute monarchies of Asia, like a private estate. But Isaac
I had been raised to the throne as the leader of the aristocracy, and Alexius
was placed in the same position. In the interval, however, the resources and
power of the central government had been much diminished, and Alexius was
compelled to reward his aristocratic partisans with a lavish distribution of
honours and pensions, which imposed a check on his own power and a heavy burden
on the public revenues. In order to attach the family of Ducas to the existing state of things, the young Constantine, son of Michael VII,
received the title of Emperor as the colleague of Alexius, and John Ducas quitted the monastic habit and resumed his rank as
Caesar. The Emperor Alexius and the family of Comnenus occupied the great
palace, and the assemblage of apartments clustered round it, which had been
fortified by Nicephorus II Phokas, and towered proudly over the port Boukoleon and the hippodrome; while the Empress Maria, the
widow of two living husbands, who had been driven from the throne into the
monastery, resided with her son, the titular Emperor Constantine, and the
whole family of Ducas, in the palace called Mangana, on the lower ground, towards what is now the
Seraglio Point. The traitor Nicephorus Melissenos laid down his arms as soon as
he saw his brother-in-law Alexius firmly seated on the throne, and received the
rank of Caesar. The title of Augustus, in its Greek form Sevastos,
was conferred on several nobles; but to observe some discrimination in the
distribution, it was divided into four gradations, sevastos, protosevastos, panhypersevastos,
and sevastokrator. New titles were
invented to gratify inferior partisans, and every title, by insuring to its
possessor a pension, swelled the imperial civil list, increased the burdens of
the people, and encroached on the resources applicable to the maintenance of
the army, the navy, and the judicial establishment. The profits of a career of
court favour eclipsed the highest rewards that could be gained in the
honourable service of the state during the longest life. Attachment to the
personal interests of the emperor was held to be more important than official
experience and talent in administration.
(Constantine Ducas wore the
imperial robes, signed the imperial decrees, and was named after Alexius in the
public prayers. He was betrothed to Anna Comnena, but
died before they were married. The Roman empire of Germany at a subsequent
period contested the pre-eminence in titular absurdities with that of
Constantinople. The title of protosevastos or archaugustos, with the pension annexed to the
dignity, was conferred on the doges of Venice, Dominico Silvio and Vital Faliero; and the latter was made King of Dalmatin,
the title on which the doges founded their right to the sovereignty of the
Adriatic. Aboulkassim, sultan of Nicaea, was
created sevastotatos, or most august).
Though the personal position of Alexius at the
commencement of his reign was controlled by the influence of the leading
members of the aristocracy, he soon delivered himself from this restraint, and
assumed despotic power. The admirable central organization of the
administrative power enabled the emperor to suppress every attempt at
provincial independence, and the political ideas and social habits of the
people favoured the imperial authority as much as the mode of conducting public
business. The emperor’s power was still the only guarantee against anarchy; it
was, consequently, still popular, though it was no longer under the legal
restraint which a firm and systematic administration of the Roman law had long
imposed on the arbitrary acts of its inferior agents. After the time of
Alexius, the firmest support of despotism in the Byzantine Empire was in the
minds and habits of the Greek people, who from this period became the dominant
race at Constantinople.
The government of the Roman Empire, as we have had
occasion to observe, exhibited, during its decline, a strong tendency to
congeal society into fixed orders and separate castes or classes. This
tyrannical system had nearly destroyed the state and exterminated the
population, when a great effort of the people and a series of reforming princes
in the Iconoclast period saved the empire and modified its institutions into
their Byzantine type. The effects of time became again visible at the end of
the eleventh century; but at this latter period the spirit of conservatism
pervaded the whole mass of society, and each individual citizen clung to the
practice of fixed forms and existing usages with a tenacity that rendered any
reform difficult. A persuasion that everything was so perfect that it ought to
remain stationary, infused as much self-conceit into the minds of the people as
it did presumption into the policy of the emperor. This attachment to a
stationary condition of society was carried to such a degree that the relics of
old formalities and ceremonious usages were considered the essential duties of
life in civil and ecclesiastical affairs. In this way the Greek race
voluntarily circumscribed its intellects and restrained its reasoning
faculties, at the very moment when the nations of Western Europe were boldly
entering on a career of reform and progress. Nor are we to suppose that all
means of introducing improvement was shut out in the Eastern Empire, had the
throne been occupied by an emperor of enlarged views. The respect universally
entertained for the Roman law insured the support of popular opinion to every
measure of judicial reform, and the whole frame of society was thus open to
amelioration. But to enter on the path of law and equity would have compelled
the emperor and the ruling classes to make some concessions of fiscal reform,
and the patriotism necessary to make any considerable sacrifice of personal
interest was utterly wanting in every class of Byzantine society at this
period.
The throne which Alexius had gained by intrigue and
daring was considered by others also as a lawful prize. No sovereign,
therefore, had to contend with so many rebels. The first rival who claimed the
throne was a Byzantine monk, who presented himself to Robert Guiscard in Italy
as the dethroned emperor Michael VII. This deception could only have imposed on
a willing mind, for the real Michael could be seen at Constantinople by
hundreds who knew his person. Michael was so generally despised that, even had
he cast off his episcopal robes and appeared in the Norman camp, he would have
found few of his former subjects inclined to replace him on the throne he had
forfeited. In the year 1084 while Alexius was busily engaged with the Norman
war, several senators and officers of the army engaged in a conspiracy, which
was discovered before, the leaders had enlisted many followers. As it was a
matter of policy to conceal the importance of the plot, Alexius was satisfied
with the banishment of the wealthiest culprits, and the confiscation of their
estates. In 1091, Ariebes, an Armenian, and
Constantine Humbertopoulos, who had assisted Alexius
in mounting the throne, engaged in a conspiracy, and were treated in the same
way. John Comnenos, governor of Dyrrachium, son of
Isaac, the emperor’s elder brother, as well as Theodore Gabras,
who governed Trebizond almost as an independent prince, with his son Gregory,
who subsequently married Maria, the emperor’s second daughter, were also
accused of treasonable projects. The Turkish pirate Tzachas,
who had rendered himself master of Smyrna, Chios, Mitylene,
Samos, and Rhodes, assumed the title of Emperor in the year 1092, and inflicted
a sensible wound on the vanity of Alexius, by appearing constantly in public
with all the ensigns peculiar to an emperor of the Romans. In the same year the
fiscal oppression of the Byzantine administration produced revolts in Crete and
Cyprus, where the leaders of the insurgents urged the inhabitants to render
themselves independent; but Karykas, the Cretan leader,
was abandoned by his followers, and put to death on the first appearance of the
imperial fleet; while Rapsomates, after a feeble
resistance, was captured in Cyprus, and order was restored in both islands.
These troubles were followed by an extensive
conspiracy among the members of the imperial family, in which the ex-empress
Maria and Michael Taronites, a brother-in-law of
Alexius, took part. If we credit the narrative of Anna, Nicephorus Diogenes,
son of Romanus IV and Eudocia, undertook to assassinate
Alexius. Nicephorus and his brother Leo, who was killed in a battle with
the Patzinaks, had been crowned in their infancy, but after their father’s
captivity they were deprived of the imperial title, and confined in a monastery
by the Caesar John Ducas and Michael VII. Nicephorus
was admired for his handsome athletic figure, popular manners, skill in warlike
exercises, generosity, and courage, so that whenever he appeared in public he
was received by the people with friendly salutations. Such popularity is
dangerous in a despotic government, yet it is said that he first excited
suspicion at court by an open violation of etiquette, and then made some very
awkward attempts to murder the emperor. Anna, indeed, represents his conduct as
that of a person verging on insanity. He was arrested and put to the torture,
which, it was said, compelled him to reveal his accomplices. He and Katakalon Kekavmenos, who had commanded under Alexius at the battle
of Kalavrya, lost their eyes; the fortune of Michael Taronites was confiscated, but the ex-empress Maria, being
the mother of Alexius by adoption, escaped all punishment. After the loss of
his eyes, Nicephorus Diogenes devoted his time to study, and made great
progress in geometry by means of figures in relief which were prepared for his
use. The fate of Nicephorus affected public opinion so powerfully that an
impostor, who assumed the character of Constantine, the eldest son of Romanus
by his first marriage, was generally welcomed. Though Constantine had been killed
at the battle of Antioch, in which Isaac Comnenus, the emperor’s elder brother,
had been taken prisoner, twenty years before the appearance of the impostor, he
yet found credit with many persons of rank in the capital. Alexius, in alarm,
banished him to Cherson, from whence he escaped to the Romans, whom he induced
to invade the empire. The hostile army advanced as far as Adrianople,
when Alexius was released from the fear of this dangerous rebel by a
Byzantine officer, who decoyed him into an ambuscade and took him prisoner. He
was deprived of sights (AD 1094).
While the armies of the Crusaders threatened
Constantinople, no one ventured to intrigue against the government of Alexius,
who was generally considered the only man capable of directing the state. But
in 1106, when affairs appeared more tranquil, new competitors were again eager
to seize the throne. Salomon, a senator of great wealth, but a vain literary
coxcomb, who affected the character of a philosopher, engaged in a plot with
four brothers named Anemas, descendants of that Anemas who had been slain in a battle with Swiatoslaff. The plot was discovered; the wealth of the
philosophic Salomon and several of his accomplices was confiscated. The four
brothers, whose descent from the Saracen emir of Crete was not forgotten, were
conducted through the streets of Constantinople mounted on oxen, the hair of
their heads and beards torn out with pitch plaster, crowned with horns, and
decorated with entrails. After this, they were imprisoned in a tower near the
palace of Blachern, which retained the name of the
Tower of Anemas until the city was conquered by the
Turks. About the same time Gregory Tironites, who had
acted as an independent prince in the government of Trebizond, was
brought prisoner to Constantinople by his cousin John, and imprisoned in
the same tower.
The following year (1107) a new plot was formed to
murder Alexius by an illegitimate descendant of Aaron the Bulgarian prince, who
was assassinated by his brother Samuel, king of Achrida. The emperor was
encamped near Thessalonica, but the presence of the empress and her attendants
rendered the execution of the plot difficult. Libels and satires were placed in
the imperial tent, in the hope that Irene would be induced to quit the
encampment. A search for the author of these libels brought to light the whole
plot, yet Aaron was only banished, in consequence of his connection with the
royal line of Bulgaria, whose blood flowed in the veins of the empress.
We are inclined to give Alexius credit for extreme
moderation, when we find him condemning those who are said to have been
convicted of plotting his murder merely to imprisonment and banishment; but as
he condemned heretics to be burned alive, we are compelled to suspect that the
accusation of having plotted against his life was in many cases a charge added
to the real crimes of the culprit, merely to increase the public indignation,
and that Alexius knew the charge was without foundation, though his daughter
Anna readily adopted every prejudice against those who had certainly shown
hostility to her father’s authority and person. The want of all political
principle among the courtiers, and of all attachment to the government among
the people, are, however, proved incontestably by these numerous conspiracies.
The unpopularity of Alexius among the people was caused
by the severity with which the public taxes were collected, by the injustice of
the monopolies he created for the profit of the fisc and of members of the imperial family, and by the frauds he committed in
adulterating the coinage. This mode of cheating his subjects was carried to a
greater extent by Alexius than it had been by any of his predecessors, and is
one of the strongest symptoms of the incurable decline in the government of the
Byzantine Empire. A government which systematically commits such frauds is
utterly demoralized; and a people which is so weak as to submit to such
oppression, has sunk into a hopeless state of degradation. Alexius paid the
public debts in his own debased coinage, but he enforced payment of the taxes,
as long as it was possible, in the pure coinage of earlier emperors. The ruin
produced by these measures at last compelled him to adopt new regulations for
collecting the land-tax; and the credit of his coinage became so bad
throughout all the countries in Europe in which Byzantine gold had previously
circulated, that the emperor was compelled, in all his public acts with
foreigners, to stipulate that he would make all his payments in the gold coins
of his predecessors of the name of Michael The decline of Byzantine commerce in
the Mediterranean may be traced to these measures of Alexius, which ruined the
credit of the Greek merchants, and transferred a large quantity of capital from
the cities of the empire to the republics of Italy.
Ecclesiastical animosities and religious persecutions
contributed their share to increase the disorders in the empire. Though Alexius
was both superstitious and hypocritical, his necessities, after the Norman war,
induced him to assemble a servile synod of Greek ecclesiastics, who authorized
him to employ the wealth accumulated as offerings in the churches for the
public service. But this act was violently opposed by many of the clergy, and
Leo, bishop of Chalcedon, went so far as to maintain that the government had
committed sacrilege in melting down sacred objects which were entitled to the
adoration of Christians. Alexius took advantage of his imprudence in
attributing more than orthodox importance to these objects; and his opinions
being condemned by a synod as heretical, he was banished to Sozopolis,
where, however, the people regarded him as a saint. The general indignation
soon forced the emperor to yield to public opinion, and he published a golden
bull ordering restitution to be made for all the sacred plate already employed
for the public service, and declaring it to be sacrilege for any one in future
to apply church plate to profane uses.
Soon after this Constantinople was troubled by
disputes arising out of the opinions taught by a professor of philosophy named Italos, from the native country of his father. Italos had succeeded Psellos as
the chief of the philosophers, and his lectures on the Platonic philosophy had
gained him so much popularity and influence as a teacher that the clergy became
jealous. They soon discovered a taint of heresy in his opinions, and the
Patriarch Eustratios Garidhas,
who supported him, was deposed. Nikolaos the Grammarian was appointed
Patriarch, and Italos was compelled to recant his
opinions publicly in the church of St Sophia, (A.D. 1084).
BOGOMILIANS.
The heresy of Italos afforded some mental occupation for the people of the capital, but it was
followed by a Paulician rebellion, which inflicted many evils on the
inhabitants of Thrace. Various Asiatics, generally
tainted with heretical opinions, had been established in the neighbourhood of
Philippopolis from the time of Constantine V, and had long been remarkable for
their industry, and the vigour they displayed in conducting their local
affairs. Their moral education was excellent, though their religious opinions
were deficient in Grecian orthodoxy. Their lands were well cultivated and
bravely defended, and their commercial dealings extended over a great part of
Western Europe. After the conquest of the Paulician state at Tephrike by Basil
I, numbers of that sect had established themselves in Thrace, where other
Asiatic colonists united with them. When Alexius marched against Robert
Guiscard, two thousand eight hundred of these Paulicians joined his army as the
military contingent they were bound to furnish; but having lost three hundred
men in the defeat at Dyrrachium, the remainder, instead of rallying in the
imperial camp, returned home. After the conclusion of the war, Alexius
determined to punish them for this desertion, and destroy their communal system.
He established himself at Mosynopolis, where he
summoned the principal men of the Paulicians to his presence. By separating
them from one another he disarmed the whole. A judicial sentence was then
promulgated, depriving them of their property; and their families were expelled
from their houses with great cruelty. It happened that a Paulician, who
had been baptized during the reign of Nicephorus III, and had attained the rank
of domestikos, heard that his four
sisters had been driven from their home. Eager to avenge the cause of his
family and countrymen, he seized a fortress called Veliatova,
and plundered the property of the orthodox Greeks and Bulgarians to the very
walls of Philippopolis. In the year 1086 he effected a junction with a colony
of Patzinaks which had crossed the Danube, and extended his expeditions over
all Thrace. Pakuvian, the grand domestikos of the West, and Branas, were sent to arrest his
progress, but the Byzantine army was completely defeated, and both its generals
were slain. After this the Patzinak war insured impunity to their Paulician
allies for a considerable period; but towards the end of his reign, Alexius
found time to think of converting these heretics. Many were established in a
new town called Alexiopolis or Neokastron.
Some affected to be converted by the arguments of the emperor, but others
persisted in their hereditary heresies. Partly on account of the aversion
entertained by the provincial population to the imperial government, whose
fiscal severity became from age to age more burdensome, and partly on account
of national antipathies, roused into activity by the arrogance which the Greeks
displayed as soon as they could assume the position of a dominant race, a very
general desire was felt by the inhabitants of Thrace and Bulgaria to emancipate
themselves from the ecclesiastical power of the Greek church. This sentiment
had long supplied the Paulicians with a perpetual influx of votaries, and
enabled them to increase in numbers while the population of the provinces around
them was sensibly diminishing. Other heresies also derived a portion of
their success from this general feeling of opposition to the central authority
of the church and state.
The original constitution of the Eastern Church had
been well suited to prevent the formation of heresies based on national
feelings, for it admitted the formation of a separate ecclesiastical
establishment in each nation, while its central government, by general
councils, rendered the subdivision of the hierarchy into a number of
independent churches highly advantageous both to the cause of morals among the
priesthood and of religion among the people. The power of emperors and popes
put an end to this early constitution of the church. The emperor enslaved the
Patriarch of Constantinople, and the Patriarch enslaved those Christians who
remained in communion with the Greek Church. Still, wherever a nation was
politically independent, it wished also to be so ecclesiastically. Men may
unite voluntarily to receive the dogmas of a common religion, but they cannot
accept a foreign ecclesiastical establishment without some feeling of hostility
to the foreign priesthood which invades their independence. This feeling gained
so great strength in Bulgaria, as to render the Bulgarian hierarchy at last
independent of the priesthood at Constantinople. Though the king and people of
Bulgaria had adopted all the rites and ceremonies of the Eastern Church, and
rejected the solicitations of the popes to acknowledge the supremacy of Rome,
they nevertheless seized the opportunity, when it presented itself, to
constitute their own ecclesiastical establishment as a national church, under a
patriarch entirely independent of the jurisdiction of the Patriarch of
Constantinople. This was probably effected in practice long before it received
its official recognition from the Byzantine emperor and the Patriarch of
Constantinople. At length, however, the victorious army of Simeon, king of the
Bulgarians, was enabled to dictate terms of peace to the Emperor Romanus I in
the year 923, and one of the stipulations of the treaty appears to have been
that the emperor and the Byzantine church should publicly recognised the
primate of the Bulgarians as a patriarch equal in authority to the other
patriarchs of the Eastern Church. In virtue of that treaty, the Patriarch of
Constantinople was compelled to acknowledge the complete independence of the
Bulgarian church, and to admit the Patriarch of Bulgaria to all the
ecclesiastical honours and rank held by the patriarchs of Antioch, Alexandria,
and Jerusalem. It is true that the conquest of Bulgaria by John I Zimiskes put
an end to the national independence and the patriarchal dignity in about fifty
years; but neither the Emperor John nor his successors could eradicate the feelings
of hostility to the ecclesiastical domination of the Greeks, which had sunk
deep into the hearts of the Bulgarian and Sclavonian population.
It is to the influence of these national feelings,
rather than to the mystical religious doctrines which the Paulicians had
brought with them from the East, that we must ascribe the growth of the sect
called Bogomilians. Their name is derived
from the Sclavonian language, and the sect had its
origin among the Sclavonian population of Thrace and
Bulgaria. It is not necessary to trace the first principle of their dissent
from the Byzantine church to intellectual speculations, tending to harmonize
the Oriental doctrines concerning the existence of good and evil as two
distinct powers in the universe with the Gospel dispensation; but, on the other
hand, there can be no doubt that the Paulicians and Catharists,
who had derived their religious sentiments directly from Oriental sources,
mingled some of their mystical tenets with the opinions of the Bogomilians. Among the mass of the Sclavonians in the Byzantine empire, however, the origin of heresy was simply hatred of the
Greek church on account of its simony, aversion to the Greek ecclesiastics on
account of their corruption, and a craving for some purer religious instruction
than was offered by an established church, in which religion was suffocated by
mechanical forms and unmeaning ceremonies. This is proved clearly by the
sympathies which the Bogomilians manifested for the
memory as well as the doctrines of the Iconoclasts, and their hostility to the
adoration of the Virgin and of saints. At the same time, there is convincing
proof that they adopted some of their heretical opinions from the Paulician and
Euchite teachers, who never ceased to preach the doctrines of an Oriental
theosophy throughout Thrace and Bulgaria during the tenth and eleventh
centuries.
The Bogomilian heresy was
propagated among the Sclavonian population for some
time before it excited the attention of the church at Constantinople; but at
last its followers became so numerous as to cause alarm among the Byzantine
clergy. When the Emperor Alexius was fully informed of the progress the sect
was making, he readily joined the Patriarch in rousing the prejudices of the
orthodox against the new heresy. His politic spirit felt the importance of
forming a close alliance with the clergy on a question where the interests of
the church were more directly involved than those of the state; and he was
eager to avail himself of a favourable opportunity of awakening passions in the
minds of the people which would tend to divert their attention from the
political errors, fiscal abuses, and lavish expenditure of the imperial
government. The Bogomilian teachers had, however,
made so little public display of their opinions, that they were only discovered
by means of spies; and perhaps they might have escaped all notice in the
political history of the time, had the Emperor Alexius not engaged in personal
discussions with Basilios their leader; a controversy which the imperial
theologian terminated by committing his inflexible opponent to the flames as a
heretic. The conduct of Alexius in the whole transaction fixes a deeper stain
on his character than any mystical speculation could reflect on his adversary.
A Bogomilian who was put to
the torture by the imperial officers revealed to them that a monk named
Basilios was regarded as the leader of the sect, and that he had selected
twelve teachers to act as his apostles. When Basilios was brought before the
emperor, his demeanour was modest and respectful; his figure was good, but his
thin beard gave his withered countenance the air of an ascetic more than of an
enthusiast. His manners and conversation made the emperor look on him as a
worthy antagonist. The Emperor Alexius, as his daughter informs us
repeatedly, prided himself more on gaining his ends than on choosing honourable
paths. He received Basilios with an appearance of frankness, and he even
invited him to enter on the discussion of religious opinions, in order to make
a public display of the political cunning with which he could deceive a
heresiarch who had deceived thousands. The learned Anna even boasts that
her father knew how to rub sweets on the rim of the cup he induced his
antagonist to swallow, and how, with a dose of flattery, he purged the Bogomilian monk of his heretical opinions. “I am anxious”,
said the imperial hypocrite, “to hear the opinions of your reverence, and learn
all the arguments by which you have laboured to correct the vain superstitions
of our clergy”. The courtiers supposed that the ascetic was misled by
flattery; it is more likely he deceived himself by enthusiasm, and expected to
make Alexius a convert to truth. He knew but little of the
emperor. Roused by his subject, however, Basilios fully explained all his
objections to the established church, and revealed the full extent of his
heretical opinions, while an imperial secretary, concealed behind a
curtain, committed his words to writing. When the discussion was
terminated, the emperor drew aside the curtain and showed Basilios that he had
been speaking with the patriarch and the most bigoted members of the senate and
clergy as his audience. His conviction and condemnation as a heretic before the
patriarchal tribunal of Nikolaos the Grammarian followed as a matter of course,
and as he refused to renounce his opinions, he was ordered to be burned at the
stake. This sentence was passed about the year 1110, but it was not
carried into execution until the year 1118; for Anna mentions that it was one
of the last, and, in her opinion, one of the most glorious acts of her father's
life to burn the heretic. Every solicitation was employed to induce Basilios to
retract, and own himself a convert to the imperial arguments, but all was vain;
and the courageous demeanour of the heretic induced the people to believe that
he expected angels to descend from heaven to release him from the stake. The
clergy, however, pretended that he was tormented in his cell by demons, who
stoned him during the night for revealing their secrets. He was burned in the
hippodrome, and suffered with the firmness of the noblest martyrs. The
spectacle of a fellow-creature committed to the flames was so agreeable to the
populace of Constantinople, that they shouted to the emperor to bring out more
heretics to be burned; but Alexius prudently cut short the tumult by dismissing
the assembly. On another occasion, the emperor ordered two fires to be lighted
in the tchukanesterion for the purpose of
burning other Bogomilians; but some, having shown a
disposition to recant, were immediately released, and the others who remained
firm in their opinions were remanded to prison.
It is necessary to notice an example of the
superstition of Alexius, in order to show how completely his mind was ruled by
the spirit of false devotion prevalent in his age and nation. As Alexius was
riding with his elder brother Isaac, before he ascended the throne, a reverend
old man in the garb of a priest approached and whispered in his ear the words
of the Psalmist, “Advance prosperously and reign, because of truth, meekness,
and righteousness”. He then exclaimed, “0 Emperor Alexius” and suddenly
disappeared. Both brothers sought the strange priest in vain; and though
Alexius pretended to consider the apparition as an illusion of the imagination,
his daughter asserts that in his heart he was persuaded that he had received a
direct revelation from St John the Evangelist, the son of thunder. On a later
occasion, he gave a curious instance of his confidence in a belief that God
habitually revealed his will to mortals. In the year 1094, when the Romans
invaded the empire to support the pretended Diogenes, Alexius, in the presence
and with the participation of the Patriarch Nikolaos, consulted the will of
Heaven by depositing on the high altar of St Sophia's two rolls inscribed with
the questions whether the Romans were to be attacked or not to be attacked. A
priest ignorant of the contents of the two rolls, was ordered to approach the
altar, after the Patriarch had performed divine service, and take up one of the
papers, which was unfolded, and its contents read to the emperor. The
communication thus obtained appeared to him an oracle of God, commanding him to
march against the enemy.
When the emperor was so completely under the guidance
of superstition, it is not surprising that his conduct was extremely
inconsistent. At times the suggestions of reason and true religion could not
fail to overpower his fanatical fancies. We find him, accordingly, at times
favouring popular preachers whose avowed theme was the eulogy of some beloved
saint, and at times persecuting these orators because their doctrines were
suspected of heretical or seditious tendencies. At times he tolerated, and at
times he persecuted astrologers; for these impostors frequently made the
imperial crown one of the prizes which futurity allowed them to distribute. An
Athenian astrologer was allowed to sell his predictions to the
Constantinopolitans unmolested, while an Alexandrian was banished for mixing
too much truth in his predictions. A hermit named Nilos,
who had gained great popularity as a public preacher, was accused of heresy,
and the emperor was led by his inordinate vanity to engage in personal
controversy with the enthusiast; but the monk foiled his theological skill, and
defied his earthly power by expressing his readiness to suffer martyrdom for
the truth.
TREATY OF PEACE WITH THE TURKS, A.D.
1081.
One of the earliest acts of the reign of Alexius was
to conclude a treaty of peace with the Seljouk emir Suleiman, who acted in Asia
Minor as if he were completely independent of the Grand Sultan Malekshah. The treachery of Nicephorus Melissenos had
placed Suleiman in possession of Nicaea, and his troops occupied several posts
on the shores of the Bosphorus and the Sea of Marmora; while Alexius, who
required the whole forces of the empire to resist the invasion of Robert
Guiscard, was compelled to purchase peace at any price. Under such
circumstances, it was only to be expected that the immediate neighbourhood of
Constantinople could be kept free from the Turks, and accordingly the
boundaries of the Roman Empire in Asia Minor were by this treaty reduced to
very narrow limits. The country immediately opposite the capital, as far as the
mouth of the river Sangarius and the head of the gulf
of Nicomedia, was evacuated by the Turks, as well as the coast of the Sea of
Marmora, from the little stream called Drako, which
falls into the gulf of Nicomedia, westward to the city of Prusias.
Already the mountains of the Turkish territory were visible from the palace of
Alexius and the dome of St Sophia; but the Crusades were destined to repel this
torrent of Mohammedan invasion from the shores of Europe for several centuries.
The spirit of enterprise and conquest which, when
placed under the guidance of religious enthusiasm, carried the bravest warriors
of western Europe as Crusaders to the East, had, in the preceding generation,
under the direction of civil wisdom, produced the conquest of England and
southern Italy by the Normans. These conquests had raised their military
reputation and self-confidence to the highest pitch; and Robert Guiscard, who
was lord of dominions in Italy far superior in wealth to the duchy of Normandy,
hoped to eclipse the exploits of Duke William in England by conquering the
Byzantine empire. But as he knew that he must expect a more prolonged
resistance than England had offered to its conqueror, he sought a pretext for
commencing the war which would conceal his own object, and have a tendency to
induce a party in the country to take up arms against the government he was
anxious to overthrow. His daughter Helena had been betrothed to Constantine Dukas, the son of Michael VII, and was still so young that
she was residing in the imperial palace at Constantinople, to receive her
education, when Michael was dethroned. Nicephorus III sent the child to a
convent, and Robert her father stood forward as the champion of Michael’s right
to recover the throne from which he had been expelled. Under the cover of this
pretext, the Norman expected to render himself master of Constantinople, or at
all events to gain possession of the rich provinces on the eastern shore of the
Adriatic.
The preparations of Robert Guiscard were far advanced
when Alexius ascended the throne. To inflame the zeal of his troops, he
persuaded Pope Gregory VII that a Greek monk, who had assumed the character of
Michael VII, was really the dethroned emperor, and thus induced the Pope to
approve of his expedition, and to grant absolution to all the invaders of the
Byzantine empire, as if they had been about to commence a holy war. The
soldiers were impressed with a deep conviction of the justice of their cause at
its outset, and when the imposture of the Greek monk was generally
acknowledged, they were inflamed with hopes of plunder and glory.
In the month of June 1081, Robert Guiscard sailed from
Brindisi with a well-appointed fleet of a hundred and fifty ships, carrying an
army of thirty thousand chosen troops. His first operation was to render
himself master of the rich island of Corcyra (Corfu), which then yielded an
annual revenue of fifteen hundred pounds’ weight of gold to the Byzantine
government. He then seized the ports of Butrinto, Avlona, and Kanino, on the
mainland, and laid siege to the important city of Dyrrachium, the strongest
fortress on the eastern coast of the Adriatic, and the capital of Byzantine
Illyria. It was fortunate for the empire that George Paleologos, one of its
bravest officers, had entered the place before Robert commenced the siege.
Alexius immediately hastened to the relief of
Dyrrachium with as large an army as it was in his power to assemble. He had
endeavoured to raise up every obstacle to Robert’s expedition, and still hoped
that the Emperor of Germany, Henry IV, would cause a serious diversion in his
favour by attacking the Norman dominions in Italy. To induce the German emperor
to do this, Alexius had paid him a subsidy of 144,000 byzants, and sent him
many valuable presents; but Henry was too deeply engaged in his contest with
Pope Gregory to spare either time or troops to act against the Normans in
southern Italy, and the Byzantine Empire gained little by his alliance. The
Venetians proved more valuable allies. Alexius solicited their assistance, as
bound to aid the empire by the ties of their ancient allegiance; and he engaged
not only to pay them for their services, but also to make good any losses of
ships which they might sustain by the war. The interests of Venice bound them
to the cause of the Byzantine government at this time. They were alarmed
lest their lucrative trade with Greece and the Levant should be placed at the
mercy of the rapacious Normans, in case Robert Guiscard should succeed in
gaining possession of the entrance of the Adriatic. They plunged,
therefore, into the war without hesitation or reserve.
The Doge Dominic Sylvio sailed from Venice with a powerful fleet to attack the Normans before the
Emperor Alexius could collect his army and march to the relief of Dyrrachium.
The Norman fleet, which was commanded by Bohemund, the illustrious son of
Robert Guiscard, suffered a complete defeat, and the communications of the
invading army with Italy were cut off. This difficulty only excited Robert to press
the siege with additional vigour. He employed every device then known for the
attack of towns. Towers of wood were prepared in frame; battering-rams were
used to shake the walls, and balists to sweep the
defenders from their summits. But the fortifications of Dyrrachium were too
solid to be seriously injured by the feeble machines the Normans had prepared.
The immense blocks of stone that formed their foundations were the work of the
ancient Greeks who first colonized Epidamnus. The
more modern superstructure was so broad that four horsemen could ride abreast
on its summit, and it was flanked at proper intervals by towers raised eleven
feet above the line of the curtain.
The mode of attack generally most successful in that
age consisted in filling up the ditch, and pushing forward a high wooden tower
close to the walls. This structure, which moved on rollers, was furnished with
a drawbridge, which, reaching the ramparts of the place, enabled the storming
party to come to an engagement with its defenders hand to hand. Robert had at
first attempted to take Dyrrachium by escalade, and for that purpose had
brought up the usual battering machines as close as possible to the body of the
place, but all his attacks had been repulsed. Showers of stones, and torrents
of burning naphtha and Greek fire, had broken the ladders and burned the
tortoises and pavisses of the assailants, while
Paleologos, in several desperate sallies, had destroyed the greater part of the
battering-rams and balists. The only hope of taking
the place before the arrival of the emperor was at last concentred on a mighty
wooden tower which Robert Guiscard had constructed from the timbers of his
ships which the Venetians had rendered useless. This fabric, higher than the
towers of Dyrrachium, was built out of reach of the flaming missiles of the
besieged, and well protected against their sallies. The interior consisted of a
broad staircase, to enable companies of armed men to mount in close order to
the summit, whence a drawbridge hung suspended to fall on the ramparts of the
enemy. When this tower was completed, an inclined plane and wooden tram-way
brought it close to the edge of the ditch with as much ease as a ship glides
from the stocks into the sea. But Paleologos and his engineers had watched the
progress of the work with attention, and before the mighty tower was put in
motion, a framework of masts and yards was constructed on the tower of the city
against which it was directed. The appearance of a slender scaffold to resist
their mighty tower only excited the contempt of the Normans, and the monster
was advanced slowly to the very edge of the ditch without any opposition from
the besieged. Five hundred chosen men, in complete armour, were ready to rush
on the drawbridge, and already crowded the staircase, when the order was
suddenly given to halt. The long masts and yards on the city tower had already
descended, and wedged the drawbridge firmly against the body of the structure,
where it served as a door to enclose its occupants, and prevent them from
making any use of their arms.
At the same instant an immense quantity of combustible
materials was projected from the walls, and the tower was in a short time
enveloped in flames and smoke, while the whole attack was terminated by a
vigorous sortie, which enabled Paleologos to destroy its last relics.
In the middle of October, Alexius at last approached
Dyrrachium. He had been joined on his march by Pakurian,
the grand-domestikos, with the European troops
stationed at Adrianople, and by Bodin, king of
Servia, who brought an auxiliary force of active Sclavonian mountaineers to aid the heavy Byzantine infantry. The imperial army was
composed of so great a variety of troops that an enumeration of its different
corps and nations will afford the reader some information concerning the
military condition of the empire at this interesting period, just before it was
visited by the great armies of the Crusaders. The legion of the guards, which
usually did duty on the outer walls of the great palace at Constantinople, was
commanded by Constantine Opos. The Macedonian legion,
recruited in great part from the Sclavonian population of that province, was under the orders of Antiochos.
The Thessalian, composed of Greeks, was commanded by Alexander Kavasilas. The contingent of Turkish troops, from a colony
settled near Achrida, to overawe the Sclavonian population, and keep open the communication with the Adriatic by the Via Egnatia, was led by Tatikios, an
active and able soldier, son of a Saracen who had been taken prisoner by John
Comnenus, the emperor’s father. The body-guard called Vestiarites was commanded by Panukometes; the Frank mercenaries
by Constantine Humbertopulos, a nephew of Robert
Guiscard; and the Varangians by Nampites. A corps of
two thousand eight hundred Paulicians, from the colonies in the neighbourhood
of Philippopolis, had also joined the imperial army, under their own leaders, Xantas and Kuleon. The military
proceedings of Alexius, when he reached the neighbourhood of Dyrrachium, were
very injudicious. The position of the Normans was extremely dangerous, hemmed
in on one side by the numerous army of the emperor, and exposed on the other to
constant attacks on the part of an active garrison. Their foraging parties were
daily destroyed by the Dalmatians and Albanians, so that, if Alexius had taken
up a strong position, and thrown out his light troops all-round the Norman
camp, he would soon have destroyed their cavalry, and reduced them to
capitulate. But he was jealous of the military glory acquired by Paleologos,
and resolved to eclipse it.
The first measure of Alexius betrayed the meanness of
his disposition. He ordered Paleologos to quit Dyrrachium, in order that he
might confer with him in the imperial camp, and he thus relieved Robert Guiscard
from an active enemy in his rear on the day of battle. In opposition to the
advice of all the most experienced officers in his army, the emperor then
decided on risking a general engagement, though it was evident that by this
rash proceeding he offered the enemy the only chance for safety that now
remained to them. The battle which took place was as disgraceful to the
Byzantine arms as to the emperor’s judgment. Alexius commanded the centre
in person; his brother-in-law, the Caesar Nicephorus Melissenos, who had put
the Turks in possession of Nicaea and the greater part of Bithynia, commanded
the right wing, and Pakurian the left. The Varangian
guard, having quitted their horses in order to make a display of their valour,
led the van on foot. For some time the attack of the Varangians on the Norman
line was completely successful, and one wing of Robert’s army was broken. A
part of the cavalry was forced back to the sea-shore, where the Venetians began
to assail them from boats. But Robert regained the advantage by promptly
bringing up a fresh division of his troops to attack the flank of the
Varangians, to whom the emperor brought no succour. The victors were compelled
to retreat to a church in order to make a stand against the Norman cavalry. In
the meantime, after a short engagement, the rest of the Byzantine army was
broken and fled. Several nobles of the highest rank perished on the field, and
the emperor himself was slightly wounded, and compelled to fly without a
follower. The King of Servia had remained an idle spectator of a battle which
he probably considered as an act of imperial folly, and he retired from the
field as soon as his allies were defeated. The loss of the vanquished amounted
to about six thousand; but from the loss of the military chest and baggage, and
the defective arrangements adopted by Alexius in his confidence of victory,
many corps dispersed, and could never be brought back to their standards. The
Paulicians, who had behaved with courage and lost three hundred men, finding that
they had no hope either of plunder or pay, returned home, in spite of all the
exertions of the emperor to detain them.
After the battle, Paleologos found it impossible to
enter Dyrrachium; but Alexius succeeded in transmitting orders to the garrison,
appointing an Albanian general named Komiskorta governor of the place, and intrusting the custody of the citadel to the
Venetians. In the month of February 1082, a Venetian, who guarded one of the
towers, betrayed the city to Robert, who had previously put his army into
winter-quarters at Glabinitza and Joanina,
in order to escape the severe cold of the winter farther north. Alexius
collected the remains of the Byzantine army at Deavolis,
and repaired himself to Thessalonica, where he passed the winter collecting a
second army; which he was enabled to do, as he had replenished his military
chest from the church plate of the richest cathedrals and monasteries in his
dominions. The affairs of Italy, before the opening of the second campaign,
fortunately compelled Robert Guiscard to quit Illyria, and leave his son
Bohemund in command of the Norman army.
The progress of the Normans was arrested by the number
of fortified towns in the mountains of Illyria and Epirus, most of them the
remains of Hellenic cities or Roman municipalities, whose strong walls secured
them against any attack short of a regular siege. The whole summer of 1082
passed without any operation of importance, and Bohemund established his army
in its old winter-quarters at Joanina. In the spring
of 1083, Alexius had collected an army so powerful that he again marched
forward to attack the Normans. In order to break the terrible charge of their
cavalry, which no Byzantine horse could resist, the emperor placed a number of
chariots before his own troops, armed with barbed poles extending in front like
a line of lances, and in these chariots he stationed a strong body of
heavy-armed infantry. Bohemund, however, on reconnoitring this strange unwieldy
measure of defence, broke up his line of cavalry into two columns, and, leaving
the centre of the Byzantine army with the chariots unassailed,
fell with fury on the extremity of the two wings. The resistance was short, and
the Emperor Alexius again fled with precipitation to Achrida, where Pakurian assembled the fugitives. Bohemund considered it of
more importance to the success of his enterprise to render himself master of
Arta, than to pursue the beaten army. While he was engaged besieging Arta,
Alexius, before the end of autumn, had collected troops sufficient to risk a
battle to relieve the besieged city; but he was again defeated by Bohemund, and,
seeing his inability to contend with the young Norman in the field, he left
Arta to its fate, and retired to Constantinople.
The Normans soon overran all Epirus, and invaded
Macedonia, extending their incursions as far as Skopia;
but they failed to reduce the citadel of Achrida, though they gained possession
of the town. Bohemund, finding that he was unable to take Ostrovos and Berrhoea, could not venture to advance into the
plain of Thessalonica, though he penetrated by Vodhena as far as Moglena, and proceeded by Pelagonia and Kastoria into
Thessaly, where, after making himself master of Tricala and Tziviskos, he laid siege to Larissa, in which he
intended to establish his winter-quarters. This city, however, was defended by
Leo Kephalas with great obstinacy; and Alexius,
having procured a subsidiary force of seven thousand light cavalry from
Suleiman, the Sultan of Nicaea, again took the field in the spring of 1084.
After passing Mount Kellia, he quitted the high-road,
and, diverging to his left, descended by the southern side of Ossa, having
avoided the vale of Tempe. Passing Exeban, a Vallachian village near Andronia,
he encamped at Plavitza, on the banks of a stream of
the same name. From thence he advanced by the gardens of Delphina to Tricala, from which the Normans had retired. He there
learned, by a letter from Leo Kephalas, that Larissa
was reduced to the last extremity, and must surrender unless it received
immediate succour. Alexius immediately formed his army into two divisions, and
advanced to engage the Normans before Larissa. His preparation for a battle was
on this occasion made with considerable skill. The principal division of his
forces, with which he left the imperial standard, was ordered to engage the
enemy with caution, and, after some fighting, to retire in order to a pass
called Lykostoma, or the Wolfs Mouth, where they
would be protected by the nature of the ground from further pursuit. Alexius,
with the other division, at the same time marched with a chosen body of men
through the pass of Livatanino, and, avoiding Reveniko, took post at Allage,
where he lay concealed until Bohemund should have pursued the other division of
his army to a considerable distance. When he found that his stratagem had
proved successful, he issued from his concealment, and stormed the Norman camp.
This exploit was facilitated by a body of archers, who were instructed to shoot
the horses of the Normans as they were forming to make a sally.
The wounded horses became unmanageable, and
the dismounted Normans, though terrible on horseback, were almost
helpless, on account of the weight of their armour and their pointed boots,
which impeded their motions on foot. Bohemund, believing that he had again
defeated the emperor, was boasting that he had driven him into the wolf's jaws,
when a messenger arrived with the news that his camp was lost and Larissa
relieved. He immediately galloped back with all his knights, but he found that
Alexius had already-established himself so strongly in the camp that there was
no hope of recovering it. Still the Byzantine army feared the Norman lance too
much to venture any engagement in the plain; but next day Bohemund, seeing that
he was in danger of being cut off from his resources, retreated to Kastoria. As soon as the Norman army was cut off from
plunder, and without any hope of making further conquests, it began to display
a mutinous spirit; and Bohemund was compelled to return to Italy, to obtain
supplies of money and fresh troops. Brienne, the constable of Apulia, who
commanded in his absence, found himself compelled to surrender Kastoria to the Emperor Alexius, and to engage not to bear
arms again against the Byzantine Empire.
While Bohemund was carrying on the war against the
Emperor of the East, Robert Guiscard had driven the Emperor of the West out of
Rome; and after vanquishing Henry IV, he had plundered the Eternal City like
another Genseric. He was now ready to resume his schemes of ambition in the
East. Collecting a powerful fleet to carry over his victorious army into Epirus,
he raised the siege of Corfu, which was invested by the combined naval forces
of the Byzantine Empire and the Venetian republic. The united fleets were
completely defeated in a great naval battle, in which, according to Anna Comnena, they lost thirteen thousand men. But in the month
of July 1085, Robert died in the island of Cephalonia, and with him perished
all the Norman projects of conquest in the Byzantine Empire. Dyrrachium was
recovered by Alexius with the assistance of the Venetian and Amalphitan merchants established in the place, and the
services of the Venetians in this war were rewarded by many commercial
privileges which were conferred on them by a golden bull. The Amalphitan merchants at Constantinople were also obliged to
place themselves under Venetian protection, and pay dues to the Venetian
corporation. The Venetians had been so displeased with their doge, Dominico Silvio, to whose negligence they ascribed their
defeat by the Normans, that he had been deposed, and Vital Faliero appointed doge
in his stead. On Faliero the Emperor Alexius conferred the title of Protosevastos, to which he attached a considerable pension,
and the title of the republic to the sovereignty of Dalmatia and Croatia was
formally recognised. From this time the doge appears to have styled himself
lord of the kingdoms of Dalmatia and Croatia.
PATZINAK WAR, A.D. 1085.
It was fortunate for Alexius that neither the
Patzinaks nor the Seljouk Turks availed themselves of his defeats during the
Norman war to attack the empire. Their united efforts would, in all
probability, have destroyed the Byzantine Empire, and might have exterminated
the Greek race. The dominions of the Patzinaks at this time extended along the
northern bank of the Danube, from the Carpathian Mountains to the shores of the
Black Sea and the Sea of Azof. Over these extensive plains the nomad Patzinaks
wandered as lords of the country, amidst a numerous fixed population of Sclavonians and Vallachians. It
seems at variance with our modern theories concerning the great superiority
which civilization is supposed to confer in the arts of war and government, to
find the Patzinaks carrying on the administration of their extensive dominions
from a movable camp of waggons, and displaying a degree of military and political
skill which rendered them for several generations formidable enemies to the
Byzantine empire. But it requires no very profound knowledge of history to
perceive that military superiority often exists distinct from social
civilization, that literary cultivation affords no guarantee for national
wisdom and honour, and that theological learning is no proof of individual
virtue.
During the Norman war the Patzinaks were themselves
attacked by a new horde of Komans. But when the
tyranny of Alexius drove the Paulicians into rebellion, a union was formed
between large bodies of Patzinaks and Romans, who invaded the empire under the
guidance and with the assistance of the persecuted Paulicians. Their success in
defeating the Byzantine army under the grand-domestikos Pakuvian has been already noticed. In the following
spring, A.D. 1087, a fresh army of invaders, to the number of eighty thousand
men, ravaged Thrace under the command of Tzelgu, but
were at last defeated by Nikalaos Mavrokatakalon,
and their leader slain. The Byzantine army soon after proved again unfortunate;
and in the following campaign the emperor, in order to recover the ground then
lost crossed the range of Mount Haemus by the central pass called the Iron
Gates, in opposition to the counsels of Nicephorus Bryennius,
his blind rival, who, when he heard of the imprudent determination of Alexius,
observed, “Well! on the other side of the mountains it will soon appear who is
best mounted”. The emperor pushed forward as far as Dorostylon,
but he was there met by the Patzinaks and completely defeated. The enemy made
such good use of their victory that they pursued the imperial troops over Mount
Haemus, and wintered in the valley of the Hebrus,
about seven leagues from its mouth, in the neighbourhood of Kypsele and Taurokomon.
In the spring of the year 1089 the Patzinaks advanced
to the vicinity of Constantinople, and the whole campaign was passed in a
variety of movements, which led to no certain result except that the barbarians
ravaged the country between Adrianople and the capital without sustaining any
serious loss. The Princess Anna recounts an occurrence during this campaign
which places in a strong light both the weakness of her father and the extreme
difficulty of his position. A Patzinak chief named Neantzes,
having deserted his countrymen, became a great favourite with the
emperor. But Alexius having laid a plan to surprise the Patzinak army by a
sudden attack, a soldier discovered that Neantzes contrived to hold a parley with some of his countrymen, and from his knowledge
of their language he was satisfied that the deserter was a double traitor. He
immediately repaired to the emperor's tent and denounced Neantzes.
The Patzinak was summoned to answer the charge, but as soon as his accuser had
concluded his narrative, Neantzes drew his sabre, and
before anyone could interpose or the soldier make a movement either to defend
himself or escape, he slew his accuser in the emperor's presence. Yet, either
from timidity or suspicion, the emperor overlooked this insolent act of
rebellion; nay, he had even the baseness to attempt to conceal his natural
indignation, by making Neantzes a present of one of
his own horses. The Patzinak, who knew well that his conduct was unpardonable,
used the emperor’s horse to make his escape to his countrymen.
Though Alexius could gain no advantage of any
importance over the Patzinaks in the field of battle, and was forced to leave
all Bulgaria and the greater part of Thrace exposed to their devastations, he
nevertheless contrived to destroy considerable numbers of their cavalry in
different skirmishes, and his daughter loudly celebrates these partial
successes. On one occasion he was besieged at Tzurulos.
A rapid but smooth slope lay before the town like a long glacis. Along the top
of this slope the emperor ranged all the wheels of his baggage-waggons attached
to their axles, and when the Patzinak cavalry had charged half way up the
slope, to capture the plunder they saw without the walls, the wheels of the
waggons were let loose to run down on them. When the Patzinaks broke their
ranks to escape this new mode of attack, the Byzantine troops sallied out of
the place and inflicted on them a serious loss. The Patzinak army,
however, maintained its ground, and wintered at Bulgarophygia and Nizitza.
In the spring of the year 1090 the emperor took up his
position at Choirobacches, and the Patzinak army soon
encamped before the place. They were so strong that they were able to detach a
body of six thousand cavalry to plunder the country within ten miles of
Constantinople, but their confidence became so great that the emperor was
enabled to surprise their camp before Choirobacches,
and put a considerable number of their troops to the sword. He then disguised
his own cavalry by making use of the standards of the Patzinaks, and in this
way he destroyed many of their troops who were returning from plundering in the
vicinity of Constantinople. But the enemy’s force was not broken by this
victory, and their innumerable light horse continued to ravage every corner of
Thrace. The inordinate vanity of Alexius, nevertheless, induced him to
celebrate this trifling advantage (though it was insufficient to protect the
country round his capital from hostile attacks) by a triumphal procession back
to Constantinople. The advanced guard of his army wore for the occasion the
dress and carried the arms of Patzinaks, as if the emperor was prouder of his
own stratagems than of the valour of his army. The prisoners followed, each led
by a peasant; then came a body of soldiers, bearing aloft the heads of the
slain on their lances; and after this display, the emperor, surrounded by his
household and usual body-guard, with the imperial standards, and followed by
the trophies of his success. The pageant excited the spleen of Nicephorus
Melissenos, who characterized his brother-in-law’s vanity with more justice
than his brother-in-law had treated his treason. Melissinos sneered at the
emperor's victory, as bringing joy to the empire without gain, and grief
to the Patzinaks without loss.
Alexius, however, at last succeeded in concluding a
treaty with the Komans, by which these barbarians
engaged to send a large army to cooperate with him in Thrace. In order to
prepare for a great effort Nicephorus Melissenos was sent to assemble the armed
peasants of Thrace and Macedonia called Vlachs, and join the regular forces of
the empire, which the emperor conducted in person to Enos. The imperial army
was there increased by the arrival of the Komans, who
were about forty thousand strong; and the Patzinaks, who had concentrated all
their troops, found themselves hemmed in between two hostile armies. A great
battle was fought at a place called Levounion, in
which these barbarians, who had so long ravaged Thrace, were completely
defeated on Tuesday the 29th of April 1091. The number of prisoners who were
captured by the Byzantine troops was so great that fear induced the soldiers to
put many to death during the night after the battle. The remainder, with the
families captured in their camp, were established as colonists at Moglena, where they long continued to supply recruits to
the imperial armies. The Komans, distrusting the
treachery of Alexius, hastened to regain their own seats beyond the Danube,
with the booty and prisoners they had secured. A few who remained behind
were rewarded by Alexius with additional presents, to secure the goodwill of
their nation.
The wars carried on by Alexius with Bodin king of Servia, and Balkan prince of Dalmatia and Rascia, though they occupied a considerable force at
different times, exerted too little influence on the general condition of the
Byzantine Empire to be noticed in detail.
On the other hand, the fortunes of the Seljouk Turks
influenced the course of European history. We have already seen that their
conquests in Asia Minor were facilitated by two causes—by the destruction of
the Christian population, and the treachery of the Byzantine rulers. Their
incessant plundering incursions systematically exterminated the agricultural
classes who were beyond the immediate protection of fortified towns; while the
disgraceful cessions of territory they obtained from emperors and rebel chiefs
yielded them the possession of as many provinces as they conquered. History
records few periods in which so large a portion of the human race was in so
short a period reduced from an industrious and flourishing condition to
degradation and serfage. Yet the details of this
great catastrophe are almost utterly neglected by the Byzantine historians,
though its causes can be directly traced to the proceedings of the imperial
administration and the conduct of the leading members of the aristocracy of
Constantinople. Family prejudice and courtly blindness concealed from the minds
of the Prince Nicephorus Bryennius and his spouse,
the Princess Anna, how much of the decline of human society was the work of
their own relations; and national prejudices, combined with political
servility, rendered other contemporary writers more anxious to conciliate
patrons by liberal eulogies than to trace the causes of the calamities they
witnessed by a searching investigation of the truth.
SELJOUK TURKS
It has been already noticed that the defeat of the
Emperor Romanus IV by Alp Arslan left all Asia Minor exposed to the ravages of
the Seljouks, who even then pushed their plundering
incursions as far as Nicaea and Nicomedia. Shortly after Suleiman, the son of
Koutoulmish, was entrusted with a subordinate sovereignty in Asia Minor by the
Grand Sultan Malekshah, and thus became the founder
of the Seljouk sultanat of Roum.
The dominion of Suleiman over the greater part of Asia Minor was recognised by
a treaty with the Byzantine Empire in 1074, when Michael VII purchased the
assistance of a Turkish auxiliary force against the rebellion of Oursel and his own uncle John Dukas.
Nicephorus III ratified the treaty concluded with Michael VII, augmented the
power of the Turks, and abandoned additional numbers of Christians to their
domination, to gain their aid in dethroning his lawful prince; and Nicephorus
Melissenos, when he rebelled against Nicephorus III, repeated a similar treason
against the traitor, and, in hopes of gaining possession of Constantinople,
yielded up the possession of Nicaea to Suleiman, which that chief immediately
made the capital of his dominions. It must not be forgotten that the hatred
which a considerable portion of the Christian population bore to the Byzantine
government, on account of the oppressive nature of its financial
administration, and to the Greek Church on account of its rapacity, simony, and
cruelty, greatly facilitated the consolidation of the Seljouk power. The
overthrow of the Iconoclasts and the destruction of the Paulicians were
victories of the Greek race and church over the native Asiatics,
which were neither forgotten nor forgiven. The strict centralization of power
which the emperors of the Basilian family had established also accelerated the
disunion in a population destitute of homogeneous elements, by leaving the
native population solely dependent on foreign governors for defence,
protection, and justice. The effect of this was a tendency towards the
formation of several independent principalities in Asia Minor even before the
conquests of the Seljouks; and one of these states,
the Armenian kingdom of Cilicia, long defied the Turkish power. The
administration of the Iconoclast emperors had restored Asia Minor to a high
degree of prosperity, wealth, and population; but in the time of John I
Zimiskes, individual nobles had succeeded in obtaining possession of enormous
estates, which were chiefly devoted to pasturage, and thus the diminution of
the Christian population had commenced from internal causes of decay in the
Byzantine empire before the Seljouk invasions. The nomad Turks consequently,
partly on account of this want of inhabitants, and partly on account of the
void created by their own devastations, colonized the country to a wonderful
extent, and in the course of a single generation became the majority of the
inhabitants of Cappadocia, Phrygia, and Galatia. And in this rapid colonization
of the country by the Turks, we must seek for the explanation of the obstinate
and effectual resistance which these countries were able to offer to the
Crusaders, though they had been so recently conquered by the Mohammedans.
When Alexius ascended the throne, the Seljouk
conquests in Asia Minor were still considered as a portion of the dominions of
the Grand Sultan Malekshah, the son of Alp Arslan,
and Suleiman, the sultan of Nicaea, was only his lieutenant, though as a member
of the house of Seljouk, and as cousin of Malekshah,
he was honoured with the title of Sultan. The prominent position
which his posterity occupied in the wars of the Crusaders, their long relations
with the Byzantine empire, and the independent position they held as sultans of
Iconium, have secured to them a far more lasting place in history than has been
obtained by the superior but less durable dynasty of the grand sultans. But at
the commencement of the Seljouk domination in Asia Minor, there were other
emirs who commanded extensive provinces in Asia Minor with as much independence
as Suleiman. Of these, Elchan, who possessed Cyzikus; Tzachas, who acted the
pirate at Smyrna; and Charatike, who seized Sinope,
are particularly mentioned; while Artuk and Tutak are recorded as having held the command of large
armies for particular objects. Toutoush, the brother
of Malekshah, who acted as his governor at Damascus
at the same time, became the founder of the Syrian dynasty of Seljouk sultans.
The treaty by which the river Drako was declared the boundary between the dominions of Alexius and Suleiman has
been mentioned, and the assistance which the Turkish cavalry afforded to the
Byzantine empire in the war with the Normans. But as no limits were placed to
the progress of Suleiman towards the south, he did not consider himself bound
to refrain from the conquest of Antioch, though that city still nominally
formed part of the Byzantine Empire. Philaretos the
Armenian, who had commanded under Romanus IV at the unfortunate battle of
Manzikert, after passing through many vicissitudes, still governed Antioch,
which he held rather as an independent prince than as an officer of the
imperial government; but, like most of the Christian princes who continued
to keep possession of cities and districts surrounded by the Turkish conquests,
he acknowledged allegiance to the Emperor of Constantinople. When, however, he
was informed of the successful termination of the Norman war, he feared that
Alexius would be able to deprive him of his power in Antioch; and to secure his
position, he resolved to embrace the Mohammedan faith, and maintain his
independence by means of Turkish mercenary troops. His son, pretending that he
wished to prevent his father’s apostacy, by rendering it unavailing, fled to
Suleiman at Nicaea, and offered to put that prince in possession of Antioch
before his father could execute his purpose. The importance of the prize roused
the activity of Suleiman, who hastened to Antioch, and, arriving unexpectedly
before the walls, rendered himself easily master of the city under the guidance
of the treacherous son of Philaretos. This conquest
involved Suleiman in war with the Emir of Aleppo and with Toutoush,
the brother of Malekshah, by whom he was completely
defeated in the neighbourhood of Aleppo; and it is said that, to avoid falling
into the hands of his enemies, he committed suicide, which is a strong proof
that the manners of the Seljouk Turks were not yet completely disciplined to
the principles of the Koran (AD 1086).
This civil war between two of his near relations and
most powerful officers drew the attention of Malekshah to the affairs of Asia Minor. Aboulkassim, who had
been entrusted by Suleiman with the direction of the administration at Nicaea
when he departed on his expedition to Antioch, attempted to maintain himself in
a state of independence. Malekshah, in order to
secure the assistance, or rather the neutrality, of the Byzantine Empire while
he reduced his rebellious vassals to order, concluded a treaty with Alexius, by
which the empire recovered several maritime cities from the Turks. But whatever
engagements Alexius entered into with Malekshah, he
showed himself always ready to treat with Aboulkassim,
if by so doing he could gain some immediate advantage; and, according to the
testimony of his daughter, he obtained possession of Sinope by cheating the
grand sultan, and of Nicomedia by a fraudulent violation of the hospitality he
had offered to Aboulkassim. He, however, conferred on
that Mussulman the rank of Sevastotatos; and when
Nicaea was besieged by the troops of Malekshah, he
sent a Byzantine corps under Tatikios to aid in its
defence, but with secret orders to gain possession of the place for himself
should the treachery appear practicable. Aboulkassim,
at last, finding that his own resources were insufficient to maintain his
independence, preferred throwing himself on the generosity of Malekshah to intrusting his fortunes to the aid of so
faithless an ally as Alexius proved to all persons and on all occasions. He was
soon after slain by his enemies, and his brother Pulchas was compelled to surrender Nicaea to Kilidy-Arslan,
the son of Suleiman (A.D. 1092).
The Turkish chief who attacked the empire with the
greatest energy during the reign of Alexius was Tzachas,
the emir of Smyrna. He had been a prisoner at Constantinople during the reign
of Nicephorus III, and by entering the Byzantine service had gained the rank
of protonobilissimus. When Alexius
mounted the throne, and the imperial patronage was monopolized by the native
aristocracy, Tzachas, seeing he had nothing more to
hope from the Byzantine government, assembled a fleet of forty decked vessels,
called agraria, and by a series of bold
and successful enterprises rendered himself master of Clazomene,
Phocaea, and Chios. His power increased so steadily that in the year 1090 he
defeated the Byzantine fleet under the command of Niketas Kastamonites. For two years he carried on war with
the naval forces of Alexius; and having made Smyrna the capital of his
dominions in the year 1092, he assumed the title of Emperor, adopting all the
insignia of the imperial rank used by the sovereigns of Constantinople, and by
so doing inflicted a deeper wound on the heart of Alexius than he could have
struck by any loss of territory. Though Tzachas was
at length defeated by John Dukas, the brother of the
empress, and lost Samos and several other islands he had conquered, he was
still strong enough to besiege Abydos in the year 1093. But Alexius succeeded
in inspiring Kilidy-Arslan, who had married Tzachas’ daughter, with distrust of his father-in-law; and
if we believe Anna, the Sultan of Nicaea was induced by the calumnies of the
emperor to assassinate Tzachas with his own hand at a
festival. This crime strengthened the alliance between the suborner and the
murderer. But many of the Seljouk tribes beyond the Sangarius were sufficiently independent to pay little attention to the treaties of Kilidy-Arslan, and frequently infested the territories of
the empire by their incursions. To protect the neighbourhood of Nicomedia,
which was now the frontier city of the diminished empire, Alexius cleared out
an ancient canal between the lake of Sophon and the
gulf of Astacus, which was said to have been
originally constructed by the Emperor Anastasius as a defence to the Asiatic
territory in the immediate vicinity of his capital, when he fortified its contiguous
district in Europe by constructing the great Thracian wall from the Euxine to
the Propontis. Alexius erected also a fortress called the Iron Tower, in which
he placed a garrison to defend the passage of the canal. The lake and the lower
course of the river Sangarius required only a few
guards to form an effectual barrier against the plundering incursions of the
Turkish nomads. About the time this work was completed, reports reached
Constantinople of the great preparations the western nations of Europe were
making to deliver Jerusalem from the Turks. Alexius was not without alarm at
the multitudes which threatened to enter his dominions; but he hoped to employ
the arms of the Franks in such a way as would enable him to restore the
Byzantine Empire to some portion of its ancient power and dominion in the East.
THE CRUSADES
The influence of the Crusades on the progress of
European civilization, and the change they produced in the relative condition
of the governments and people in the western nations, offers too wide a field
even for cursory notice, in a work which confines its investigations strictly
to the political history of the Byzantine Empire. I must, therefore, confine my
observations on the Crusades to their effects on the government of Constantinople,
and on the condition of the Greek Christians. These effects were very different
from those which they produced on the Latin nations. In the West, we can trace
the germs of much social improvement to the immediate results of the Crusades;
but in the East, during the whole period of their continuance, they were an
unmitigated evil to the great body of the Christian population. For a time,
religious feelings induced the leaders to behave to the Byzantine Empire with
some respect, as it was a Christian state; but when ambition and fashion,
rather than religious feeling, led men to the holy wars, the Eastern Christians
suffered more from the Crusaders than the Mohammedans. It is our task,
therefore, to view the Crusades chiefly as the irruption of undisciplined
armies seeking to conquer foreign lands, and to retain possession of their
conquests by military power; and in this light these celebrated expeditions
effected so little in comparison with the forces they brought into the field,
and with the individual military pretensions of the leaders, and the government
of their Eastern conquests was so ruinous and unjust, that the character of the
Western Europeans was for many ages regarded by the Eastern Christians with
feelings of contempt and hatred.
Like all the great movements of mankind, the Crusades
must be traced to the coincidence of many causes which influenced men of
various nations and discordant feelings, at the same period of time, to pursue
one common end with their whole heart. Religious zeal, the fashion of
pilgrimages, the spirit of social development, the energies that lead to
colonization or conquest, and commercial relations, only lately extended so
widely as to influence public opinion, all suddenly received a deep wound.
Every class of society felt injured and insulted, and unity of action was
created as if by a divine impulse. The movement was facilitated by the
circumstance that Europe began to adopt habits of order just at the time when
Asia was thrown into a state of anarchy by the invasions of the Seljouk Turks.
Great numbers of pilgrims had always passed through
the Byzantine Empire to visit the holy places in Palestine. We still possess an
itinerary of the road from Bordeaux to Jerusalem, by the way of Constantinople,
written in the fourth century for the use of pilgrims. Though the disturbed and
impoverished state of Europe, after the fall of the Western Empire, diminished
the number of pilgrims, still, even in times of the greatest anarchy, many
passed annually through the Eastern Empire to Palestine. The improvement which
dawned on the western nations during the eleventh century, and the augmented
commerce of the Italians, gave additional importance to the pilgrimage to the
East. About the year 1064, during the reign of Constantine X, an army or
caravan of seven thousand pilgrims passed through Constantinople, led by the
Archbishop of Mayence and four bishops. They made
their way through Asia Minor, which was then under the Byzantine government;
but in the neighbourhood of Jerusalem they were attacked by the Bedouins, and
only saved from destruction by the Saracen emir of Kamla,
who hastened to their assistance. These pilgrims are reported to have lost
three thousand of their number, without being able to visit either the Jordan
or the Dead Sea. The invasions of the Seljouks increased the disorders in Palestine. The prosperity of the pilgrims suffered
as well as their piety. The Easter fair of Jerusalem was of importance to most
European nations. Genoese and Pisan fleets traded to Palestine before the
Crusades, and the merchants of Amalfi had already founded that glorious
hospital of St John, which became a bulwark of Christianity in Rhodes and
Malta. At the time of the first crusade, the fleets of the Italian states would
have sufficed to transport large armies to Palestine, had conquest been the
sole object of the Crusaders; for we have seen that, in a single battle with
Robert Guiscard, Venice could lose a whole fleet, with thirteen thousand men on
board, without receiving a mortal wound.
In the year 1076 the Seljouk Turks took possession of
Jerusalem, and immediately commenced harassing the pilgrims with unheard-of
exactions. The Saracens had in general viewed the pilgrims with favour, as men
engaged in fulfilling a pious duty, or pursuing lawful gain with praiseworthy
industry, and they had levied only a reasonable toll on the pilgrims, and a
moderate duty on their merchandise; while, in consideration of these imposts,
they had established guards to protect them on the roads by which they
approached the holy places. The Turks, on the contrary, acting like mere
nomads, uncertain of retaining possession of the city, thought only of
gratifying their avarice. They plundered the rich pilgrims, and insulted the
poor. The religious feelings of the Christians were irritated, and their
commerce ruined; a cry for vengeance arose throughout all Europe, and men’s
minds were fully prepared for an attempt to conquer Palestine, when Peter the
Hermit began to preach that it was a sacred duty to deliver the tomb of Christ
from the hands of the Infidels.
Pope Gregory VII was the first pontiff who attempted
to excite the European nations to attack the Mohammedans as a religious duty.
The Emperor Michael VII had entered into communications with the Papal See, for
the ostensible object of uniting the Greek and Latin churches, but principally
with the hope of obtaining military succours against the Turks. In 1074,
Gregory, moved by the danger to which Christianity was exposed by the rapid
progress of the Seljouks, called on the Christians of
Europe to take up arms to defend their suffering brethren against the
Mohammedans, and proposed to lead the troops himself to Constantinople. Many
prepared to accompany the Pope at that time; but the state of Europe, and the
various political projects in which Gregory involved himself, rendered this
first project of a crusade abortive.
Unfortunately, too, the Pope did more, by his violent
interference in the affairs of the Eastern Empire, to estrange the Greeks, than
either the exigencies of Byzantine policy or the hopes of assistance could
efface. In the year 1078, among the numerous
excommunications, anathemas, and execrations which Gregory
launched at emperors, bishops, and princes, he thought fit to excommunicate
Nicephorus III. Whether this was done because Nicephorus failed to pay an
annual subsidy of 24 lb. of gold, granted by Michael VII to the monastery of
Mount Cassino, or because he married the Empress Maria when Michael was
compelled to descend from the throne and become a priest, the step was equally
impolitic; as so violent and unwarranted an attack on the independence of the
empire, by a foreign priest, was sure to unite the Greek clergy and people in
opposition to the papal pretensions. Victor III, moved by the spirit which then
inspired the court of Rome to assume the direction of European policy, urged
the maritime states of Italy to attack the Mohammedans. Like his predecessor
Gregory VII, he promised remission of sins to all who engaged in this holy war.
The Pisans and Genoese, eager to attack the Saracen pirates who still continued
to infest the Italian seas, finding that the papal exhortations secured them a
supply of volunteers, fitted out their fleets and invaded Africa, where they
met with some success, and from whence they carried off considerable booty.
Every year brought the hostility of the Christians to the Mohammedans more
prominently before the public. Peter the Hermit began to preach, and at last,
in 1095, Pope Urban II assembled a council at Placentia, where ambassadors from
Alexius presented themselves to solicit assistance, and enrol some of the
distinguished soldiers of the Franks in the service of the Eastern Empire. At
the council of Clermont, which was held a short time after, many princes took
the cross, and the religious enthusiasm spread with such fervour among a. d.
the people that many assembled without loss of time, and commenced their march
to deliver Jerusalem.
The conduct of these first bands of Crusaders produced
a very unfavourable impression on the inhabitants of the Byzantine Empire. Only
a part of the expedition consisted of soldiers, and even these troops paid
little attention to the orders of Walter the Pennyless,
a soldier of some military experience, who was the nominal leader of the army.
The majority of this first swarm of Crusaders consisted of pilgrims without
arms, order, or discipline, followed by crowds of women and children. Few had
made adequate preparation for the journey, or possessed any knowledge of the
difficulties they must necessarily encounter, and all were without the
requisite pecuniary resources. They had hardly entered the Byzantine Empire
before their money was exhausted, and they then began to plunder the Bulgarian
villages, and carry off the provisions and cattle of the inhabitants, as if
they had been in an enemy’s country. This conduct roused the fury of the
peasantry, accustomed to war by the incessant plundering incursions of the
Hungarians, Patzinaks, and Romans, who fell upon the dispersed bands of the
Crusaders, and would in all probability have destroyed the whole expedition,
had not the imperial officer who commanded at Naissos saved the greater part, supplied them with rations, and sent them forward to
Constantinople. But that hundreds of the unarmed pilgrims, and of the women and
children, were seized and sold as slaves to pay for the ravages committed by
the plunderers, cannot be doubted. A still more numerous body of pilgrims soon
followed, under the personal guidance of Peter the Hermit himself. Though
supplied with provisions by the governor of Naissos,
this body committed such disorders that at last they were attacked by the
garrison of Naissos, and only seven thousand reached
Constantinople with Peter. These first divisions of the Crusaders were not so
numerous nor powerful as to excite any alarm in Alexius, who had often
encountered more numerous armies of Patzinaks, Romans, Turks, and Normans; and
as he expected to turn their services to his advantage, he received Peter the
Hermit with kindness, and supplied his followers with provisions. But the
ravages committed by these undisciplined bands in Servia, Bulgaria, and Thrace
sowed the seeds of a deep-rooted hatred of the western nations in the hearts of
the Sclavonian and Greek subjects of the Byzantine
empire. The bitter fruits of this antipathy will be often apparent in the
following pages of this history.
The followers of Walter the Pennyless and Peter the Hermit were soon swelled into a considerable army by fresh
arrivals at Constantinople. They were transported over to Asia by the Byzantine
fleet, where their imprudence and want of discipline quickly caused their ruin.
The various nations composing the army formed separate bands, and their
desultory attacks on the Turks led to numbers being cut off in detail. The main
body marched to attack Nicaea, and was completely defeated in a battle, from
which only three thousand men escaped into the Byzantine territory.
The great army of the first Crusade only began to
march eastward about the time this advanced guard was destroyed. In the summer
of the year 1096, the chivalry of Flanders, Normandy, and France began to move
towards Constantinople by various routes. Hugh of Vermandois, brother of Philip
I king of France; Robert II duke of Normandy; Robert count
of Flanders; Stephen count of Blois and Chartres, with some other independent
leaders of inferior rank, took the well-known road through Italy, where they
passed the winter. Bohemund, now Prince of Tarentum, caught something of their
religious enthusiasm, which he engrafted on his own private schemes of personal
ambition and rapacity; but he was accompanied by his kinsman Tancred, one of
the noblest characters of the crusade. Hugh of Vermandois, proud of
everything—of his high birth, of his having received a consecrated banner from
the Pope, and of his tall person—was impatient to reach Constantinople before
any of his comrades, hoping to impose on the Byzantine court by his grandeur.
Embarking at Bari with a small suite, he landed in the neighbourhood of
Dyrrachium. He soon learned how little respect the Greeks entertained either
for the piety or splendour of crusading princes. John Comnenus, the emperor’s
nephew, was governor of Dyrrachium, and as he was well informed of the views of
the imperial court, he detained the great Hugh until he should receive orders
from the capital. When Alexius heard that the man of highest rank among the
Crusaders was in his power, he began to speculate in what manner he could turn
the accident to the greatest advantage. He sent Butumites,
an officer of rank, to conduct the Count of Vermandois to Constantinople with
becoming honour; and though he really detained him as a hostage, he received
him with distinction, and endeavoured to gain his goodwill, in which he soon
succeeded. Hugh of Vermandois, notwithstanding his presumption and the royal
blood of France, was the first leader of the crusade who was induced to do
homage and swear fealty to the Greek emperor. But the circumstance of his
arrest, and the degradation of his homage, spread distrust through the army,
which had now passed the north-western frontier of the empire, under the
guidance of Godfrey of Bouillon.
Godfrey, the future king of Jerusalem, conducted the
most warlike if not the most numerous body of the Crusaders. Though attended by
irregular bands, who committed great disorders in the march through Hungary and
Bulgaria, he maintained such discipline among his regular troops that his
cavalry arrived at Philippopolis in good condition. He there learned that the
brother of the liege lord of most of the crusading barons was a prisoner at
Constantinople, and he sent an embassy to demand his immediate release.
Alexius’ refusal to comply with this demand was the signal for commencing
hostilities. Godfrey advanced by Adrianople and Selymbria,
laying waste the country and pillaging the inhabitants, until he reached the
walls of Constantinople. Alexius, alarmed at the energy and numbers of his
enemies, sent Hugh to the camp of the Crusaders, and peace was thereby
restored, but confidence could not be so easily re-established.
It was about Christmas, 1096, that this division of
the army reached the Bosphorus. Its hostile attitude and the news that
Bohemund, his ancient enemy, was approaching, in company with another division,
whose number exceeded this army by which he had more than once been defeated,
increased the alarm of Alexius. The emperor now exerted all his ability, and
used every machination of flattery, force, and bribery, to secure himself
against the evil designs of Bohemund, whom he regarded as the heir of his
father’s ambitious projects, by engaging the crusading chief to do homage to
the Eastern Empire, and swear fidelity to his person. It was with considerable
difficulty that Godfrey was persuaded by Hugh of Vermandois to consent to this
measure. At last, however, a treaty was concluded between Alexius and the
Crusaders. On the one hand, the emperor engaged to assist the Crusaders to
recover the Holy Sepulchre, to supply them with an auxiliary force, to protect
all the pilgrims who passed through his dominions, and to take care that the
armies of the Crusaders should be amply supplied with provisions, in open
markets, at reasonable prices. On the other hand, the leaders of the crusade
promised to commit no disorders in the empire, to treat Alexius as their liege
lord while within his dominions, to deliver up to him all the cities which had
recently belonged to the empire as soon as they recovered them from the Turks,
and to do him homage and swear fidelity to his throne. The word of an emperor
was regarded a sufficient guarantee for the faith of Alexius; but the princes
of the crusade, being already the liegemen of other sovereigns, took an oath of
fidelity, and did homage to Alexius, in regular form, to the extent of the
engagements contracted by their treaty. On the nature and extent of these
engagements, it is probable that the contracting parties, even at the time,
placed a different interpretation, and they have been the subject of a good
deal of discussion since.
Bohemund would have avoided doing homage and swearing
fealty to Alexius if possible; but he soon perceived that he must follow his
companions, and endeavour to profit for the time by the favour of Alexius,
rather than appear openly as his enemy. Still, both he and Alexius for some
time could not refrain from acting on feelings of mutual suspicion and
jealousy, which led them into serious political errors; indeed, the hostile
feelings and intriguing ambition of Bohemund, rendered his presence in the
crusading camp no small addition to the numerous causes of quarrel which
occurred between the Greeks and the Crusaders. Fortunately for Alexius, the
alliance he had contracted with Robert the Frison in
1088, secured him the friendship of his son Robert count of Flanders, one of
the most powerful and valiant leaders of the expedition, whose influence in
some degree counteracted the intrigues of the crafty Norman.
It was with the greatest difficulty, and not without
actual hostilities with Godfrey, that Alexius succeeded in persuading the
leaders to transport their troops over to Asia. All wished to enter
Constantinople, and none wished to quit it when they had entered. Its luxuries
and amusements so enchanted the young warriors of the West, that they would
fain have postponed their vows in the pursuit of pleasure. Godfrey, with
the first division of the army, did not cross the Bosphorus until the middle of
March 1097. In the meantime Bohemund, Robert count of Flanders, Robert duke of
Normandy, Stephen count of Blois, and Eustace count of Bologne,
followed one another in succession from the ports on the Adriatic, and after
doing homage to Alexius, and receiving valuable presents from him, collected
all their followers in Asia. Raymond count of St Giles and Toulouse was the
last of the chiefs who joined the army. He had been the first to take the
cross, but his preparations occupied much time, for he made a vow never to
return to his rich domains, having resolved to spend the rest of his life in
the East as a Christian soldier. Could he have foreseen that the power of his
family and the wealth of his subjects were soon to become the spoil of another
crusade, what would have been the bitterness of his feelings? Raymond collected
so large an army that he deemed it prudent to avoid as much as possible the
routes of those who preceded him. His own line of march was, nevertheless, very
ill chosen. After passing through the north of Italy, instead of descending the
valley of the Save, he proceeded from Friouli through
Dalmatia. The country was mountainous, destitute of roads, and thinly peopled;
the inhabitants were poor, and avoided the strangers, concealing their cattle
and provisions in their most sequestered valleys. Hostilities took place;
Raymond put out his prisoners’ eyes and cut off their hands and noses to
intimidate their countrymen, and thereby increased his difficulties. At last he
reached Scodra, where he was met by Bodin king of Servia, but the poverty of the country
was so great that no adequate supplies of provisions could be obtained; and
this army of Crusaders, though better prepared for their journey than any
other, suffered greater hardships. Even after reaching Dyrrachium, as they had
to march over ground traversed by their predecessors, they were compelled to
fight their way through the Albanian, Sclavonian, and
Bulgarian population of Epirus, Macedonia, and Thrace.
The conduct of Alexius to Raymond was at first
extremely haughty and imprudent. Raymond left his troops at Redestos,
and repaired to Constantinople to wait on the emperor; but his refusal to do
homage like the other princes offended the vanity of Alexius, who, thinking the
troops of the count were exhausted by fatigue, cut off their supplies of
provisions, and sent armed men to harass them in their quarters, hoping by
these measures to force Raymond to do homage. The Count of St Giles was neither
to be moved by fear of the emperor nor by the solicitations of the other
Crusaders. He declared that he had not taken the cross to enter the service of
any earthly sovereign, but that if the Byzantine emperor would place himself at
the head of the expedition, he was ready to obey all his orders. The
proceedings of Alexius threatened war, and it required all the prudence of
Godfrey and Robert of Flanders to prevent the indignation of Raymond letting
loose his army on the environs of Constantinople. Bohemund, gained over
for the time by the liberality of Alexius, went so far as to tell the Count of
Toulouse that, in case of hostilities breaking out, he should hold it his duty
to serve Alexius as his liege lord. This threat the haughty Raymond never
forgave. The other leaders at last arranged the quarrel. Raymond swore to
observe the treaty entered into by the other Crusaders, and never to undertake
anything against the life or the honour of Alexius, but he refused to do him
homage. A more intimate acquaintance with the honourable though haughty
character of the count showed the emperor the impolicy of the quarrel. He
perceived that no projects of worldly ambitions caused the refusal of Raymond,
nor could power ever be held by a Crusader less inclined to seek wealth and
conquest at the expense of the empire. He found that the word of Raymond was as
good a guarantee as the oath of others, and he then endeavoured, by every means
in his power, to gain the good opinion of one he had received in the beginning
so ill. As Raymond, though severe and haughty, was frank and loyal, he soon
forgave the hostilities of Alexius, but he never pardoned the insolent threat
of the upstart Bohemund.
The conduct of Alexius towards the Crusaders was
certainly deficient both in candour and prudence, but he had a very difficult
part to act; and it must be admitted that all his fears and distrust were fully
justified by the rapine of the private soldiers, who plundered his subjects,
and the insolence of the chiefs, who insulted his authority. The memorable
anecdote of the insolence of a petty French chieftain, who has been supposed by Ducange to have been a count of Paris, and who rudely
seated himself on the imperial throne at a solemn audience, is familiar both to
the readers of history and romance. His conduct must have appeared to the
Byzantine courtiers an act of high treason deserving death, and it was regarded
by the princes of the crusade as an intolerable piece of rudeness and
brutality. The Franks and Greeks were at this time in social conditions which
rendered it impossible for them to associate together without feelings of
mutual contempt. The narration of Anna Comnena enables us to contrast in a curious manner the experienced anility of the
Byzantine court with the idleness and mental inanity of the Western
aristocracy. She complains, with great reason, of the presumption, vanity, and
loquacity of the chiefs, who, considering themselves entitled by their rank to
converse with the emperor, compelled him to sacrifice hour after hour of his
valuable time listening to their pretensions and solicitations. Alexius knew
that these men were independent chiefs, and he was anxious to avoid giving them
offence, for their power so often exceeded their judgment that the neglect of a
childish demand or the irritation of an unintentional slight might plunge his
empire in a dangerous and bloody war. The personal behaviour of Alexius was
more judicious than his political system. He did everything to conciliate the
nobles, and his patience, good-humour, and liberality overcame many
difficulties, but his health suffered from the fatigue of the interminable
audiences he gave the leaders amidst the toils of his other occupations. The
silly loquacity of men who wasted their days in idle talk and vain boasting
made a very unfavourable impression on the Byzantine nobles, whose social
intercourse retained much of Roman gravity, formalized by Oriental ceremony.
The chiefs of the crusade also displayed an unseemly eagerness to obtain money
and presents from the emperor. Tancred, the flower of Norman chivalry, openly
expressed his disgust at the rapacity of his companions. When solicited to do
homage to Alexius, which he would fain have avoided, he could not repress his
sneers at their venality. Looking one day at the magnificent tent of the
emperor, which all were admiring, Tancred exclaimed, “If Alexius would give me
that tent full of money, and as much more as he has given to our princes, I
might think of doing him homage”.
The feudal nations and the subjects of the Byzantine
Empire formed different estimates of the exigencies of society. Political
order, security of property, and the supremacy of the judicial administration,
were, in the opinion of the Eastern Christians, the true objects of government.
Personal independence, and the right of each noble to redress his wrongs with
his own sword, were the most valuable privileges of freemen, in the opinion of
the Frank nations, lie authority of a central administration, which made the
most powerful noble submit to the law, was regarded by the feudal barons as an
intolerable despotism; while the right of private war, as it existed in western
Europe, was considered by the Greeks as a state of anarchy suitable only to a
society of lawless bandits. Nor were the feelings of the Eastern and Western
clergy towards one another calculated to infuse any addition of Christian
charity into the intercourse of the Greeks and Franks. The unfounded and
arrogant pretensions of the popes excited the opposition of the whole Greek
Church, and were ably exposed by its more learned members. The general
ignorance of the Latin clergy raised feelings of contempt, which were changed
into abhorrence when the Greeks beheld men calling themselves bishops clad in
coats of mail, riding through the streets on fiery chargers, and returning from
battle covered with blood. On the other hand, the Latin priests despised the
Eastern clergy as a timeserving and slavish body, utterly unfit to uphold the
dignity of the priesthood, and they condemned those doctrines as heretical
which taught that the clergy were bound to submit to the civil magistrate. In
addition to these incongruities, the rival nations mutually reproached one
another as insolent, false, and treacherous.
One of the primary causes of the quarrels between the
Crusaders and the subjects of the Byzantine Empire arose from the attempts made
by the government and its officials to make unfair profits in selling
provisions to the strangers. The financial administration of Alexius was
remarkable for its rapacity and bad faith. He had cheated his own subjects by
issuing debased coin in payment of his debts, and enriched his treasury by
oppressive monopolies. He attempted the same system with the Crusaders; but
when he beheld the numbers of the armies they assembled under the walls of
Constantinople, he saw the necessity of laying aside his previous practice, and
attempted, by a liberal distribution of money and provisions, to efface the
memory of his earlier frauds. For a time the crusading army appeared to be no
better than a host of Byzantine mercenaries; the imperial paymasters carried
bags of gold byzants to the leaders, and distributed quarter byzants, or tetartera, among the inferior officers and men.
CONQUEST OF NICAEA, A.D.
1097.
The first warlike operation of the Crusaders against
the Turks was the siege of Nicaea, a city which, by the terms of their treaty
with Alexius, they were bound to restore to the empire. The Byzantine army was
so much inferior to that of the Crusaders in number, that the emperor deemed it
prudent to watch the siege from a camp at Pelekanon,
without taking part in the attack. His general, Tatikios,
joined the besiegers with two thousand light cavalry; and a number of boats
were transported on waggons from Kios to the Ascanian Lake and filled with Byzantine troops, under the
command of Butumites, to blockade Nicaea on the side
towards the lake. The Sultan Kilidy-Arslan was
defeated in an attempt to raise the siege, and the inhabitants, seeing that
they could not long resist the incessant assaults of the Franks, entered into
secret arrangements with the Byzantine troops on the lake, and admitted them
into the city on receiving a charter from the emperor promising that the lives
and property of the Turkish inhabitants should be respected. By this treaty the
Byzantine forces entered the city unknown to the Crusaders, who were informed
of its surrender by seeing the Byzantine ensigns displayed
on the walls. Many of the besiegers were enraged at being thus
deprived of the plunder of the first Mohammedan city they had attacked.
Alexius, however, pacified the discontent by dividing great part of the public
property that fell into his hands among the Crusaders, and furnishing them with
abundant supplies of provisions, to enable them to hasten forward through Asia
Minor. The emperor at the same time placed a strong garrison in Nicaea, and
enrolled in his service many Franks who were without the means of continuing
their journey.
The crusading army quitted the neighbourhood of Nicaea
about the end of June, and reached Antioch on the 21st October 1097. The
country through which they passed had long been the ordinary line of march for
the Byzantine armies, and an excellent road for the transport of baggage and
provisions had existed only thirty years before, when Romanus IV Diogenes
commenced his unfortunate war with Alp Arslan; but the country was now
everywhere depopulated, the roads had become impassable, the bridges were
broken down, the cisterns ruined, and the wells filled up. The assistance of
the petty Armenian princes in Cilicia and Mount Taurus proved of more use to
them than the alliance of Alexius. Never, perhaps, had any country fallen so
rapidly from civilization to barbarism, or changed the great body of its
inhabitants, its language, religion, and mode of life so completely as Asia
Minor in the latter half of the eleventh century. A single generation
accomplished what a thousand years have often in other circumstances vainly
laboured to effect. But the Crusaders, in defiance of sufferings and
opposition, advanced steadily, if slowly, storming every city that refused to
assist them. At Germanicia, Baldwin, the brother of Godfrey, quitted the grand
army, which continued its march to Antioch, and moved eastward to take
possession of Edessa, a city which still acknowledged allegiance to the
Byzantine emperor. It had surrendered to Pouzan, one
of the generals of Malekshah, in the year 1087, but
during the contests of the Turks and Saracens in the north of Syria it had
recovered its independence. Baldwin now sullied the honour of the Franks, by
exciting the people to murder their governor Theodore, and rebel against the
Byzantine authority; he then took possession of the place in his own name, and
founded the Frank principality of Edessa, which lasted about forty-seven years.
This was a direct violation of the treaty with Alexius. Antioch was besieged
for seven months. It was winter, and the sufferings of the Crusaders were so
great that many deserted the army. Tatikios retired
with the Byzantine auxiliaries to Cyprus. Robert duke of Normandy went off to
Laodicea, and it required three citations of the chiefs to recall him to his
duty. William viscount of Melun, and Peter the Hermit himself, attempted to
escape to Europe, but were brought back to the camp by Tancred. At length
Antioch was taken by the treachery of an officer, who admitted Bohemund into
one of its towers. The departure of the Byzantine contingent served as a good
pretext for refusing to cede the city of Antioch to Alexius, who had afforded
them no assistance, nor attempted any diversion in their favour, when they were
placed in a very critical position immediately after gaining possession of the
city. Alexius was advancing with a considerable army in the spring of 1098, in
the hope of securing Antioch to himself but on reaching Philomelium he heard that it had already surrendered; but at the same time he was informed
that an immense army, under Kerboga, the emir of Mossoul, which had been sent by the Grand Sultan Barkyarok, was about to make an attempt to recover the
place. Several deserters from the crusading army, and particularly Stephen
count of Blois and Chartres, brought alarming accounts of the magnitude of the
Turkish army, and of the unprepared condition of the Crusaders. Their reports
induced Alexius to make a precipitate retreat to Constantinople; and in order
to retard the progress of the Turks, whom he imagined were already pursuing his
army, he invited all the Christians in Phrygia to retire with their families
and property into the provinces of the Byzantine empire, and thus save
themselves from the inroads of the Mohammedans. The Crusaders defeated the
Turkish army, and Bohemund became prince of Antioch rather by his own intrigues
than in consequence of any regular concession on the part of the leaders of the
crusade.
As Alexius had employed the summer of 1097 in
recovering possession of Smyrna, Ephesus, Sardis, Philadelphia, and many other
cities on the west coast of Asia Minor, the Crusaders determined to ask some
explanation of his neglecting to make a diversion in their favour when
they were attacked by Kerboga. Hugh of Vermandois and
Baldwin of Hainault were sent to Constantinople as ambassadors for this
purpose, and to invite the emperor to join the army and march at its head to
Jerusalem; on that condition they offered to put him in possession of Antioch
and all their other conquests. But in case of his refusal, the ambassadors were
instructed to declare that, Alexius having failed to perform his engagements,
the treaty was annulled, and the Crusaders renounced the fealty they had sworn.
All this was strictly in accordance with feudal usages, and Alexius had no
reason to complain of the proceeding. The mission proved every way unfortunate.
Baldwin was never heard of and was probably murdered by the bands of brigands
who infested Asia Minor. Hugh of Vermandois, finding Alexius occupied with
other business, and not likely to afford his companions any assistance, abandoned
their cause, and returned to France.
It is not surprising that Alexius declined joining the
Crusaders. He knew that he was not likely to be obeyed, and he might doubt
whether he would be able to force Baldwin and Bohemund to surrender their
conquests. His own absence from Constantinople might also be attended with
danger, in an empire where pretenders to the throne were constantly starting
up, and where feelings of loyalty and hereditary right were almost unknown.
Besides this, the arrival of fresh bands of Crusaders required the presence of
a considerable military force, under his immediate direction, to protect
Constantinople and the environs. Armed pilgrims, who considered that by
taking the cross they had purchased absolution for every crime, could only be
restrained from plundering the emperor’s subjects by fear of the consequences;
for we must not overlook the fact, that the Crusaders began about this time to
drain off poverty and crime from the western nations of Europe, somewhat as
emigration and transportation perform that service for Great Britain at
present. It was also a matter of greater importance to the security of the
Byzantine Empire that the Turks should be expelled from Bithynia and Phrygia
than from Syria and Palestine.
Unfortunately for the Byzantine Empire, Alexius was
more eager to gain some diplomatic advantage over the Latins than to promote
the prosperity of his subjects and consolidate the strength of the empire. He
sent an embassy to the leaders of the crusade, which found them encamped before Archas. His ambassadors demanded that all the towns
they had conquered in Syria should be surrendered to the imperial officers. The
princes of the crusade, already disgusted with the cowardly manner in which he
had deserted their cause before the battle with Kerboga,
and no longer standing in need of his assistance, since they had opened
communications with the fleets of the Italian republics, treated his ill-timed
demand with scorn, and dismissed his envoys with reproaches. Nevertheless the emperor
gained possession of the city of Laodicea in Syria, which, however, he soon
lost. The inhabitants of Laodicea had thrown off the Turkish yoke, with
the assistance of a Flemish pirate named Guymer,
about the time the Crusaders took Antioch. The Byzantine fleet soon after
landed a garrison, and Guymer, who was endeavouring
to establish himself as an independent prince, was thrown into prison. But the
Crusaders, on their march from Antioch to Acre, entered Laodicea, and the
Byzantine garrison retired to Cyprus. Guymer gained
his liberty. Raymond of Toulouse, who was left in possession of the city, now
surrendered it to the officers of Alexius, rather than leave it to be occupied
by his enemy Bohemund. Andronicus, the Byzantine governor, however, was unable
to retain possession of it for any length of time. Tancred soon laid siege to
it, and compelled it to capitulate.
In the meantime the Crusaders, who continued to arrive
at Constantinople, gave Alexius almost as much trouble, and threatened the
empire with as great danger, as the expedition under Godfrey. Jerusalem was
already in the hands of the grand army, when a body of Lombards, accompanied,
but certainly not commanded, by their archbishop, entered Bulgaria. Their
conduct was more lawless than that of the followers of Walter the Pennyless and Peter the Hermit. They remained sometime in
the environs of Constantinople, awaiting the arrival of a number of French and
German pilgrims who were known to have taken the cross. Their insolence alarmed
Alexius, who insisted on their passing over into Asia before new bands arrived,
as it would be impossible to furnish all with provisions. With this requisition
they refused to comply, and it was necessary to compel them by
force. Hostilities broke out; the Lombards attempted to storm the quarter
of Blachern, and it was with great difficulty that
the Archbishop of Milan and Raymond of Toulouse succeeded in re-establishing
order, and persuading them to cross the Bosphorus. They were soon after joined
by the Count of Blois and the Constable of the Emperor of Germany. The
brilliant appearance of their camp, which was soon filled with wealthy nobles,
raised the confidence of the Lombards to the highest pitch. They spoke with
contempt of the exploits of the first army which had taken Jerusalem, and,
scorning to follow in the track of others, they determined to march to Bagdad,
and destroy the caliphate. Raymond of Toulouse was appointed their leader, but
he had little power over the disorderly Italians. Alexius, however, supplied
them with five hundred Turkopuls to serve as
guides,—an admirable species of light cavalry, but whose origin made them an
object of suspicion to the Crusaders.
This army took Ancyra without difficulty, and crossed
the Halys without order or precaution, plundering the
inhabitants indiscriminately whether they were Christians or Mohammedans. On
one occasion the inhabitants of a town came out to meet them in solemn
procession, headed by their priests, bearing the crucifix and pictures of their
protecting saints. Some acts of hostility had taken place in the neighbourhood,
and the dress of the Greek priests being different from that of the Latin
clergy, the Crusaders would not listen to a word of explanation, but
immediately massacred the peaceful citizens and the ministers of
religion. Their brutal conduct and want of discipline caused
their ruin. Before they reached Amasia they were
surrounded by the Turks, their foraging parties were cut off; they could obtain
no information, for the Christians feared them more than the Turks. They were
at last attacked and completely defeated. A few only of the leaders escaped, by
haying maintained some discipline among their personal followers. Raymond, who
had long foreseen the inevitable issue of the enterprise, saved himself with
the Turkopuls by a precipitate flight.
This unfortunate expedition was followed by others
equally disastrous. The Count of Nevers, with a large army, was defeated; and
he himself with a few others, reached Antioch on foot. The Count of Poitiers
and Hugh of Vermandois made their line of march a scene of disorder and
devastation. Before they reached Adrianople they were involved in hostility
with the Bulgarian and Sclavonian subjects of the
empire, and with the Patzinak and Koman mercenaries in
the Byzantine service. The imperial troops were defeated, the governor of
Adrianople was taken prisoner, and Alexius was compelled to make every
concession they wished, in order to facilitate the progress of these furious
pilgrims, and allow them to expend their vigour in contests with the infidels.
This army reached Phrygia during the season of the great heats. The harvests
were already removed, the forage exhausted, the wells on their road filled up,
and the cisterns emptied. Disaster and defeat followed in quick succession. At
last their camp was captured and the army dispersed. Hundreds of ladies had
joined this band, which it was supposed would make their pilgrimage a triumphal
precession, under the leading of the great Hugh: these ladies now became slaves
of the Mussulmans, and for many years the slave-markets of Bagdad and the
harems of the East were supplied with noble ladies, whom the defeats of the
Crusaders were continually consigning to perpetual slavery. Hugh of Vermandois
escaped to Tarsus, where he died of fatigue, and the Count of Poitiers reached
Antioch with only six attendants. The Latins would not allow that their
disasters were caused by their own misconduct and imprudence; they persisted in
attributing all their misfortunes to the treachery of the Greeks; and though
Alexius delivered many from captivity, the Crusaders generally regarded him as
an enemy.
The personal jealousy of Alexius and Bohemund in the
end became the immediate cause of war between the Greeks and Latins. Alexius
could not forget his defeat in Epirus, and he sought revenge by endeavouring to
expel Bohemund from Antioch. Nothing could be more ill-judged, for the city was
too distant from the center of his power to be a
possession of any value, and the conquest was sure to involve him in
hostilities with the Crusaders. In the year 1103 Bohemund was taken prisoner by
the Emir Danishmend, who had formed a principality
embracing Sevaste and all the country round. Alexius,
hoping to gain possession of Antioch, offered to purchase Bohemund from Danishmend; but Kilidy-Arslan
claiming the prisoner, as representative of the grand sultan in Asia Minor, Danishmend, to secure some profit to himself, released
Bohemund on receiving a sum of money paid down, and a promise of support should
either Alexius or Kilidy-Arslan attack him. Alexius,
foiled in his attempt to make Bohemund his prisoner, attacked Antioch. The
Byzantine Empire was thus rashly brought into collision with the Crusaders; and
the Greeks, already involved in a contest of commercial interests with the
maritime states of Italy, were soon excluded from a considerable portion of the
trade of the Mediterranean at a time when it was receiving a great extension.
The Byzantine army, commanded by Butumites and Monastras, advanced from Cilicia, but gained no advantage.
The imperial fleet, on the other hand, commanded the sea, and reduced Bohemund
to the greatest difficulty. He, however, succeeded in forming an alliance with
the Pisans, who sent a fleet to his aid. Part of the Pisan force was detached
to plunder Corfu, Cephallenia, Leucadia, and Zante.
The main body fell in with the Byzantine fleet between Rhodes and Patara. The Greeks were commanded by Tatikios and Landolph, a Lombard officer of great naval
experience; their vanguard was led by Perichytanes, a
Peloponnesian noble, who traversed the whole Pisan fleet, sending out streams
of Greek fire from both sides of his vessel; but he was not seconded with
promptitude, and the engagement, though advantageous to the imperial forces,
reflected little honour on the Greek navy. A storm proved more injurious to the
Pisans than the battle, and only a small part of their ships gained the
port of Laodicea. The Byzantine army now occupied Seleucia and Korykos, near the mouth of the Kalykadnus,
and repaired the fortifications of these towns. A naval division on the station
completely commanded the channel between Cilicia and Cyprus, and excluded the
allies of Bohemund from shelter on the Asiatic coast, so that the
communications of the Prince of Antioch were cut off during the winter, when
the navigators of the time feared to venture into the open sea to the south of
Cyprus.
In 1104 a Genoese fleet, engaged in conveying pilgrims
and merchandise to the East, was instructed to assist the Prince of Antioch,
with whose dominions the Genoese had established commercial relations. The
Genoese succeeded in avoiding the Byzantine fleet. The Greek admiral in the
meantime captured the city of Laodicea, but could not take the citadel, though
it was only defended by one hundred cavalry and five hundred infantry. The army
in Cilicia, under the command of Monastras, having
received considerable reinforcements, proceeded to attack the Normans with
vigour, and captured Tarsus, Adana, and Mopsuestia (Mamistra). The result of the campaign convinced Bohemund
that without fresh troops he could not make head against the forces of the
Byzantine Empire; but it was no longer an easy matter for succours to escape
the Greek cruisers. Bohemund, seeing that his own presence would be necessary
to obtain adequate assistance from the West, resolved to run every risk. In
order to deceive any spies the emperor might have placed in Antioch, he is said
to have spread a report of his own death; and Tancred assumed the direction of the
government of Antioch.1 A coffin was then prepared in which he could conceal
himself, and in this way he was embarked at the port of Suda,
in a vessel of which all the equipage were dressed in mourning. The
Princess Anna adds that a dead fowl was shut up with him in the coffin; that
even in case the vessel should be visited by the Greek officers, they might be
deterred from opening the coffin by the offensive odour. “I must acknowledge”,
says the learned lady, “that there is nothing capable of overcoming the
obstinacy with which the barbarians pursue their plans”, Bohemund reached the
coast of Italy in safety, but a contrary wind delayed him at the entrance of
the Adriatic until his provisions and water were exhausted. He ventured to
visit Corfu in order to obtain refreshments and purchase provisions; and the
governor, not possessing a sufficient force to attack this redoubted enemy of
the empire, permitted the communication. On quitting Corfu, Bohemund sent this
message to the Byzantine governor—“Inform your master that the Prince of
Antioch has arisen from the dead, and will soon give proofs of his vitality”.
Bohemund hastened to Rome in order to excite the Pope
to aid him against the Emperor Alexius. Pope Pascal II, who adopted all the
ambitious schemes of Gregory VII, and strove to establish the papal domination
over all Christian princes, approved of the projects of the Norman. Bohemund
then visited France, to collect troops for a crusade against the Byzantine
Empire. He was received with great honour. Philippe I of France gave him his
daughter Constance in marriage, and this alliance alarmed Alexius to such a
degree that he forgot his imperial pride so far as to write letters to the
republics of Pisa, Genoa, and Venice, refuting the injurious reports which
Bohemund had spread concerning his conduct, and declaring that it was a
disgraceful calumny to call him an enemy of the Christians and a traitor to the
Crusaders. As a proof of the calumnious nature of Bohemund’s accusations, he
immediately obtained the release of three hundred knights who were prisoners at
Cairo.
Alexius made every preparation to encounter this
crusade against the Greeks. He formed a camp at Thessalonica in the autumn of
1105, and sent his nephew Alexius Komnenos to take
the command at Dyrrachium, and put that important place in a good state of defence.
Isaac Koutostephanos was also sent into the Adriatic
with a powerful fleet assembled in the ports of the Aegean Sea. Bohemund was
not ready to invade the empire until the autumn of 1107. In the meantime Koutostephanos made an attempt to surprise Brindisi, in
which he failed. The Normans on this occasion captured a few of the mercenaries
of Turkish race who served in the Byzantine armies. These prisoners may have
been Patzinaks, Uzes, Romans, or Turks of the colony
at Achrida, and were probably Christians; but their dress and arms were
different from anything in use throughout the west of Europe, so that Bohemund
presented them to the Pope as a convincing proof that the emperor of
Constantinople was in close alliance with the enemies of Christianity. Bohemund,
with his usual skill, availed himself of an opportunity to cross the Adriatic
when the Greek fleet had retired to Chimaera. He left the port of Bari with two
hundred transports and thirty war-galleys, and arrived safely at Avlona on the 9th October 1107, where he landed his army.
The cavalry alone amounted to five thousand.
This army resembled that with which William the
Conqueror subdued England. It was composed of experienced military adventurers,
whom the hope of a richer conquest than that of England had assembled under the
banner of the Prince of Tarentum and Antioch. But, fortunately for the
Byzantine Empire, instead of fighting a battle immediately on its landing, it
was compelled to pass the winter before the walls of Dyrrachium. The strength
of that fortress, and the ample supplies with which it had been furnished,
saved Alexius from the necessity of giving battle until it suited his
convenience; and he had every advantage in his favour. Bohemund was compelled
to leave his warriors idle, while his engineers were preparing movable towers,
tortoises, and battering-rams; and in the meantime Alexius assembled his army
at Thessalonica. The Byzantine court was the real cause of the ruin of the
Eastern Empire; its expenses were so great that every branch of the public
service was paralyzed to supply its demands whenever money was scarce in the
treasury at Constantinople. That Caesars and sevasts might be maintained in becoming pomp, the emperors had long been in the habit
of disbanding a considerable part of the native troops at every cessation of
active hostilities; and when this happened, court influence, not length of
service, decided what officers and troops were to profit by the arrangement.
The vanity of Alexius, the necessity he was under of conciliating several
powerful aristocratic families, and the exigencies of his numerous relations,
had always prevented his reducing the expenses of the court within reasonable
bounds; and while the pomp and magnificence of his court at Constantinople surpassed
every other in Europe, we find him constantly commencing his military
operations with new armies enrolled for the occasion. This circumstance is
alone sufficient to explain why his continual wars were productive of such
trifling results. Alexius had considered it politic to form an aristocratic
guard, consisting of two thousand chosen youths, who were trained with care to
military exercises, and instructed in military science. Of these archontopuls, three hundred were sent forward, as soon as
Bohemund landed, to secure the passes between Achrida and Dyrrachium.
At the approach of spring, Bohemund began to push
forward his works. His ships being useless in consequence of the superiority of
the Byzantine fleet, he destroyed them, and employed the timber in the
construction of his towers and military engines; but the interruption of his
communications with Italy soon proved disastrous to his army. The country round
Dyrrachium had been laid waste in the preceding war, and was now either
depopulated, or well protected by fortified towns and castles, in which the
cultivators had secured their property. From these posts Byzantine troops
watched the movements of every forager, and rendered it difficult for the
besieging army to obtain the smallest supplies of provisions. On the other
hand, the magazines of Dyrrachium were abundantly furnished both with
provisions and military stores, the garrison was numerous and in high spirits,
the ramparts were well garnished with military engines, and the governor was
active and popular. Bohemund assaulted the place in vain; he advanced his
towers and battering-rams, which were of extraordinary size, up
to the walls, and he worked mines under the foundations; but his assaults
were repulsed, his towers and battering-rams were reduced to ashes, and his
miners were suffocated at their work.
Alexius advanced as far as Deavolis,
which commands the most important and easiest pass over the great range of
mountains between Epirus and Macedonia to the south of Achrida. Experience had
convinced him that his mercenaries and militia were unable to resist the
Normans in the open field; so he determined to remain in his camp, and direct a
series of desultory operations for wearing out the strength of the invaders.
His love of intrigue showed itself in a mean artifice he used to spread
distrust in the camp of Bohemund. Letters, addressed by the emperor to several
of the Norman leaders, in which he pretended to have received information
concerning the plans of Bohemund, were sent in a way that they fell into that
prince's hands. The artifice appears not to have deceived the crafty Norman,
who was more inclined to suspect the perfidy of Alexius than of his companions.
He communicated the letters to his officers, and left everyone in the command of
the positions they had previously occupied. If this anecdote of imperial policy
had been communicated to us in some frank chronicle written by a prejudiced
monk, we might have doubted its accuracy, and suspected the writer of having
given a calumnious colouring to the incident; but the fact is attested by the
beloved daughter of the imperial diplomatist, and affords us a valuable
portraiture of the moral obtuseness of the Byzantine court, for Anna Comnena never suspected that she was holding up her father’s
conduct to the contempt of every honourable man.
The prudence of Alexius in his military proceedings
soon placed Bohemund in great difficulties. The mountain passes were all
fortified with strong entrenchments. Avlona, Yericho, and Canina were occupied by Michael Kekavmenos; Petroula by Alexander Kavasilas; Divri by Leo Nikerites; and the Kleisoura, or
passes of Albania, by Eustathios Kamytzes.
But the population of the country, which consisted in great part of Albanians,
hardly viewed the Byzantine troops with more favour than the Norman; and when
Bohemund paid his guides well, he was enabled to plunder at times with
considerable success. While the war was thus prosecuted on shore with very
little effect, the negligence of Koutostephanos and
the Byzantine nobles on board the fleet, who ran into port when the sea became
stormy, enabled the Italians to send a large convoy with provisions and
reinforcements to Bohemund. At length, however, Mavrokatakalon having superseded Koutostephanos in the command of
the fleet, and the Patzinak, Turkish, and Alain cavalry having posted
themselves nearer and nearer to the Norman camp, Bohemund found his army
reduced to a state of absolute famine, and made propositions of peace to the
governor of Dyrrachium. These proposals were transmitted to the emperor, who
still occupied his camp at Deavolis; and Alexius
required that Bohemund should visit him in person to settle the terms of the
treaty.
Two princes less deserving of trust could hardly have
engaged in a negotiation; but after numerous precautions and mutual
guarantees, their interests induced them to come to terms, and peace was
concluded in the month of September 1108. Bohemund and his principal officers
signed an act containing the obligations imposed on them, while Alexius, in
order to preserve all his imperial superiority, only ratified these conditions,
and made the concessions required on his part in the form of a golden bull. By
this treaty, the stipulations of the alliance between the Crusaders and Alexius
concluded in 1107 were annulled, in as far as they were applicable to the
relations between the emperor and the Prince of Antioch. Bohemund again
declared himself the liegeman of Alexius, and of his son John Porphyrogenitus,
and bound himself to make war against all the enemies of the emperor who were
not invulnerable like the angels, nor endowed with bodies of iron. He engaged
to hold his principality in Asia as a fief of the Byzantine Empire, and to
surrender any place he might take in future which had in old time belonged to
the Byzantine emperors. He bound himself to make war on Tancred in case he
should not cease all hostility in Cilicia, and promised immediately to
surrender the whole coast between the Cydnus and the
Hermon, and the cities of Laodicea, Gabala, Valanea, Marathos, Tortosa, and Antarados in Syria, and to accept the investiture of the principality of Antioch from the
emperor by a golden bull. The limits of his principality were defined as
extending to Germanicia, with the exception of the country in the possession of
the two Armenian brothers, Leo and Theodore, princes of the house of Reuben,
who were subjects of the Byzantine Empire. A pension of two hundred talents or
pounds’ weight of gold, in byzants of the coinage of the Emperor Michael, was granted
to Bohemund, who swore never to separate his interests from those of Alexius
and his son John; but to observe all the stipulations of the treaty by the
passion of our Saviour—by the Gospel which has subdued the world —by the crown
of thorns—and by the nails and lance which pierced the body of the Redeemer.
After this termination of all his ambitious schemes of conquest, the Norman
prince hastened back to Italy, leaving his army to winter in Epirus, where
Alexius promised to supply them with provisions. In the following spring many
entered the Byzantine service, some proceeded to Jerusalem, and some returned
to Italy. Bohemund, though compelled to remain quiet for some time, was
collecting another army, either for the purpose of extending the limits of his
principality of Antioch, or of seeking to avenge his defeat, when death put an
end to his schemes in the month of February 1111.
The indefatigable energy of Alexius deserves the
highest praise. As soon as he had put an end to the war with Bohemund, he
turned all his attention to the affairs of Asia Minor; but in the conduct of
the war, and in the policy of his civil administration, he allowed his ambition
to blind his judgment. Instead of confining his operations to the country
nearest to Constantinople, and to the Aegean Sea, he engaged in hostilities
with Tancred and the Crusaders on the coast of Syria, leaving the Turks in
undisturbed possession of the greater part of the intervening country, though
the condition of the Seljouks at the time rendered it
probable that a combined attack of the Franks and Greeks might have
expelled them from the whole country between Constantinople and Antioch. The
brave Sultan Kilidy-Arslan perished in the year 1106.
His sons Melek and Massoud succeeded to his dominions, and Melek, the eldest,
ruled the western part of Asia Minor. But though a brave soldier, his
administration was weak, and many of the Turkish provincial governors assumed
an independent position, and were called Sultans. During the ten years that Melek reigned, the Seljouk dominions were a scene of
intestine war, Alexius acted with no great energy against the Turks at this
period, but during their civil war he succeeded in getting possession of the
whole coast of Asia Minor from the Hellespont to Attalia.
He repaired the walls of Adramyttium, which had been
destroyed by Tzachas, and endeavoured to make it a
flourishing commercial city, as it had formerly been, by repeopling it with the
inhabitants of the surrounding country. This was perhaps not the most likely
way to restore prosperity to Adramyttium, but the
reparation of the fortifications excited the jealousy of the nomad Turks in the
province, and they assembled a large force to attack the new colony. They were
completely defeated in an engagement, and the Greeks captured their camp, with
their wives and children. The inhuman cruelty with which the Christians treated
their prisoners on this occasion roused the fury of the whole Turkish nation,
and gave an energy to their military operations against the Byzantine territory
which checked all the plans of the emperor for its improvement. Hassan, the
emir of Cappadocia, invaded the empire at the head of twenty-four thousand
men, resolved to exact a bloody vengeance for the carnage at Adramyttium. The prudence of Philokales,
the governor, who had rebuilt Adramyttium, and
happened to be at Philadelphia on his way to assume the command of Attalia, saved the coast of western Asia from ruin. Hassan,
not expecting to meet with any opposition in the field, formed his army into
three divisions, in order to extend the sphere of his ravages. These divisions
were directed against Sardis, Smyrna, and Pergamus;
but the Byzantine troops under Philokales, issuing
from Philadelphia, successively defeated the two first divisions, and compelled
the third to abandon the attack on Pergamus, and save
itself by a precipitate retreat.
The progress of the Turkish war was interrupted by the
hostilities Alexius carried on with Tancred, which involved the empire in a
maritime warfare with the Genoese and Pisans, whose piratical expeditions
against the islands and coasts of the Aegean proved ruinous to the commerce and
trade of the Greeks. In the year 1112, while the emperor was encamped in the
Thracian Chersonesus preparing to send a fleet
against the Latins, five Genoese galleys entered the Hellespont, and plundered
the neighbourhood of Abydos. Four, it is true, were captured by the Byzantine
fleet, but one escaped to encourage its countrymen to new acts of piracy.
The imposing force Alexius had assembled in Asia Minor
enabled him to conclude a temporary peace with Sultan Melek in the year 1112, yet, as the conditions of the treaty are not recorded by his
daughter, it seems probable that no cession of territory was made. New armies
of Turks arriving in Asia Minor from the frontiers of Persia, and Melek exercising no very extensive authority over the
Seljouk chiefs, the sultanat of Iconium was soon
again involved in hostilities with the Byzantine Empire. Bithynia, Mysia, the Troad, and the coast
of Paphlagonia were ravaged by the Seljouks in
successive campaigns. Brusa, Apollonias,
and Cyzikos were taken and plundered, the governor of
Nicaea was defeated and made prisoner, the inhabitants abandoned the
cultivation of the open country, and either emigrated to Europe or clustered
round castles in which they could quickly seek protection, or else formed their
dwellings in places of difficult access, where they could escape the search of
invading armies. These places of refuge and concealment, called Kataphygia, now began to assume a certain degree of
political importance in the Byzantine government. The imperial troops often
defeated the invaders, but new bands of Turks and Turkomans daily extended the
field of their devastations.
The last campaign of Alexius was in the year 1116. The
Sultan of Iconium had assembled a large army, composed not only of his own
troops and those of the emirs who acknowledged his authority, but also of an
army of auxiliaries sent to his assistance by the Sultan of Aleppo. The Turks
expected to carry their ravages as far as the shores of the Bosphorus, and to
retake the cities which the Crusaders had compelled them to surrender. Alexius
determined to avert the danger by carrying the war into the heart of the
dominions of Melek before his preparations were
completed. After defeating a body of Turks on the banks of the Bhyndacus, near Lopadion, and
clearing the neighbourhood of Nicaea from their nomadic hordes, the emperor
advanced with his army by Dorylaeum to Santabaris. Here the army was divided into three columns.
One, under Stypeiotes, was detached to the left, in
order to attack the Turks who had assembled at Amorium, and, falling in with
the enemy at Poimanenon, it gained a complete
victory. The second division, under Kamytzes, was
sent forward to drive back a Turkish force stationed at Polybotos.
When this service had been performed, the main body of the army, under the
command of the emperor in person, advanced to Kedrea,
on the road to Polybotos. Finding, however, that the
sultan had carried off all the provisions from the country through which he had
proposed to advance, the emperor began to see the necessity of retiring. To
pretend that his retreat was dictated by the command of Heaven, he performed a
ceremony worthy of his superstition and hypocrisy. Writing on two papers the
questions whether he should advance to attack Iconium or stop at Philomelion
(Ak Sheher), he deposited his interrogatories on the
altar of a church in which he passed the night in prayer. In the morning the
priest entering took up one of the papers, and announced that the will of
Heaven had fixed Philomelion as the limit of the campaign. In the meantime all
the Turkish hordes were hastening to the scene of warfare. A strong body
advancing to join the Emir Monolykos, by crossing the
bridge over the Sangarius at Zompi (Tchanderl), was defeated by a Byzantine corps, under
Bardas, in the plain of Amorium; but to this corps Alexius was compelled to
detach reinforcements, to enable it to preserve its advantage over the enemy.
The emperor then advanced to Mesonacta, near the Lake
of the Forty Martyrs, and continuing his advance, soon reached Philomelion,
which he took at the first assault. After ravaging the possessions of the
Turks, and summoning the Christians who desired to escape from their Kataphygia to retire under the escort of his army, he
commenced his retreat in the most deliberate manner, arranging his order of
march so as to afford effectual protection to the immense number of Christian
families and enormous quantity of spoil that accompanied his troops. The forces
of Melek and Monolykos hung
on his flanks and rear, and compelled him to fight a battle in the plain of Polybotos; but they were defeated with loss, and Alexius
continued his retreat to Ampous. The subsequent
attacks of the Turks were equally unsuccessful, and at last the sultan sent
proposals of peace to the emperor. A meeting between Alexius and Melek, who came attended by the old warrior Monolykos, took place between Augustopolis and Acroinion, at which the terms of a treaty were
arranged. What these terms were we are not informed; but the emperor terminated
his retreat with honour, bringing all the Christian colonists, with their
families and property, safe into the Byzantine territory. Melek perished shortly after, the victim of assassination and fratricide. His brother Massoud, who was his murderer, succeeded him on the
throne of Iconium.
Violent attacks of gout, accompanied by increasing
weakness, warned Alexius of his approaching end. Near the conclusion of his
reign he gained great popularity by burning the Bogomilian heresiarch Basil, and by founding a splendid hospital and orphan asylum.
The deathbed of Alexius affords a melancholy picture
of the effects of his duplicity in the bosom of his own family. It seems like a
satire on his reign. His habitual distrust of all men had induced him to make
his wife and his learned daughter his chief companions, and to employ them in
aiding him to perform the routine duties of the imperial administration. The
Empress Irene and the Princess Anna proved apt pupils in the school of
political intrigue. They deluded themselves into the belief that they
understood the whole art of government, and proposed that Anna’s husband, the
Caesar Nicephorus Bryennios, should share the task of government with them. To
effect this, Irene endeavoured to persuade Alexius to nominate the Caesar his
successor, though his eldest son John had been invested with the imperial title
for twenty-six years. The empress entertained an aversion for John, whose short
and ugly figure showed to little advantage in the pageants of the court, while
his love of truth and frank character appeared to her a proof of rudeness and
stupidity. During the last illness of the emperor she frequently pressed him to
declare Nicephorus his successor; but Alexius, who was well acquainted with his
son’s talents, listened patiently to her advice without following it. When the
emperor's end approached, Irene took more daring measures to secure the
realization of her wishes. The palace was filled with her creatures, and the
Varangian guards on duty were gained over, and prepared to dispute the title of
John to the throne. In the meantime John, who had watched all his mother’s
intrigues, took prompt and decided measures for securing his succession,
without bringing matters to an open rupture. While the empress was absent from
his father's bedside, he entered his chamber and drew the imperial signet from
his finger; an act of which the dying emperor perfectly understood the import,
and of which, consistent with his habitual dissimulation, he said nothing to
the empress on her return. John immediately employed the signet to assume the
direction of the public administration—the treasury, the army, and the fleet.
He then hastened to the palace, where the Varangians for a time disputed his
authority, and he had some difficulty in avoiding a collision between these
foreign guards and the people who supported him; but at length he gained
possession of the great palace, which was the citadel of Constantinople. The
empress, finding that all her schemes were thus rendered abortive, rushed to
the apartment of her dying husband and accused her son of treason, urging him
to declare another successor; but Alexius only raised his hands and eyes to
heaven, to indicate that his concerns on earth were terminated, and that his
thoughts were now directed to another world. The empress, interpreting the
gesture according to the emperor's habitual system of duplicity, supposed the
movement was made to avoid giving a direct answer, and as she gazed on the
dying emperor exclaimed, “You die as you have lived, a hypocrite”.
The Emperor Alexius died in the year 1118, aged
seventy, having reigned thirty-seven years, four months and a-half.
Sect. II
The reign of John II, A.D. 1118-1143
John Comnenus was the most amiable character that ever
occupied the Byzantine throne. He was stainless in his private conduct, frank,
merciful, generous, prudent, active and brave, economical without avarice, and
pious without superstition. Even the Latins bear testimony to his virtue, while
the love of his own subjects is declared by the singular exception his
government offers of exemption from rebellion and sedition. The only traitors
during his reign, which lasted almost a quarter of a century, were members of
his own family. The moral and political feelings of his sister and brother
appear to have been corrupted by their father’s duplicity and their mother’s
ambition.
The position of John when he mounted the throne was
one of some difficulty and danger. His virtues alarmed the courtiers, and were
almost unknown to the people. He was consequently compelled to secure his
authority by administrative arrangements and military power, and to do this
without any effusion of blood was his first care. To avoid all chance of
collision with the members of the conspiracy organized by his mother, he never
quitted the great palace until he was assured that all his commands for
preserving order in the capital and its immediate vicinity had
been carried into execution. During this interval his
father’s funeral was celebrated; and though he took care that the ceremony
should be performed with imperial pomp, he did not venture to be present.
The selfishness of his own relations, and the
treachery of the Byzantine aristocracy, made a deep impression on his mind.
Though they never destroyed his feelings of family affection, nor infused any
tinge of melancholy into his equable disposition, they led him, at an early
age, to seek elsewhere for a friend. A Turkish lad, remarkable for his personal
grace and amiable disposition, fell into the hands of the Emperor Alexius at
the capture of Nicaea, and was placed as a domestic slave and personal
companion with his son John Porphyrogenitus, who was nearly of the same age.
The two youths were educated together, and became sincerely attached to one
another. In Axouchos John found the frank character
and the love of truth which he sought in vain among his own relations and the
Greek courtiers. Years ripened the youthful friendship into mutual respect. Axouchos showed himself a man of talent as well as of
courage and virtue; and John, seeing that the fidelity of all his father’s
ministers had been tampered with by his mother, made the Turkish slave his
prime-minister. Axouchos proved himself worthy of the
high post; but whatever may have been the amount of his virtues, the very
circumstance that the people regarded the appointment of a slave to the rank of
minister as a boon to humanity, must be taken as a proof of the oppressive
conduct of the aristocracy, the corruption of the general administration, and
the decay of wise institutions and right feelings in the people.
The government of John II was disturbed by no internal
troubles. Two conspiracies occurred during his reign; one headed by his
literary sister Anna, and the other by his brother Isaac, but both proved
abortive. The Princess Anna induced several members of the imperial family to
join in a plot for placing the imperial crown on the head of her husband
Nicephorus Bryennios. For the success of her plan it was necessary that her
brother should be murdered, or that his eyes should be put out; and when her
more humane husband testified some reluctance to proceed with the plot, the
learned princess expressed her contempt for his feminine weakness, as she
termed it, in very strong terms, contrasting it with what she considered her
own manly inhumanity. The conspiracy was revealed, and John thought it
necessary to confiscate his sister's wealth in order to check her future
intrigues. He bestowed her palace, which was richly and luxuriously furnished,
on Axouchos; but that minister, who thought more of
performing the duties of his situation for the emperor's advantage than of
enriching himself by the imperial favour, suggested that it would be more
politic to restore the palace to Anna. John felt all the prudence as well as
the justice of his minister’s advice, and replied, “I should, indeed, be
unworthy to reign, if I could not forget my anger as readily as you forget your
interest”. Anna was reinstated in her palace.
Isaac, the only surviving brother of the emperor, was
always treated with the greatest kindness and the highest honour. But it would
appear that his capacity and disposition prevented his being entrusted
with as great a share of political power as he wished, and, dissatisfied with
his position, he fled to the court of the Sultan Massoud at Iconium, accompanied by his eldest son John. During this voluntary
exile he led many predatory incursions into the Byzantine Empire, but at last,
finding himself both poorer and more neglected at Iconium than he had been at
Constantinople, he made his peace with his brother, and was reinstated in his
former wealth and rank. The conduct of his son John, however, soon caused a new
alienation of feeling between the brothers. John accompanied the emperor his
uncle at the siege of Neocaesarea. An Italian knight,
highly esteemed for his valour, happened to be dismounted, which the emperor
observing, ordered his nephew to remount him on an Arabian horse he was riding,
adding, “You have other excellent horses at hand”. The pride of the young
prince was hurt, and he turned to the Italian, saying, “Take some other horse,
and try if you can make me quit my saddle with your lance”. A look of the
emperor, however, made him think it wise to dismount and surrender his horse.
Shortly after he rode oft joined the Turks, with whom he had formerly lived,
and embraced the Mohammedan religion. His father Isaac also appears to have
engaged in some plots, concerning the details of which we have no information,
but he was banished by his brother to Heracleia in
Pontus towards the end of his reign.
The historical records of the reign of John II are
very imperfect, and relate only to his warlike enterprises. Hence it has been
supposed that he was either too strongly biassed in
favour of military fame, or that he considered success in war as the surest
means of increasing the power and restoring the prosperity of the empire,
overlooking the necessity of infusing new vigour into the social organization
of the motley population of the Byzantine provinces, and of reforming the gross
abuses of the fiscal administration. There can be no doubt that the general
opinion of the age viewed military success as the true preservative against all
political evils, and the emperor’s popularity with the inhabitants of
Constantinople must have been considerably increased by the conviction that
such was his opinion. The material prosperity of the people of Constantinople
was closely identified with the augmentation of the imperial dominions, and
only indirectly influenced by the general wellbeing of the rest of the empire.
This identification of prejudices and interests between the inhabitants of the
capital and the rulers of the state is one of the usual results of strict
administrative centralization, and its basis is generally laid by some
sacrifice of the interests of the people in the provinces for the profit of the
crowds congregated in the vicinity of the sovereign. Rome and Constantinople,
by their public distributions of provisions and expensive public amusements,
afford proofs of this fact quite as strong as any Eastern despotism, and modern
Europe offers something similar in the state of Paris.
The superiority assumed by the Byzantine armies
whenever John appeared in the field, proves that he was an able general as well
as a brave soldier. His troops showed perfect confidence in his military skill,
even when his operations proved unsuccessful; and he used their services with
that daring energy which marks the existence of the highest military qualities
in a leader. His enterprises were at times foiled; but neither failure nor
retreat ever produced discomfiture to his army. His opinions
concerning the constitution of the force under his command were those of a
professional soldier, not of a patriotic general nor of a feudal monarch. The
native militia of the Byzantine provinces, and the nobles of the empire, who
were in the habit of returning to pass the winter, after each campaign, in their
domestic quarters, were a force on which he placed no reliance; to use his own
phrase, he desired soldiers whose thoughts were concentrated in a military
life, and who were ready at every season and for any enterprise he might
command. This naturally led to a preference of mercenary troops, and his
choicest army appears to have been composed of very few Byzantine subjects; its
principal divisions consisting of Macedonians, which doubtless means Sclavonians and Bulgarians, of Scythians, which signifies
Patzinaks and Romans, of Turks and veterans, or guards. His military policy was
pursued with skill and energy; the plan of each campaign was well conceived and
ably executed; he gained for himself great military renown, and he made the
Byzantine armies a terror both to the Turks and Franks. But there appears to
have been a want of political system in his Asiatic wars, and he seems to have
expended too much of the military resources of his dominions on distant
expeditions to Syria, and unnecessary attacks on Armenian Cilicia, from which
no permanent advantage could be expected. It cannot be doubted that, even
during his victorious reign, the social condition, and perhaps the numerical
population, of the empire continued to decline; and before a generation
had elapsed from the death of his son Manuel I, the Byzantine Empire was
overthrown, and a Flemish count occupied the imperial throne.
The private conduct of the Emperor John indicates that
he viewed with regret the internal evils which weakened the moral and political
energy of Greek society; for we must now observe that the Byzantine Empire had
assumed a Greek character. Yet we have no reason to suppose that he adopted any
measures to root out the administrative abuses or reform the social state of
his dominions. The undertaking may have appeared to him one in which the power
of government could effect very little; and he may
have thought that Divine Providence alone could bring about the revolution in
men's thoughts and conduct necessary to produce any effectual improvement.
Many persons even at the present day may be of the same opinion, and ask, with
reference to our time, what Catholic emancipation, municipal and parliamentary
reform, improved central administration, and free trade, could have effected towards
improving the general condition of the inhabitants of the British empire,
without an extensive emigration, and the accidental discovery of gold in
California and Australia, events with which Government had certainly very
little connection. But to these persons it may be replied, that unless the
previous changes had placed the social and political condition of all British
subjects on a harmonious scale, the subsequent events might have increased many
evils which they have contributed to diminish. And thus it is not impossible,
that if John had endeavoured to improve the administration of justice in the
provinces, to relieve trade from monopolies, to secure the fruits of their
labour to the agriculturists, and to diminish the burden of fiscal oppression on
his people, his reign might have opened a new era of prosperity to the Greek
nation. Perhaps, like Leo III, he might have ranked as a restorer of the
Eastern Empire under a Greek phase.
There are so many points of similarity between the
situation of the empire at the accession of Leo III and at the accession of the
family of Comnenus, that they must have made some impression on the mind of the
Emperor John II, had history been then studied for political instruction. At
both periods the Mohammedans had overrun Asia Minor and threatened
Constantinople. In both cases they were driven back, and the empire gained time
to reorganize its resources. In the first instance, however, the victory was
gained by Leo and the Byzantine army; but in the second, the advantage was
derived from the accidental passage of foreign Crusaders. We have seen in the
preceding volume with what political prudence Leo profited by his military
successes. He boldly forsook the beaten track of Roman conservatism, and
created the Byzantine Empire by reforming the whole circle of the imperial
administration; and by so doing he infused new life into Christian society. The
inhabitants of the Eastern Empire, who appeared to be on the eve of extinction
when he mounted the throne, increased rapidly in numbers and wealth before his
reign was concluded; while the scheme of policy he traced out for his
successors, gave three centuries and a half of prosperity to the Byzantine
empire.
When Alexius Comnenus seized the throne, the Byzantine
administration required to be once more reformed. New evils had again
depopulated the empire and enfeebled the government. Everything was falling to
decay. The systematic administration of the Roman Empire, which had preserved
the fabric of the imperial power in many periods of difficulty, was now swept
away, and replaced by temporary expedients and arbitrary counsels. The
emperor had become more despotic as his instruments of government became
weaker, and his officials more incapable. The expenses of the imperial court
now absorbed the greater part of the revenues of the state; and the army and
navy were diminished and neglected, while princes, courtiers, and chamberlains
were multiplied and honoured. The civil, financial, and judicial administration
was treated as a field for enriching those favoured by the emperor and by the
emperor’s favourites. The Roman law, which for ages had formed the bulwark of
individual rights and the basis of public prosperity in the Eastern Empire, no
longer protected the persons and the property of the people against the
rapacity of the imperial officers. Ever since the death of Basil II the public
property of the state had been visibly going to ruin.
Roads, bridges, aqueducts, ports, public warehouses,
and city fortifications, arsenals, warlike machines, and ships, were
everywhere becoming unserviceable. Even cisterns, wells, farm-houses,
plantations, and other signs of rural civilization, were disappearing over
extensive districts where they had once flourished. Colonies of nations in the
rudest state of civilization, like the Turks, Patzinaks, and Romans, to whom
the cultivation of gardens, vineyards, olive-grounds, silk, and plants used in
manufactures was unknown, were established on sites once occupied by populous
cities. A little grain was raised in the enclosures of ruined gardens, while
sheep pastured through abandoned vineyards, orchards, and olive-groves. It is
evident that agricultural industry must have been sadly degraded, and the
depopulation of the empire must have made great progress, before the Emperor
Alexius could have found vacant lands in the rich plains about Thessalonica and
Philippopolis, for the colonies he planted at Moglena and Alexiopolis. In the period of anarchy which
preceded the reign of Leo III, the civilized inhabitants of the Byzantine
Empire were driven into cities and walled towns; and under such circumstances
the Greek race must have diminished much more rapidly than the rude colonists
who entered the country could increase.
We shall have occasion to remark that the policy of
John, with reference to the agricultural population in Asia Minor was not very
enlightened. With the short-sighted view of diminishing the revenues of the
Sultan of Iconium, he ruined a flourishing class of Christian agriculturists,
who maintained some local independence by paying taxes to the Turks. These
people were compelled by the emperor to abandon their farms, with all those
improvements which the expenditure of capital for ages on their property had
effected, in order to colonize some ruined site in the empire, where all
capital of a similar kind had been already annihilated. There can be no
doubt that such a colony would soon become extinct.
It is not difficult, even at this distance of time, to
point out the measures which ought to have been adopted in order to arrest the
decline and depopulation of the empire; but how far the adoption of these
measures would have tended to improve the moral condition of the Greek nation
must, of course, remain problematical; and without a great improvement in the
moral rectitude and political energy of the Greeks at this period, no exertions
of the central administration would have sufficed to save the Byzantine empire.
The first task was to root out the all-pervading corruption of court influence.
Without this, there was no possibility of restoring the systematic and
equitable administration of justice. All the benefits which Roman law had
conferred on society for so many ages were now nullified by the despotic power
of inferior officials; and as long as the expenditure of the court absorbed the
greater part of the public revenues, no effective system of administrative
control could be framed to check the abuses of the agents of the court in the
provinces. The secondary measures were, to sweep away all the monopolies and
privileges which were ruining Greek commerce, and to reform the fiscal
exactions which were annihilating all capital invested in agriculture. Had such
measures of improvement been perseveringly pursued during the quarter of
century that John reigned, the Byzantine Empire might perhaps have escaped its
impending ruin, and the Greek race its subsequent debasement.
The Emperor John II was engaged in constant wars; but
the inhabitants of the empire enjoyed during his reign a degree of internal
security to which they had been long strangers. No armies of plunderers ravaged
Thrace, Macedonia, Bithynia, and Ionia; and the Greeks especially were secured
from all hostile attacks, and were afforded an opportunity of recovering their
former commercial and manufacturing activity. The Patzinaks, the Hungarians,
and the Servians, indeed, ventured at different times
to invade the northwestern provinces of the empire;
but they were soon repulsed, and permanent peace was established.
In the autumn of 1122, the Patzinaks, who had remained
quiet ever since their defeat in 1091, crossed the Danube in great force, and
spread over the country north of Mount Haemus. The emperor established a camp
at Beroea to cover the passes, and passed the winter
with the army. At the approach of spring, the Patzinaks advanced to force the
passes, but were completely defeated. Even the barrier of waggons, which
served as an entrenchment to their encampment, was broken through by the Varangian
guard with their battle-axes. This victory terminated the war, and broke the
force of the Patzinaks so completely, that it was long commemorated as a feast
by the. Byzantine Church. The most robust of the prisoners were droughted into
the imperial army—some were sold as slaves for the profit of the victorious
soldiers, and many were settled as colonists on waste lands in the European
provinces, where their descendants were still dwelling at the time of the Latin
conquest.
A war with the Servians who
had invaded the empire, ended in their complete defeat, and the Servian
prisoners were established as colonists on waste lands in the neighbourhood of
Nicomedia.
Hostilities broke out between the emperor and Stephen
king of Hungary, in consequence of John, whose wife was a Hungarian princess,
protecting Bela, who was regarded as the rightful heir to the Hungarian throne.
Stephen took Belgrade, which he destroyed, and employed the materials to
construct a new town called Zeugmin (Semlin) on the northern bank of the Save. The Hungarian
army marched forward to Triaditza, and the emperor
established his headquarters at Philippopolis, where, with a strong body of
Italian heavy and Turkish light cavalry, he shut up the passes, and waited
until he was informed that his flotilla had entered the Danube. He then crossed
Mount Haemus, and, driving the Hungarians before him, effected a junction with
his flotilla, and defeated a powerful Hungarian army near the fort of Chram. He established a garrison in Branitzova,
and returned to Constantinople. The Hungarians, taking the field during the
winter, recaptured Branitzova, and the emperor was
obliged again to place himself at the head of his army; but both parties, after
some severe fighting, became convinced that nothing was to be gained by
continuing the war, and peace was concluded, in which the Servians,
and perhaps the Venetians, were comprised, on terms favourable to the extension
of Byzantine commerce.
(Stephen II was the son of Coloman,
who had put out the eyes of his brother Almus and
nephew Bela to secure the throne to Stephen, for the brother in Hungary
succeeded before the son. Coloman and Almus were sons of Geïsa I, the
elder brother of Ladislas, the father of the Empress
Irene, John’s wife. L'Art de vérifier les Data makes Irene (Pyriska) daughter of Geïsa I. But as Geïsa died in
1077, and she was married during the reign of Coloman in 1104, when John was sixteen years of age, it is impossible to place her
birth earlier than 1088. Cinnamus says she was the
daughter of Ladislas; but he errs in making Almus and Stephen also sons of Ladislas.
Bela, though blind, succeeded to the throne of Hungary on the death of Stephen.
The series of Hungarian kings is—Geïsa I, from 1075
to 1077; Ladislas, to 1005; Coloman,
to 1114; Stephen II, to 1131; Bela II, to 1141).
Previous to this time, the Venetian republic had
generally been a firm ally of the Byzantine Empire, and, to a certain degree,
it was considered as owing homage to the Emperor of Constantinople. That
connection was now dissolved, and those disputes commenced which soon occupied
a prominent place in the history of Eastern Europe. The establishment of the
Crusaders in Palestine had opened a new field for the commercial enterprise of
the Venetians, and in a great measure changed the direction of their maritime
trade; while the frequent quarrels of the Greeks and Franks compelled the
trading republics of Italy to attach themselves to one of the belligerent
parties, in order to secure a preference in its ports. For a short time, habit
kept the Venetians attached to the empire; but they soon found that their
interests were more closely connected with the Syrian trade than with that of
Constantinople. They joined the kings of Jerusalem in extending their
conquests, and obtained considerable establishments in all the maritime cities
of the kingdom. From having been the customers and allies of the Greeks, they
became their rivals and enemies. The commercial fleets of the age acted too
often like pirates; and it is not improbable that the Emperor John had good
reason to complain of the aggressions of the Venetians. Hostilities commenced;
the Doge Dominico Michieli,
one of the heroes of the republic, conducted a numerous fleet into the
Archipelago, and plundered the islands of Rhodes and Chios, where he wintered.
Next year he continued his depredations in Samos, Mitylene,
Paros, and Andros. Modon was also taken and occupied by the Venetians, to serve
them as a harbour of refuge on their voyages to and from Syria. The war which
the emperor carried on in Dalmatia and Servia appears to have been connected
with his hostilities against the Venetians, but the events are hardly noticed
by any Byzantine writer. They were really insignificant in the history of the
empire, though they appeared of vast importance to the republic of Venice.
Peace was re-established by the emperor reinstating the Venetians in the
enjoyment of all the commercial privileges they had enjoyed before the war
broke out. The attention of the Emperor John was early directed to the affairs
of Asia, but he employed the forces of the empire too often rather to extend
the authority and increase the fame of his government than to consolidate the
prosperity of his dominions.
He left the power of the Turks almost unbroken, while he
wasted the wealth and strength of the empire in harassing the Armenians of
Cilicia and the Franks of Antioch. Two of his early campaigns (AD 1120 and
1121) were devoted to regaining possession of Laodicea and Sozopolis,
and clearing the country between the Meander and Attalia from Turkish garrisons and encampments. After the termination of the
Hungarian war, John again placed himself at the head of his army in Asia Minor.
Three campaigns appear to have been successfully devoted to re-establishing the
Byzantine authority on the southern coast of the Black Sea; yet even towards
the end of his reign, an alliance between Mohammed the successor of Danishmend, on whom the Turks of Paphlagonia and Pontus
were dependent, and Massoud the sultan of Iconium,
forced the emperor to form a winter camp on the banks of the Rhyndacus to protect Bithynia, AD 1139.
Before this (AD 1137) the emperor reduced the Armenian
principality of Cilicia to complete dependence on the government at
Constantinople. His conquest, however, was not effected without great exertions
and considerable loss, while the hatred of the Greeks which it roused in the
breasts of the warlike Armenian population of the Cilician mountains favoured
the progress of the Turks. Leo, the sovereign of Armenian Cilicia, after
carrying on war for some time with the Turks of Antioch, concluded peace with
them, and endeavoured to gain possession of Seleucia, the frontier fortress of
the Byzantine Empire, and a city of considerable commercial importance. The Emperor
John appeared in person, at the head of a powerful army, to punish the Armenian
prince, and compel his ally the Prince of Antioch to do homage to the empire,
according to the treaty with Bohemund. Tarsus, Adana, and Mopsuestia,
were soon reduced by the operations of the Byzantine engineers; but Anabarza and Vahkah, where the
natural strength of the position opposed great obstacles to an attack, were
only taken by the perseverance of the emperor after an obstinate resistance.
After the loss of Vahkah, Leo and his family sought
refuge and concealment in the fastnesses of Mount Taurus, but were captured and
imprisoned at Constantinople. Leo died in captivity: on some suspicion of
treason the emperor ordered the eyes of his son Reuben to be put out, and the
Armenian prince died of the operation; but the other son of Leo, named Thoros, returned to Cilicia after the death of John, and
re-established the power of the Armenians in Cilicia.
After the reduction of Cilicia the emperor compelled
the Prince of Antioch to acknowledge the sovereignty of the Byzantine Empire.
The reigning prince was Raymond of Poitiers, who had married Constance the
infant daughter of Bohemund II. Constance had been proposed by the people of
Antioch to the Emperor John as a wife for his youngest son Manuel, but from
some unknown cause he had refused the match. The people of Antioch, and indeed
all the inhabitants of the Syrian cities, were extremely hostile to the
administrative and judicial authority assumed by the Byzantine clergy; they
were, consequently, warmly opposed to the emperor’s pretensions to the
sovereignty over Antioch. Raymond, however, knew that his forces were
insufficient to oppose the army of John. When, therefore, he was summoned to do
homage as a vassal, and prepare to receive the emperor, he solicited an
interview. At this meeting it was stipulated that Antioch should remain under
the existing administration, civil and ecclesiastical, but that Raymond was to
hold the principality as a dependence of the Byzantine Empire, and do homage to
John as his sovereign. On the other hand, the emperor engaged to unite his arms
with those of the Prince of Antioch and the Count of Edessa, to drive the Turks
out of Aleppo, Shizar, Hama, and Hems, the
investiture of which he promised to confer on the Prince of Antioch.
The following campaign (AD 1138) was carried on
against the Turks in Syria, while the Seljouks of
Iconium were left unmolested in the rear of the Byzantine army. This appears to
have been a very ill-judged enterprise. It added to the renown of the emperor
and displayed the superiority of his army, but it conferred no advantage on his
empire. Piza, a strong fortress on a rock near the
banks of the Euphrates, was taken, and given up to Joscelin,
count of Edessa. But the emperor could make no impression on Aleppo, and he
only extracted a large sum of money from Shizar. His
two allies, Raymond and Joscelin, gave him no
assistance, and the manner in which they spent their time in feasting and
gambling disgusted the emperor, who felt little anxiety to extend their
dominions. He saw that unless he could make Antioch his place of arms, and the
headquarters of his army during the winter, there would be great difficulty in
making any permanent conquests in Syria. He therefore proposed to Raymond to
admit the Byzantine troops into Antioch. The proposition alarmed both the
prince and the people; and after the Emperor John had entered the place to
treat of the arrangements which it would be necessary to make, a popular tumult
arose, which compelled him to withdraw, and he retired with his army from Syria
to wait for a more favourable opportunity.
While he had been pursuing his schemes of ambition in
the south, the Turks had ravaged the country along the banks of the Sangarius. The emperor was occupied, during the summer of
1139, with an expedition into Paphlagonia and Pontus, in which he advanced as
far as Neocaesarea. In this campaign his youngest son
Manuel distinguished himself by his valour, and his nephew John fled to the
Turks, as has been already mentioned. In winter the army was encamped on the
banks of the Rhyndacus, to protect the rich plains of
Bithynia.
The emperor now prepared a powerful army, at the head
of which he proposed to march to Jerusalem and re-establish the Byzantine
supremacy in Syria. The Frank princes, the King of Jerusalem, the Pope, and the
Latin clergy, all viewed his project with fear and jealousy, and were eager to
thwart his operations. The year 1141 was occupied by military operations
against the Sultan of Iconium, in order to secure the frontiers of the empire
from all danger during the emperor's absence in Syria. One of the measures
adopted by John during this campaign has been already blamed.
On the frontiers of Lycaonia, nearly in a direct line
between Attalip and Iconium, there is a large
freshwater lake surrounded by mountains, called Pasgusa by Cinnamus. This lake, the Koralis of Strabo, is about twenty miles long and eight broad, and is distant upwards
of forty miles from Iconium. Many islands are interspersed on its surface,
which in the time of John II were inhabited by a numerous Christian population,
enjoying a considerable degree of municipal liberty, and carrying on a
flourishing trade with Iconium under the protection of the sultan. The
emperor now summoned these islanders to receive Byzantine garrisons; but as the
islands were well fortified, and the people feared the fiscal rapacity of the
imperial administration, and hated the ecclesiastical tyranny of the Greek
Church, they rejected the summons, and prepared to resist the emperor. But
though the lake and the island fortifications had proved an effectual defence
against the Seljouk Turks, they could oppose only a weak barrier to the
scientific attacks of John. Boats were soon constructed, battering-rams and
storming-towers were floated on rafts close to the walls, and after a brave
resistance the island fortresses were taken and their inhabitants made
prisoners. Byzantine garrisons for a while retained possession of these
conquests, but when deprived of their industrious inhabitants the islands
became useless, and the shores of the lake were deserted.
The emperor passed the winter near Anazarba,
on the frontiers of Cilicia, holding his army ready to enter Syria and take
possession of Antioch in spring. But while he was revolving his projects, and
arranging everything necessary for his march to Jerusalem, an accident suddenly
terminated his life. While he was hunting on Mount Taurus, it happened that he
received the charge of a wild boar with his hunting-spear, and in his struggle
with the wild beast a poisoned arrow from his own quiver wounded his hand. At
first he paid no attention to the wound, and when his arm began to swell with the
effect of the poison, he refused to submit to amputation, which would then,
perhaps, have proved unavailing. Without loss of time, he made every
arrangement necessary for the tranquil transmission of the imperial power to
his youngest son, Manuel, whom he selected for his successor on account of his
superior talents. John II expired tranquilly on the 8th of April 1143, after a
reign of twenty-four years, seven months, and twenty-five days, at the age of
fifty-five.
Sect. III
Reign of Manuel I, A.D. 1143-1180
Manuel was not unworthy of his father’s preference,
but the possession of absolute power at an early age brings temptations which
no man can resist. Perhaps if Manuel had enjoyed the advantage of passing a few
additional years under his father’s eye, he might in his maturer age have become a wise and great prince. He possessed courage, ability, and
strength of character; nor was he deficient in literary cultivation, political
sagacity, or theological knowledge; but he ascended the throne of a corrupted
empire before his passions were disciplined. We need not wonder, therefore, at
finding that his vices developed themselves so rapidly as to choke many of his
virtues. Neither the institutions of Byzantine society nor the political
organization of the government enabled the. higher and middling classes of the
capital to acquire the knowledge or the virtues necessary to invest them with
the authority of public opinion, so that Manuel felt little moral restraint,
and rarely considered it an imperative duty to make his conduct conformable to
the dictates of his judgment by sacrificing his inclinations. A middle class
could hardly be said to exist any longer in the empire, and the Byzantine
officials were corrupted by every vice.
Manuel’s authority as emperor was peaceably recognised
at Constantinople in consequence of the energy and prudence of Axouchos, his father’s friend and prime-minister, who
hastened to the capital, and took all the necessary precautions before the
death of John II was publicly known. The young emperor’s elder brother, Isaac,
was confined in a monastery and closely watched, while the intrigues of his
brother-in-law, the Caesar Roger, were easily rendered abortive. The support of
the clergy was purchased by a yearly pension equal to the value of two hundred
pounds’ weight of gold, and the goodwill of the Patriarch was secured by a
further donation of one hundred pounds, which Manuel placed on the high altar
of St Sophia’s at the time of his coronation. The army was attached by promotions,
bounties, and furloughs; and the citizens of Constantinople were gained by the
grant of a donative of two pieces of gold to every householder in the
capital. The circumstances attending Manuel's accession compelled him
to hasten in person to Constantinople, in order to receive the imperial crown
in St Sophia’s. Custom and popular prejudice rendered the immediate performance
of this ceremony absolutely necessary to give a legal sanction to his
occupation of the throne, for it often happens that, long after law and
religion are neglected, forms and ceremonies exert despotic power over nations
deaf to the voice of justice and truth.
Manuel possessed both the personal advantages and
mental qualities most admired by his contemporaries. He was tall, handsome,
vigorous, and brave; skilled in all military exercises, and indefatigable as a
sportsman and a soldier. But his headlong courage degenerated into rashness,
and his personal skill made him seek the fame of a daring knight oftener than
was prudent in an able general. His unlimited power and violent passions
rendered his wars as much a matter of amusement as his hunting parties, and
induced him to engage in them with as little reference to their effects on the
welfare of his subjects. The wealth of the empire was lavished on brilliant
fêtes and tournaments, which were renowned through all Europe as the most
magnificent spectacles of the kind that had ever been seen. But the dignity of
the empire was forgotten in the emperor’s private society, and his love of
pleasure was unrestrained by morality and religion. The Byzantine court,
already familiar with every vice, was taught by him to tolerate even the crime
of incest.
Two anecdotes may be selected to give a picture of the
state of society early in Manuel's reign. At one of the social meetings in
which he indulged, the conversation of his relations present turned on his own
and his father's military exploits. His nephew, John, the son of his deceased
brother Andronicus, extolled the deeds of the Emperor John as superior to those
of Manuel, and the preference was admitted to be just by Manuel himself who
loved his father, and respected his memory. But the emperor's brother Isaac and
his cousin Andronicus engaged in a violent altercation on the subject, in which
something which Andronicus said offended Isaac to such a degree that he drew
his sword, and made a blow at his cousin's head. The emperor, with his usual
boldness and promptitude, warded off the blow with his arm, and John Ducas, another cousin of the emperor’s, assisted in
parrying it with his hunting-whip. Manuel, however, received a wound from his
brother’s sword, even through his gold-embroidered
dress, of which he carried the mark to his grave. His cousin Andronicus showed
little gratitude to the emperor in his future life. The circumstances of this
affair made a deep impression on the mind of Manuel, to whom it revealed a
degree of concealed ill-will and envy the existence of which he had not
previously suspected, and he is said ever after to have worn armour under his
clothes.
The other anecdote exhibits the court in a state of
society so disgusting, that we should be unable to believe the possibility of
so much vice under the eye of a Christian clergy and an established church,
unless we possessed convincing proofs of the fact. It shows us how far crime
may proceed where the aristocracy have no feelings of moral responsibility, and
where the church is the creature of a corrupted state. The amours of Andronicus
with his cousin Eudocia were the object of much remark, as the connection was
considered incestuous among the Greeks. It was notorious, however, that the
emperor was carrying on an adulterous and incestuous intercourse with his niece
Theodora, the sister of Eudocia. Andronicus, therefore, openly made a jest of
his own and his sovereign's infamy, observing that water from the same fountain
has the same taste. Yet while such was the state of the court, Manuel gave his
imperial sanction to an ecclesiastical prohibition of the marriage of his subjects
to the seventh degree of consanguinity.
At this time the aristocracy of Western Europe far
surpassed the nobles of the Byzantine Empire in all warlike accomplishments.
The military spirit of the times of Nicephorus Phokas, John Zimiskes, and Basil
the Bulgarian-slayer, had passed away. This degeneracy of the Greeks induced
the Emperor John II to fill his ranks with Turkish mercenaries, and it now
caused Manuel to adopt the habits and prejudices of Western chivalry, and in
military affairs to show a strong preference in favour of the Franks. Both
Manuel's wives were Latin princesses. His first was Bertha, called by the
Greeks Irene, who was daughter of the Count of Sulzbach,
and sister of the wife of Conrad, emperor of Germany. His second was Maria, the
daughter of Raymond and Constance of Antioch, and this marriage mingled the
blood of Alexius and Bohemund in an unlucky alliance. His daughter Maria, after
having been betrothed to Bela III before he became king of Hungary, promised to
William the Good, king of Sicily, and asked in marriage by the Emperor
Frederick Barbarossa for his son, Henry VI, was at a ripe age (years, however,
not having in any way impaired her beauty) bestowed on Rayner, second son of
William, marquis of Montferrat, who received the rank of Caesar at the
marriage, which took place in 1180. At the same time, the emperor's young son
Alexius was married to Agnes, the daughter of Louis VII, king of France. To
this disposition of the emperor Manuel in favour of the Latins we may trace
something of the hostile feeling which the Greek clergy showed to his
government on more than one occasion, and there can be no doubt that it was
from political and personal reasons, not from religious preference, that Manuel
endeavoured to effect a union with the papal church.
(The Patriarch Kosmas of Aegina was deposed by a synod
of bishops of the court party. He was accused of favouring the heretical
opinions of his friend Niphon, a monk convicted of
holding some of the doctrines of the Bogomilians. But
the real ground of the deposition of Kosmas was his hostility to Manuel’s
views, and the suspicion the emperor entertained that he was intriguing with
his brother Isaac. The deposed Aeginetan patriarch
had very little Christian charity. He appears to have been an ecclesiastic
worthy of Manuel’s court, for when he heard his sentence, he heaped curses on
the heads of his accusers, on the synod, and on the emperor; and his frantic
rage went so far that he implored Heaven the empress might never have a child.—
Kosmas was patriarch for only ten months, until February 1147).
To form a correct estimate of the position occupied by
the Byzantine Empire at this period in the international system of the
Christian states, we must bear in mind the superior intellectual cultivation of
its rulers and its immense pecuniary resources. Though the Byzantine
nobility were inferior to the Western barons in warlike accomplishments,
they surpassed even the Latin clergy in intellectual culture. Even the Emperor
Manuel, who rivalled the valour of Richard Coeur-de-Lion in the field, was
instructed in all the learning of his age. His knowledge of surgery enabled him
to dress the broken arm of Baldwin III, king of Jerusalem, and his theological
studies enabled him to direct the determinations of the synods of the Byzantine
church. After a long dispute with the Greek clergy, he succeeded in expunging
an anathema against the God of Mahomet from the church catechism, and replacing
it by an anathema against Mahomet and his doctrines.
The relative superiority of the Byzantine Empire to
the other Christian states was still very great, though the foundations of its
prosperity and strength were already undermined. This superiority was also
rendered more apparent in a political point of view, from the immense power
conferred on the emperor by the centralization of the whole governmental
authority in his person, and by the arbitrary power he was thereby enabled to
exercise over the fortunes of his subjects. But we shall see that the splendour
of Manuel’s reign was purchased by the expenditure of the capital as well as of
the income of the empire, and the diminished resources of his dominions became
apparent immediately after his death. The wasteful extravagance of his court
and his tournaments, together with the expense of the large military
establishments he maintained, kept his treasury so low that he was compelled to
use both oppression and rapacity in order to fill it; his financial
administration was marked by injustice; wealth was seized wherever he could lay
his hands on it; the people were impoverished by monopolies, and individuals
were enriched by privileges, so that the inhabitants of the provinces began to
contemplate subjection to the Franks and the Mohammedans as an alternative by
which they could escape spoliation. Unfortunately for the empire, the family of
Comnenus was a fruitful stock, and every member of the house required to be
provided with an income suitable to their imperial rank; so that if we glance
our eye over the long catalogue of these Byzantine princes in the volume of Ducange, and estimate their cost to the state by the fact
that, when prisoners, their ransom was generally rated at twenty thousand
pieces of gold, there can be no doubt that an army of one hundred thousand men,
with its officers and materials of war, might have been maintained for the same
expenditure.
But when we look beyond the corruption of the
administration, the vices of the court, and the servility of the clergy, we
perceive that a desire for improvement still existed in those classes who were
free from the immediate circle of official influence. The degraded condition of
society was felt, and some anxiety to escape its evils was manifested. The
scanty records of the civil and ecclesiastical jurisprudence of the time, and
the pedantic remains of Byzantine literature, allow us to trace this spirit in
the history of the law and of the church. Unfortunately for the Eastern Empire,
the Greeks, in whom these feelings could alone have produced some practicable
political reform, sacrificed their nationality to the pride of calling
themselves Romans, and to the profit arising from appropriating to themselves
the innumerable offices in the public and in the ecclesiastical administration.
The Greeks never made any national opposition to the ruinous abuses of the
imperial government. The only constitutional remedy on which all classes in the
empire could ever agree, was to depose an emperor when his conduct became
intolerable. The officials, who shared in the plunder of the people, declared
that no earthly power was entitled to circumscribe the imperial authority, and
the people were unable to discover any practical guarantee for their natural
rights. The consequence was, incapacity in the rulers and apathy in the
subjects, so that the subjugation of the Byzantine Empire by foreigners became
at last an easy task
The Greeks were almost excluded from military service
by fiscal regulations, for they were regarded by the emperors as more useful in
their capacity of taxpayers than they were likely to become as soldiers; yet
their prosperity was neglected, their country was left unprotected, and was
ravaged by invaders, who destroyed their property, ruined their manufactures,
and carried away their artisans to exercise their industry in other lands. A
national feeling at length arose among the provincial clergy in Greece, but it
was prevented from producing any political effects favourable to popular
liberty, by being diverted into a bigoted hatred against the Latins.
We derive some valuable information concerning the
condition of the Byzantine Empire during the reign of Manuel from the travels
of the Jewish rabbi, Benjamin of Tudela. Whether
Benjamin visited in person all the countries he describes is a matter of no
great importance, for he certainly records the observations of an eyewitness.
The state of the Eastern Empire is sketched with as much clearness and
precision as is generally displayed even by modern travellers. The wealth of
Constantinople, the power and magnificence of the Emperor Manuel, the
commercial activity and manufacturing industry of the Greeks, the riches and
luxury of the Byzantine nobles, the unwarlike spirit of the people, the
mercenary composition of the imperial armies, and the heterogeneous population
of various races and indifferent states of civilization that peopled the
provinces, from the Vallachians of Thessaly to the
Armenians of Cilicia, are all pointed out by this observing traveller, who,
free both from the prejudices of the Latin monk and the antipathies of the
Byzantine official, gives us a deeper insight into the composition of the
empire than the eulogies of Greek historians, or the calumnies of Western
chroniclers.
The external policy of Manuel’s reign was guided by a
desire to gain renown; the internal was solely directed by a determination to
augment the receipts of the imperial treasury. But he was not insensible to the
increasing power of the commercial republics of Italy, as we see by the
treaties he concluded with the Pisans and the Genoese, and by his protection of
the Amalphitans, who had formed a colony at
Constantinople when their city was taken by the Normans. Manuel’s object was,
by these alliances, to counterbalance the great influence the Venetians had
acquired over the Byzantine finances by the immense privileges conceded to them
by Alexius I, as a reward for their services in the Norman war. Anna Comnena enumerates these concessions in a curious passage,
which throws great light on the history of Byzantine commerce, and proves that
her father’s generosity must have inflicted a severe loss on the native
merchants of the empire. A whole street of warehouses was given to the
Venetians in the capital. The Amalphitan shopkeepers
were compelled to pay them tribute. Their merchandise was exempt from custom
duties, and they were permitted to trade over the whole extent of the empire as
far as Constantinople and the entrance of the Black Sea, with some special
privileges. It is difficult to fix the precise nature of the advantages which
they acquired by this treaty over the native merchant; but there is no doubt
that it marks the commencement of a system of a commercial policy on the part
of the Byzantine government to which we must attribute the ruin of Greek
commerce in the Mediterranean, and the estrangement of the Greeks from the
imperial administration. These concessions were also made the ground of many
abuses on the part of the Venetians, who, because they paid little, endeavoured
to pay nothing, and thus innumerable disputes arose with the fiscal officers as
well as with the native merchants. The mutual dissatisfaction arising from such
discussions broke out into open hostilities during the reign of John II; and
Manuel, warned by his father's difficulties, endeavoured to render the empire
independent of the Venetians, by encouraging their commercial rivals to visit
his dominions.
In attempting to estimate the effect produced on the
trade and manufactures of the inhabitants of the Byzantine Empire by the
privileges conceded to the Venetians, it is necessary to avoid drawing our
inferences from the state of commerce in modern times. The difficulties of
transport both by sea and land confined commerce within a smaller sphere, and
restricted it to fewer articles. Jews exacted fifty per cent interest, barons
gloried in plundering merchants, and merchants often acted as pirates. To us it
would seem that immunity from import duties must have very soon thrown the
whole trade of the empire into the hands of the Venetians. But we know that
this was not the case, and we observe three circumstances which exercised great
influence in preventing the immunity from proving as injurious to the imperial
treasury as it must have been to private traders. The first was the exclusion
of all foreign ships from the Black Sea. The second, the monopoly which the
Byzantine government retained of the commerce in grain and all kinds of
provisions, both as regarded importation and exportation. And the third was,
that the rents of shops and warehouses formed no trifling portion of the
imperial revenues at Constantinople; though it is not easy to say how the
privileges granted to the Venetians raised the value of this species of
property. Other circumstances probably contributed to modify the natural effect
of fiscal immunities, and to render them less oppressive to the general trade
of the empire than is apparent from historical records. Still, there can be no
doubt that the preference accorded by the Byzantine emperors to foreigners
during the twelfth century was one of the principal causes of the decline of
Greek commerce, which ought to be attributed rather to the direct effect of the
fiscal measures of the house of Comnenus than to the increased commercial
activity of the Italian republics caused by the Crusades.
TREATIES WITH PISA AND GENOA.
The Emperor Alexius I had concluded a commercial
treaty with Pisa towards the end of his reign. Manuel renewed this alliance,
and he appears to have been the first of the Byzantine emperors who concluded a
public treaty with Genoa. The pride of the emperors of the Romans, as the sovereigns
of Constantinople were styled, induced them to treat the Italian republics as
municipalities still dependent on the empire of the Caesars, of which they had
once formed a part; and the rulers both of Pisa and Genoa yielded to this
assumption of supremacy, and consented to appear as vassals and liegemen of the
Byzantine emperors, in order to participate in the profits which they saw the
Venetians gained by trading in their dominions. Several commercial treaties
with Pisa and Genoa, as well as with Venice, have been preserved. The
obligations of the republics are embodied in the charter enumerating the
concessions granted by the emperor, and the document is called a chrysobulum, or golden bull, from the golden seal of the
emperor attached to it as the certificate of its authenticity.
In Manuel’s treaties with the Genoese and Pisans, the
republics bind themselves never to engage in hostilities against the empire;
but, on the contrary, all the subjects of the republics residing in the
emperor's dominions become bound to assist him against all assailants: they
engage to act with their own ships, or to serve on board the imperial fleet,
for the usual pay granted to Latin mercenaries. They promise to offer no
impediment to the extension of the empire in Syria, reserving to themselves the
factories and privileges they already possess in any place that may be
conquered. They submit their civil and criminal affairs to the
jurisdiction of the Byzantine courts of justice, as was then the case with the
Venetians and other foreigners in the empire. Acts of piracy and armed
violence, unless the criminals were taken in the fact, were to be reported to
the rulers of the republic whose subjects had committed the crime, and the
Byzantine authorities were not to render the innocent traders in the empire
responsible for the injuries inflicted by these brigands. The republicans
engaged to observe all the stipulations in their treaties in defiance of
ecclesiastical excommunication, or the prohibition of any individual, crowned
or not crowned.
Manuel, in return, granted to the republicans the
right of forming a factory, erecting a quay for landing their goods, and
building a church; and the Genoese received their grant in an agreeable
position on the side of the port opposite Constantinople, where in after times
their great colony of Galata was formed. The emperor promised to send an annual
present of from four hundred to five hundred gold byzants, with two pieces of a
rich brocade then manufactured only in the Byzantine empire, to the republican
governments, and sixty byzants, with one piece of brocade, to their
archbishops. These treaties fixed the duty levied on the goods imported or
exported from Constantinople by the Italians at four per cent; but in the other
cities of the empire, the Pisans and Genoese were to pay the same duties as
other Latin traders, excepting, of course, the privileged Venetians. These
duties generally amounted to ten per cent. The republics were expressly
excluded, by the Genoese treaty, from the Black Sea trade, except when they
received a special license from the emperor. In case of shipwreck, the property
of the foreigners was to be protected by the imperial authorities and respected
by the people, and every assistance was to be granted to the unfortunate
sufferers. This humane clause was not new in Byzantine commercial treaties, for
it is contained in the earliest treaty concluded by Alexius I with the Pisans.
On the whole, the arrangements for the administration of justice in these
treaties prove that the Byzantine Empire still enjoyed a greater degree of
order than the rest of Europe.
The state of civilization in the Eastern Empire, as we
have had already occasion to observe, rendered the public finances the moving
power of the government, as in the nations of modern Europe. This must always
tend to the centralization of political authority, for the highest branch of
the executive will always endeavour to dispose of the revenues of the state
according to its views of necessity. This centralizing policy led Manuel to
order all the money which the Greek commercial communities had hitherto devoted
to maintaining local squadrons of galleys for the defence of the islands and
coasts of the Aegean, to be remitted to the treasury at Constantinople. The ships
were compelled to visit the imperial dockyard in the capital to undergo
repairs, and to receive provisions and pay. A navy is a most expensive
establishment; kings, ministers, and people are all very apt to think that when
it is not wanted at any particular time, the cost of its maintenance may be
more profitably applied to other objects. Manuel, after he had secured the
funds of the Greeks for his own treasury, soon left their ships to rot, and the
commerce of Greece became exposed to the attacks of small squadrons of Italian
pirates who previously would not have dared to plunder in the Archipelago. It
may be thought by some that Manuel acted wisely in centralizing the naval
administration of his empire; but the great number, the small size, and the relative
position of many of the Greek islands with regard to the prevailing winds,
render the permanent establishment of naval stations at several points
necessary to prevent piracy; and unless local interests possess considerable
influence in appropriating the funds required for this purpose, it is a duty
which is always in danger of being neglected by the central administration. The
monarchy established in Greece by the three protecting powers has annihilated
the navy of Hydra, Spezia, and Psara, and piracy is at present only kept down
by the steamers of the protecting powers. But no general rule can be safely
applied to a problem in practical administration. Manuel and Otho ruined the
navy of Greece by their unwise measures of centralization; Pericles, by prudently
centralizing the maritime forces of the various states, increased the naval
power of Athens, and gave additional security to every Greek ship that
navigated the sea.
The same fiscal views which induced Manuel to
centralize the naval administration when it was injurious to the interests of
the empire, prompted him to act diametrically opposite with regard to the army.
The Emperor John had added greatly to the efficiency of the Byzantine military
force by improving and centralizing its administration, and he left Manuel an
excellent army, which rendered the Eastern Empire the most powerful state in
Europe. But Manuel, from motives of economy, abandoned his father's system.
Instead of assembling all the military forces of the empire annually in camps,
where they received pay, and were subjected to strict discipline, towards the
end of his reign he distributed even the regular army in cities and provinces,
where they were quartered far apart, in order that each district, by
maintaining a certain number of men, might relieve the treasury from the burden
of their pay and subsistence while they were not on actual service. The money
thus retained in the central treasury was spent in idle festivals at
Constantinople, and the troops, dispersed and neglected, became careless of
their military exercises, and lived in a state of relaxed discipline. Other
abuses were quickly introduced; resident yeomen, shopkeepers, and artisans
were enrolled in the legions, with the connivance of the officers. The
burden of maintaining the troops was in this way diminished, but the army was
deteriorated. In other districts, where the divisions were exposed to be called
into action, or were more directly under central inspection, the effective
force was kept up at its full complement, but the people were compelled to
submit to every kind of extortion and tyranny. The tendency of absolute power
being always to weaken the power of the law, and to increase the authority of
the executive agents of the sovereign, soon manifested its effects in the rapid
progress of administrative corruption. The Byzantine garrisons in a few years
became prototypes of the shop keeping janissaries of the Ottoman Empire, and
bore no resemblance to the feudal militia of Western Europe, which Manuel had
proposed as the model of his reform. This change produced a rapid decline in
the military strength of the Byzantine army, and accelerated the fall of the
empire.
For a considerable period the Byzantine emperors had
been gradually increasing the proportion of foreign mercenaries in their
service; this practice Manuel carried farther than any of his predecessors.
Besides the usual Varangian, Italian, and German guards, we find large corps of
Patzinaks, Franks, and Turks enrolled in his armies, and officers of these
nations occupying situations of the highest rank. A change had taken place in
the military tactics of the East, caused by the heavy armour and powerful
horses which the Crusaders brought into the field, and by the greater personal
strength and skill in warlike exercises of the Western troops, who had no
occupation from infancy but gymnastic exercises and athletic amusements. The
nobility of the feudal nations expended more money on arms and armour than on
other luxuries; and this becoming the general fashion, the Western troops were
much better armed than the Byzantine soldiers. War became the profession of the
higher ranks, and the expense of military undertakings was greatly increased by
the military classes being completely separated from the rest of society. The
warlike disposition of Manuel led him to favour the military nobles of the West
who took service at his court; while his confidence in his own power, and in
the political superiority of his empire, deluded him with the hope of being
able to quell the turbulence of the Franks, and set bounds to the ambition and
power of the popes.
The wars of Manuel were sometimes forced on him by
foreign powers, and sometimes commenced for temporary objects; but he appears
never to have formed any fixed idea of the permanent policy which ought to have
determined the constant employment of all the military resources at his
command, for the purpose of advancing the interest of his empire and giving
security to his subjects. His military exploits may be considered under three
heads:—His wars with the Franks, whether in Asia or Europe; his wars with the
Hungarians and Servians; and his wars with the Turks.
His first operations were against the principality of
Antioch. The death of John II caused the dispersion of the fine army he had
assembled for the conquest of Syria; but Manuel sent a portion of that army,
and a strong fleet, to attack the principality. One of the generals of the land
forces was Prosuch, a Turkish officer in high favour
with his father. Raymond of Antioch was no longer the idle gambler he had shown
himself in the camp of the Emperor John; but though he was now distinguished by
his courage and skill in arms, he was completely defeated, and the imperial
army carried its ravages up to the very walls of Antioch, while the fleet laid
waste the coast. Though the Byzantine troops retired, the losses of the
campaign convinced Raymond that it would be impossible to defend Antioch, should
Manuel take the field in person. He therefore hastened to Constantinople, as a
suppliant, to sue for peace; but Manuel, before admitting him to an audience,
required that he should repair to the tomb of the Emperor John, and ask pardon
for having violated his former promises. When the Hercules of the Franks, as
Raymond was called, had submitted to this humiliation, he was admitted to the
imperial presence, swore fealty to the Byzantine Empire as Prince of Antioch,
and became the vassal of the Emperor Manuel. The conquest of Edessa by the
Mohammedans, which took place in the month of December 1144, rendered the
defence of Antioch by the Latins a doubtful enterprise, unless they could
secure the assistance of the Greeks.
Manuel involved himself in a war with Roger, king of
Sicily, which perhaps he might have avoided by more prudent conduct. An envoy
he had sent to the Sicilian court concluded a treaty, which Manuel thought fit
to disavow with unsuitable violence : this gave the Sicilian king a pretext for
commencing war, but the real cause of hostilities must be sought in the
ambition of Roger and the hostile feelings of Manuel. Roger was one of the
wealthiest princes of his time; he had united under his sceptre both Sicily and
all the Norman possessions in southern Italy; his ambition was equal to his
wealth and power, and he aspired at eclipsing the glory of Robert Guiscard and
Bohemund by some permanent conquests in the Byzantine Empire. On the other
hand, the renown of Roger excited the envy of Manuel, who, proud of his army,
and confident of his own valour and military skill, hoped to reconquer Sicily.
His passion made him forget that he was surrounded by numerous enemies, who
would combine to prevent his employing all his forces against one adversary.
Manuel consequently acted imprudently in revealing his hostile intentions;
while Roger could direct all his forces against one point, and avail himself of
Manuel’s embarrassments. He commenced hostilities by inflicting a blow on the
wealth and prosperity of Greece, from which it never recovered.
At the commencement of the second crusade, when the
attention of Manuel was anxiously directed to the movements of Louis VII of
France, and Conrad, emperor of Germany, Roger, who had collected a powerful
fleet at Brindisi, for the purpose either of attacking the Byzantine empire or
transporting the Crusaders to Palestine, availed himself of an insurrection in
Corfu to conclude a convention with the inhabitants, who admitted a garrison of
one thousand Norman troops into their citadel. The Corfiotes complained with great reason of the intolerable weight of taxation to which
they were subjected, of the utter neglect of their interests by the central
government, which consumed their wealth, and of the great abuses which
prevailed in the administration of justice; but the remedy they adopted, by
placing themselves under the rule of foreign masters, was not likely to
alleviate these evils. The Sicilian admiral, after landing the Norman garrison
at Corfu, sailed to Monemvasia, then one of the principal commercial cities in
the East, hoping to gain possession of it without difficulty; but the maritime
population of this impregnable fortress gave him a warm reception, and easily
repulsed his attack. After plundering the coasts of Euboea and Attica, the
Sicilian fleet returned to the west, and laid waste Acarnania and Aetolia; then
entered the Gulf of Corinth, and debarked a body of troops at Crissa. This force marched through the country to Thebes,
plundering every town and village on the way. Thebes offered no resistance, and
was plundered in the most deliberate and barbarous manner. The inhabitants were
numerous and wealthy. The soil of Boeotia is extremely productive, and numerous
manufactures established in the city of Thebes gave additional value to the
abundant produce of agricultural industry. A century had elapsed since the
citizens of Thebes had gone out valiantly to fight the army of Sclavonian rebels in the reign of Michael IV the Paphlagonian, and that defeat had long been forgotten. But
all military spirit was now dead, and the Thebans had so long lived without any
fear of invasion that they had forgotten the use of arms. The Sicilians found
them not only unprepared to offer any resistance, but so surprised that they
had not even adopted any effectual measures to secure or conceal their movable
property. The conquerors, secure against all danger of interruption, plundered
Thebes at their leisure. Not only gold, silver, jewels, and church plate were
carried off, but even the goods found in the warehouses, and the rarest
articles of furniture in private houses, were transported to the ships. Bales
of silk and dyed leather were sent off to the fleet as deliberately as if they
had been legally purchased in time of peace. When all ordinary means of
collecting booty were exhausted, the citizens were compelled to take an oath on
the Holy Scriptures that they had not concealed any portion of their property;
yet many of the wealthiest were dragged away captive, in order to profit by
their ransom; and many of the most skilful workmen in the silk-manufactories,
for which Thebes had long been famous, were pressed on board the fleet to
labour at the oar.
From Boeotia the army passed to Corinth. Nicephorus Kaluphes, the governor, retired into the Acro-Corinth, but
the garrison appeared to his cowardly heart not strong enough to defend this
impregnable fortress, and he surrendered it to George Antiochenus,
the Sicilian admiral, on the first summons. On examining the fortress of which he
had thus unexpectedly gained possession, the admiral could not help exclaiming
that he fought under the protection of Heaven, for if Kaluphes had not been more timid than a virgin, Corinth should have repulsed every
attack. Corinth was sacked as cruelly as Thebes; men of rank, beautiful women,
and skilful artisans, with their wives and families, were carried away into
captivity. Even the relics of St Theodore were taken from the church in which
they were preserved; and it was not until the whole Sicilian fleet was laden
with as much of the wealth of Greece as it was capable of transporting that the
admiral ordered it to sail. The Sicilians did not venture to retain possession
of the impregnable citadel of Corinth, as it would have been extremely difficult
for them to keep up their communications with the garrison. This invasion of
Greece was conducted entirely as a plundering expedition, having for its object
to inflict the greatest possible injury on the Byzantine Empire, while it
collected the largest possible quantity of booty for the Sicilian troops. Corfu
was the only conquest of which Roger retained possession; yet this passing
invasion is the period from which the decline of Byzantine Greece is to be
dated.
The century and a-half which preceded this disaster
had passed in uninterrupted tranquillity, and the Greek people had increased
rapidly in numbers and wealth. The power of the Sclavonian population sank with the ruin of the kingdom of Achrida; and the Sclavonians who now dwelt in Greece were peaceable
cultivators of the soil, or graziers. The Greek population, on the other hand,
was in possession of an extensive commerce and many flourishing manufactures.
The ruin of this commerce and of these manufactures has been ascribed to the
transference of the silk trade from Thebes and Corinth to Palermo, under the
judicious protection it received from Roger ; but it would be more correct to
say, that the injudicious and oppressive financial administration of the
Byzantine emperors destroyed the commercial prosperity and manufacturing
industry of the Greeks; while the wise liberality and intelligent protection of
the Norman kings extended the commerce and increased the industry of the
Sicilians.
When the Sicilian fleet returned to Palermo, Roger
determined to employ all the silk-manufacturers in their original
occupations. He consequently collected all their families together, and
settled them at Palermo, supplying them with the means of exercising their
industry with profit to themselves, and inducing them to teach his own subjects
to manufacture the richest brocades, and to rival the rarest productions of the
East. Roger, unlike most of the monarchs of his age, paid particular attention
to improving the wealth of his dominions by increasing the prosperity of his
subjects. During his reign the cultivation of the sugar-cane was introduced
into Sicily. The conduct of Manuel was very different: when he concluded peace
with William, the son and successor of Roger, in 1158, he paid no attention to
the commercial interests of his Greek subjects; the silk-manufactures of Thebes
and Corinth were not reclaimed and reinstated in their native seats; they were
left to exercise their industry for the profit of their new prince, while their
old sovereign would have abandoned them to perish from want. Under such
circumstances, it is not remarkable that the commerce and the manufactures of
Greece were transferred in the course of another century to Sicily and Italy.
Though Manuel has been blamed with justice for his
conduct to the Crusaders, it would be wrong to give credit to all the
accusations of the Latin writers, who frequently attribute to his conduct
disasters which arose solely from the rashness and incapacity of the Franks.
The Crusaders, ashamed of their defeats, indulged their national and
ecclesiastical antipathies by attributing all their misfortunes to Manuel,
forgetting that every accusation brought against him could with equal truth be
made against the Latin princes and nobles of Syria, in whose conduct the crimes
assumed a blacker dye. The truth is, that all the Christian princes in the
East, whether Greek, Latin, or Armenian, watched with fear and jealousy the
conduct of the great Western monarchs who took the cross. Princes were not then
amenable to the tribunal of public opinion, and the powerful, consequently,
generally regarded it as a glorious exploit to seize every country of which
they could hope to retain possession. When, therefore, the crusading monarchs
were unable to conquer the Mohammedans, they were too apt to conquer the
Christians.
CONRAD III, EMPEROR OF GERMANY.
The second crusade commenced in 1147. Conrad III,
emperor of Germany, was the first prince who marched eastward; and he took the
route through Hungary which had been followed by the first Crusaders. His army
was numerous and well furnished; but it was embarrassed by an immense crowd of
pilgrims, over whom the military chiefs could exercise very little control It
had, however, the advantage of being attended by a numerous body of workmen, to
make roads and construct bridges; for the army feared nothing but delay. The
agents of the Emperor Manuel, who were sent to count these troops as they
crossed the Danube, reported that the number exceeded ninety thousand; and if
we may trust the report of contemporary chronicles, seventy thousand of these were horsemen. During their progress through the Eastern Empire, they
were accompanied by a strong body of Byzantine troops, under the command
of Prosuch, who advanced parallel to their line
of march, and endeavoured to restrain the plundering propensities of the
pilgrims, who thought they were entitled to help themselves to everything they
desired, as they had received ample absolutions for every crime they might
commit. The precautions of Conrad and the prudence of Manuel were insufficient
to preserve order. The Greek suttlers, accustomed to
cheat and to be cheated by their own government, defrauded the German soldiers;
and the bands of robbers, whom the false piety of the Papal Church had allowed to
take the cross, plundered the open country as a hostile district. The
Bulgarians and Greeks took up arms to revenge themselves. A relation of Conrad,
falling sick, rested in a monastery at Adrianople, where some Byzantine
soldiers murdered him, and plundered his effects. The news reached the German
emperor when he was already two days’ march beyond Adrianople; but he
immediately sent back his nephew, the celebrated Frederic Barbarossa, to punish
this act of treachery. Frederic, naturally more violent than his uncle, set
fire to the monastery, and attacked the Byzantine troops in the vicinity; but
after some slaughter, Prosuch succeeded in appeasing
his anger and preventing a battle.
The Emperors Manuel and Conrad had married sisters;
but pride and etiquette prevented their meeting, and they became engaged in
disputes which produced various acts of hostility between their armies. The
Germans destroyed many of the splendid villas round Constantinople, and thereby
ruined one of the greatest ornaments of that capital. But as Conrad was
eager to pursue his route before Louis VII of France could witness the disorder
which already began to manifest itself in his army, and as Manuel was anxious
to transport one army into Asia before the other reached the Bosphorus, the two
emperors arranged their quarrels, and the Byzantine navy transported the
Germans into Asia. Manuel also supplied Conrad with guides for his march
to Antioch; and to his treachery in furnishing guides instructed to mislead the
army, the Crusaders attributed all their subsequent misfortunes, forgetting
that the road from Constantinople to Antioch was quite as well-known as that
from Vienna to Constantinople, and that the real cause of their disasters was
to be found in their own rashness, and in the natural difficulty of finding
provisions for a large army, whose flanks were infested with brigands in the
guise of pilgrims, whom the Emperor Conrad could not venture to hang, as they
were the chosen sheep of the Pope. Conrad had unfortunately selected the
summer as the season for marching through the arid plains of Phrygia. It
is not surprising, therefore, that the men died of fever, and the horses from
want of forage. But it cannot be denied that the envious and malignant
policy which marked the proceedings of the Byzantine court in its
communications with Western Europe did much to increase the unavoidable
difficulties of the Crusaders. It was undoubtedly a measure of prudence to
exclude them from all walled towns; but it was an act of the basest infamy to
mix chalk with the flour that was sold to them, and to coin false money to
defraud them when they exchanged their gold and silver. Yet Nicetas tells us that Manuel was guilty of these meannesses. The Turkish cavalry attacked the German
army when it was weakened by disease, and Conrad, with the portion of his
cavalry still capable of service, was compelled to retreat. After meeting Louis
VII at Nicaea, he again advanced with the French monarch as far as Ephesus; but
sickness compelled him to return to Constantinople, where Manuel gave him the
kindest welcome as soon as he had ceased to be an object of fear.
Louis conducted his march with more prudence than
Conrad. He possessed more control over his troops, and he was not attended by
so many idle followers and disorderly brigands. But Louis found even the
European provinces of the Byzantine Empire on his line of march so hostile,
that he had to force his way through the country up to the walls of
Constantinople. Manuel received Louis with demonstrations of friendship; but
while the French army was encamped before Constantinople, it became known that
the Byzantine emperor had concluded a truce with the Sultan of Iconium. A
council was held in the French camp, and the Bishop of Langres proposed that the Crusaders should commence their military operations for the
deliverance of Christ’s sepulchre by conquering the heretics of Constantinople.
He employed all his eloquence to incite his countrymen to attack the Greeks;
but the French nobles declared that they had taken the cross to fight with
infidels and defend Jerusalem, not to destroy Christian cities or punish heretics.
The King of France was so anxious to preserve amicable relations with the
Byzantine government, and so eager to march forward, that he permitted his
barons to do homage to Manuel, in order to remove all jealousy on the part of
that emperor, and gave him the fullest assurance of the good faith of the
French army. Louis also enforced the strictest discipline possible in his age,
and punished any soldiers who committed acts of brigandage with as much cruelty
as they had exercised in their depredations; some had their hands and feet cut
off.
In Asia the French army kept nearer the coast than the
Germans, which enabled them to proceed farther in the Byzantine territory. But
when they entered the Turkish dominions they soon began to suffer the same
evils as their predecessors, and only a small part gained Attalia in an efficient state. With these troops Louis embarked for Antioch, leaving
upwards of seven thousand men behind. These soldiers, abandoned by their
leaders and ill-treated by the inhabitants of the country, perished in
attempting to force their way to Syria by land. At Antioch, Louis found the
Frank princes of Syria no better disposed to favour his expedition than he had
found the Greek emperor at Constantinople. Every intrigue was employed to delay
his march to Jerusalem; and when at last Conrad returned, and he and Louis
united their forces with the troops of Baldwin III, king of Jerusalem, and laid
siege to Damascus, the enterprise failed in consequence of the jealousy or
treachery of the Syrian barons, the Templars, and the Prince of Antioch. But in
western Europe every failure, whether it was caused by the folly of the
Crusaders, the perfidy of the Latin Christians in Syria, or the jealousy of the
Byzantine government, equally tended to increase the outcry against the
treachery of the Greeks.
The destruction of the crusading armies left at
liberty to turn all his attention to Corfu; but the Patzinaks having
availed themselves of the opportunity afforded by the passage of the Crusaders
to plunder in Bulgaria, it was first necessary to clear the country of this
enemy. The whole summer of 1148 was employed in this task. In the following
year the Byzantine forces invested Corfu by sea and land. The position of the
citadel is extremely strong, occupying the base of a bold rocky promontory
which rises abruptly out of the sea with a double head. The city itself was
strongly fortified by art as well as by its natural position. When the emperor
had assembled all his forces before the place, he ordered a general assault
under the cover of showers of missiles from all the military machines then in
use, which were planted in his ships and along the shore so as to enfilade the
points which were assailed; but the advantage of their position enabled the
Sicilian garrison to repulse the attack, and the Grand-duke Koutostephanos,
who commanded the fleet was slain as he encouraged his men to plant a ladder
against the walls. In spite of this defeat Manuel continued to press on his
attacks at a considerable sacrifice of men without gaining any advantage, until
an unexpected circumstance had nearly rendered him master of the citadel It was
observed that a gully in the rock would admit the assailants into the body of
the place, if they could gain possession of a single wall that covered it
towards the sea. A lofty tower was constructed on the hulls of several
transports, which were bound firmly together, and on this tower a ladder was
fixed which reached the ramparts. Pupakes, a Turkish
officer of the guard of Axouchos, and four brothers
of Frank descent named Petraliphas, led a body of
four hundred chosen troops to the assault. Pupakes mounted the ladder and reached the rampart with a few followers; but while the
rest of the forlorn hope were mounting, the ladder broke with their weight, and
many were precipitated into the sea or dashed to pieces on the rocks of the
citadel. Pupakes, and those who had gained a firm
footing, cleared for themselves a space on the wall; but when they saw there
was no hope of receiving further aid, they availed themselves of the confusion
into which they had thrown the garrison, and with singular audacity and
presence of mind they descended from the ramparts and escaped by a wicket to
the Byzantine army. Manuel, undismayed by this failure, continued to direct his
attacks against the place with great courage, but with a degree of impatience
which often proves injurious to the military operations of sovereigns who
command their own armies. At length a quarrel occurred between the Byzantine
troops and the Venetian marines, in the large naval force which the republic
had sent to act against the Normans in conjunction with the emperor. The tumult
threatened to become a general engagement, when Axouchos,
unable to appease the combatants, determined at least to separate them. By
ordering his guards to charge the Venetians, he forced them to retire to their
ships. The republicans, furious at their discomfiture, immediately weighed
anchor and sailed to attack a division of the Greek fleet which was stationed
in the channel between Cephalonia and Ithaca, to prevent the Sicilians from
throwing supplies into Corfu on that side. The Venetians burned several of the
Greek ships and captured the emperor’s own galley, in which they placed a negro
clad in the imperial robes with a crown on his head; and having seated him on a
throne placed under a canopy, they paraded before the Byzantine camp at Corfu,
saluting their black pageant of an emperor with all the multifarious and
servile prostrations practised at the Constantinopolitan court. The Emperor
Manuel, however, had the good sense to smile at this buffoonery, in which his
dark complexion was ridiculed; and by his prudence he succeeded in bringing the
Venetians back to their duty. A fleet sent by Roger to relieve Corfu was
defeated, and the garrison, being cut off from all hope of succour, at length
capitulated. The Norman and Sicilian troops were allowed to retire with their
arms; but Theodore Capellan, their commander, fearing to encounter the
indignation of Roger, or satisfied that his courage and military skill would be
better appreciated by Manuel, entered the Byzantine service.
The emperor resolved to make the recovery of Corfu a
step to the invasion of Sicily. A division of the Byzantine fleet ravaged the
coast of Sicily, and Manuel twice attempted to invade the island, but was
driven back to Avlona by storms; and the damage his
ships sustained compelled him to abandon the undertaking for the time, nor did
future wars ever allow him to resume this enterprise. His officers, however,
were ordered to persist in a vain struggle to restore the Byzantine domination
in southern Italy, in order to form a base for operations against Sicily. The
war was prolonged for several years. On one occasion a Sicilian fleet of forty
sail passed the Hellespont, and appeared unexpectedly before Constantinople
while the emperor was absent; but the city was too well fortified to be exposed
to any danger from such a force. The Sicilian admiral, after proclaiming his
sovereign master of the sea, shooting a flight of gilded arrows at the walls of
the great palace, and plundering some houses at Damalis on the Asiatic coast, retired. The Byzantine generals enrolled
considerable bodies of mercenaries at Ancona and Venice, and obtained some success
in Apulia; but at last Alexius Comnenus, the son of the Princess Anna the
historian, having been defeated and taken prisoner, and Constantine Angelos, who was sent to regain the superiority with a
powerful fleet, having met with the same fate, Manuel became inclined to peace.
The terms of the treaty satisfied the vanity of the Byzantine emperor, and
served the policy of the Sicilian king. The Byzantine officers and soldiers who
were prisoners in Sicily were released without ransom; but Manuel, with that
indifference to useful industry, and to the feelings of his peaceful subjects,
and with the ignorance of the true sources of national strength, as well as
riches, which is so common among princes, left the artisans of Thebes and
Corinth to pass their lives in bondage under the Norman king. The fact that
they were well treated, and settled as freemen with their families around them,
reflects honour on Roger and additional disgrace on Manuel. As they were living
in a climate similar to that of their native cities, and in the midst of a
population speaking the Greek language, they probably were happier in their
favoured exile than they could have been under the fiscal oppression that
reigned in Byzantine Greece. The peace between Manuel and William the Bad,
Roger’s son and successor, was concluded in the year 1155.
The appearance of the crusading monarchs of Germany
and France, and the events of the war with the King of Sicily, gave Manuel a
more correct knowledge of the resources and wealth of Western Europe than he
had previously possessed. He began to fear their power as well as to
esteem their valour, and during the remainder of his reign he watched the
politics of a Italy with great attention. On more than one occasion he
assisted the Italian cities in their struggle for liberty against Frederic
Barbarossa, both with troops and money. He feared lest a general pacification
of the Western states should enable some crusading monarch to employ an
irresistible force against the Byzantine Empire and the Greek Church.
For about twenty years, from 1148 to 1168, the chief
field of Manuel’s personal exploits was on the northern frontier of his empire.
His first campaign, after the fall of Corfu, was against the Sclavonian princes who ruled in Servia and Dalmatia, whom
the Byzantine emperors always affected to consider as vassals, and who had been
really dependent on the empire as long as the state of the roads enabled the
population of these mountainous districts to transport their produce with
profit to the markets of the populous cities in Macedonia and Thrace. But the
decay of communications by land had depopulated and barbarized the mountain
districts, while the inhabitants of the sea-coast began to be more closely
connected with Italy, by their commercial interests, than with the Byzantine
Empire. During the Sicilian war, the Prince of Servia had leagued himself with
Roger; Manuel now marched into his country in order to punish him. The
Hungarians sent a powerful army to his assistance, and the united forces encountered
the emperor on the banks of the Drin, not far from its junction with the Save.
Manuel led his own troops to the attack, and behaved in the battle rather as a
valiant knight than as a prudent general. At the head of his noble guard, he
charged Bachin, the Servian archzupan,
with his lance; but the Servian general was a man of immense size, and his
heavy armour turned aside the imperial lance. Bachin rushed at Manuel with his drawn sword, and cut away the linked veil that hung
before the emperor’s face as a visor. The broken clasps wounded Manuel’s cheek,
yet he instantly closed with his antagonist, and, seizing him by the sword arm,
secured him as a prisoner. The result of this combat decided the victory in
favour of the imperial troops. Peace followed; for the Servian prince,
abandoning all hope of resistance after the defeat of the archzupan,
swore fidelity to the emperor as a vassal, engaging to furnish a contingent of
two thousand men to the Byzantine army whenever it took the field in Europe,
and five hundred when the Servian auxiliaries were required to pass over into
Asia. This treaty, after subsisting some years, was violated by Primislas, prince of Servia, on which Manuel again invaded
the country, dethroned Primislas, and conferred the
government on his younger brothers Beluses and Deses.
The latter, entering into secret alliances with Frederic Barbarossa and Stephen
III of Hungary, prepared to revolt; but he was arrested by Manuel as a
perfidious vassal, tried, condemned, and imprisoned at Constantinople. His
successor Neeman continued to give the emperor as
much trouble as his predecessors, planning rebellion when an opportunity
presented itself and making the humblest submissions whenever the emperor was
prepared to invade Servia. All the wars which Manuel carried on in Europe were
of secondary importance to his contest with the kings of Hungary, though by
prudence and policy he might easily have avoided the necessity of wasting so
large a portion of the military resources of his empire on this unnecessary and
unprofitable war. His pretext for commencing hostilities was the
circumstance that Geïsa II had afforded
assistance to the Prince of Servia at the battle of the Drin; but the real
cause of his engaging in this ill-judged enterprise was a hope that he should
be able to conquer a part of Hungary, in consequence of the continual disputes
in that country concerning the succession to the crown. Manuel coveted the
possession of the country between the Save and the Danube. This district was the
centre of a rapidly increasing commerce. In order to avoid the oppressive
duties and fiscal severity of the Byzantine government, a very considerable
portion of the trade which had once taken the routes by Cherson and Trebizond
to Constantinople now avoided the empire, and passed along the northern shores
of the Caspian and Black Seas, through the territory of the Patzinaks, until it
reached Zeugmin. The commerce of the Greeks was thus
declining in the north as well as the south. The Patzinaks, Russians, and
Hungarians became their rivals in the carrying trade by land, as the Venetians,
Pisans, and Genoese were by sea; while the Jews and Lombards were beginning to
supplant them as capitalists.
HUNGARIAN WAR. A.D. 1151.
Manuel invaded Hungary in the year 1151, when Geïsa II was carrying on war in Russia. Zeugmin was taken. The emperor abandoned the place to be pillaged by his troops, making
a merit of sparing the lives of the inhabitants. This mode of commencing the
war naturally rendered all the mercantile classes his determined enemies, in a
country where traders were men accustomed to encounter danger, and frequently
possessed both military skill and influence. The Byzantine army, after laying
waste the province between the Save and Danube, crossed the latter river,
stormed several cities, and spread its ravages far and wide. Geïsa, on returning from the war in Russia, found that his
forces were insufficient to encounter Manuel in the field. He therefore
solicited a truce, which the emperor readily granted, that the Byzantine
army might carry off the immense booty it had collected without molestation.
These spoils were exhibited with great triumph at Constantinople. In the
following year Geïsa commenced hostilities by laying
siege to Branisova, the command of which Manuel had
imprudently intrusted to his unprincipled cousin Andronicus, who was suspected
of inviting the Hungarians to recommence the war, hoping that their movement
would aid his own treasonable plots. But the promptitude of the emperor saved Branisova and deranged the projects of Andronicus. In the
following year (1153) peace was concluded with Hungary, which lasted until the
death of Geïsa II in 1161.
On Geïsa’s death, Manuel
made the Hungarian law of succession to the throne a pretext for attacking the
kingdom. As in many of the European monarchies of the time, the brother of the
last monarch was preferred to his son. But Geïsa II
had done everything in his power to change this order of succession in Hungary,
and to secure the succession to his son Stephen III. The great majority of the
Hungarians supported his views and ratified his choice; for they feared lest
the brothers of Geïsa, who had resided long at the
Byzantine court, should sacrifice the independence of Hungary. Manuel, deeming
the time favourable for his own schemes of conquest, supplied Ladislas, the elder of the two brothers of Geïsa II, with liberal aid. Stephen III was driven from the
throne, but Ladislas died after a reign of six
months. Stephen, the youngest brother of Geïsa, who
had married Maria Comnena, the daughter of Isaac, the
emperor’s eldest brother, succeeded Ladislas. The
exactions of Stephen soon rendered his government so unpopular that
the Hungarians took up arms, expelled him from the kingdom, and replaced
his nephew Stephen III on the throne. Manuel sent a Byzantine army into Hungary
to assist the husband of his niece, and the elder Stephen again recovered his
crown; but the Byzantine troops had hardly crossed the Danube on their return
before their royal client was compelled to follow them, and present himself
once more as an exile at the imperial court. Manuel, perceiving that his
endeavours to force a worthless monarch on the Hungarians would only lead to an
interminable war, consented to treat with Stephen III, whom he acknowledged
King of Hungary, on condition that Bela, his younger brother, should be
recognised as heir to the Hungarian crown; Bela engaging to adopt the Greek
church, and marry Maria, the only child of Manuel. A treaty of peace was
concluded on this basis in 1163, and the ceremony of the betrothal of Maria and
Bela (whose name was changed to Alexios by the
Greeks) was performed in the church of Blachern.
Manuel conferred the title of Despot on the Hungarian prince, and looked
forward to the union of Hungary with the Byzantine Empire as an achievement
which would reflect immortal glory on his reign, and raise the Eastern Empire
to the highest degree of power among the states of Europe.
This peace proved of short duration, for Manuel not
only refused to disarm the elder Stephen, but even permitted him to enrol
troops, and invade Hungary from the Byzantine territory. Stephen III, who
justly held the emperor responsible for these hostilities, sequestrated the
appanage of Bela in order to indemnify Hungary for the losses it suffered, and
Manuel recommenced the war. He entered Hungary in person at the head of a large
army, and, bearing down all opposition, marched to Peterwardein;
but as his object was to conciliate the Hungarian people, he, on this occasion,
prevented his troops from plundering, and offered to conclude peace if Stephen
III would restore Bela’s appanage. Stephen III preferred the chance of war, for
he was on the eve of effecting his junction with his ally Uladislas,
king of Bohemia, who had brought a powerful army to his assistance. The
Hungarian and Bohemian armies effected their junction, but Manuel was not
deterred by their numbers from advancing to attack them. He crossed the Danube,
and encamped at Titul on the banks of the Teisse, in front of the two kings. The brilliant appearance
of the Byzantine army after its rapid movements, the order with which it had
marched, the high military reputation of the emperor, the moderation of his
demands, and the justice of the King of Bohemia, prevented a battle. He
persuaded Stephen III to surrender Bela’s appanage, and Manuel immediately
retired. But the emperor, not having engaged to disarm the elder Stephen, still
allowed him to assemble troops within the frontiers of the empire, and make plundering
incursions into Hungary. The King of Hungary, finding that he had been
deceived, reassembled his army, and, laying siege to Zeugmin,
took that important city before it could receive assistance. His uncle Stephen
was taken prisoner soon after, and, falling ill, is reported to have been
murdered by a physician, who was suborned to bleed him with a poisoned lancet.
The capture of Zeugmin enraged Manuel, who now resolved to dethrone Stephen, and place his son-in-law
Bela on the throne. To effect this he formed alliances with the Emperor of
Germany, Frederic Barbarossa, with the Venetians, and with several of the
princes who then governed different parts of Russia. In 1166 he assembled a
powerful army at Sardica, and marched to Zeugmin.
Attacking the place with his ordinary impetuosity, he soon carried it by storm.
The King of Hungary, seeing that he could offer no resistance in the field,
sent an embassy to the emperor to demand peace, offering to cede Zeugmin, Sirmium, and Dalmatia to Manuel. To these offers
Manuel replied by asking the Hungarian envoys, with a sneer, if their king
possessed other cities named Zeugmin and Sirmium, and
a second province called Dalmatia, for his troops were already in possession of
the places usually known by those names. In this campaign, the Byzantine army,
under the immediate command of the emperor, conquered all the country between
the Save and the Danube; while a second army, under the command of John Dukas, subdued all Hungarian Dalmatia, a province which
then contained fifty-seven towns, among which were the cities of Trau, Sebenico, Spalatro, Dioclea, Scardona, Salona, and Ostrourypitza.
Next year (1167) the Byzantine army in Hungary was
commanded through two Byzantine nobles, Gabras and Branas, by whose cowardice it was completely defeated.
(Michael Gabras was the
husband of Eudocia Comnena, the paramour of
Andronicus. The two historians of Manuel’s reign, Cinnamus and Nicetas, both record an anecdote which reveals
the corruption of the Byzantine court. The defeated generals were accused of ruining
the army by their misconduct, before they made the final exhibition of their
cowardice on the field of battle. In spite of former jealousies, they agreed to
stand by one another in their defence. When Gabras was examined by the emperor in council, he referred to Branas as a man who could give disinterested evidence concerning his behaviour as
commander-in-chief. Branas was in consequence brought
before the emperor to be examined; but he requested that Gabras,
as his superior officer, might bear testimony to his conduct, as second in
command, in order that he might speak more freely concerning Gabras. On this appeal, Gabras praised the personal valour of Branas, particularly
in covering the retreat. When he concluded, Branas coolly observed, “I am surprised you know so well what I performed, for I swear
by the head of the emperor, that when I turned myself, I hardly got a glimpse
of you galloping off in the distance”.)
The Hungarian general, Dionysius, was an officer of
great military talent. To repair the losses caused by this disaster, the
emperor took the field in person in 1168; but the state of his health prevented
his accompanying all the movements of the army, the immediate command of which
he intrusted to his nephew, Andronicus Koutostephanos.
The Hungarians had a well-appointed and numerous army under the command of
Dionysius. The Byzantine council of war decided that Koutostephanos should engage the enemy without loss of time; and the emperor, who was
extremely superstitious, was delighted with his decision when he learned that,
just as the council rose, a Hungarian, who was galloping towards the Byzantine
camp, had fallen from his horse. This trifling accident he viewed as a lucky
omen, and Koutostephanos was ordered to hasten
forward. But the astrologers who accompanied the emperor, being anxious to
avoid falling into neglect, assured Manuel that he should himself suffer some
misfortune if the engagement took place next day. Manuel was weak enough to
send a courier to his general at their suggestion, ordering him to suspend the
attack for twenty-four hours. Koutostephanos had
already made his dispositions for battle when the imperial order reached him,
and he thought there would be more danger in withdrawing his troops from their
positions, and passing a whole day inactively, than in despising the
predictions of the astrologers, for he had no confidence in the tactics of the
stars. He knew well that nothing but a complete victory would serve as his
apology for disobeying the imperial order; and as delay seemed to him likely to
diminish his chances, the order was instantly given for attacking the
Hungarians. The battle was long and bloody. Dionysius had drawn up his best
troops in one solid mass, at the head of which he expected to break through the
ranks of the Byzantine army, and then destroy its divisions in detail. He
himself fought beside the national standard of Hungary, which was displayed on
a tall mast fixed in an immense waggon, and elevated high above the
field, that it might serve both as a guide for the attacks and a rallying-point
for the repulses of the Hungarian squadrons. The plan of Dionysius was foiled
by the dispositions of Koutostephanos. The cavalry,
which composed the best part of the Hungarian army, was broken by the Byzantine
horse, and after a desperate struggle driven from the field. The great standard
was taken; Dionysius saved himself with difficulty; two thousand suits of
complete armour were collected from the slain, against which the lances of the
Byzantine cavalry had been shivered in vain, and whose wearers had only
perished when their helmets were crushed by the weight of the terrible
mace-of-arms. Only eight hundred prisoners were taken, for the imperial cavalry
was too much exhausted to continue the pursuit; but these prisoners were the
heaviest-armed and bravest knights in the enemy’s army: among their number were
many of the highest nobility, and five Bans.
This battle, which was fought near Zeugmin,
put an end to the war. Peace was concluded in 1168, Stephen III ceding to the
empire Zeugmin, Sirmium, and Dalmatia, so that Manuel
only gained the same terms after the victory of Koutostephanos which he might have obtained in the year 1166. When Manuel returned to
Constantinople, he made a triumphal entry into the city, riding on horseback,
with Andronicus Koutostephanos by his side. The
imperial cavalcade was preceded by a chariot of silver gilt, drawn by four
white horses, in which a picture of the Virgin Mary was displayed to the
superstitious inhabitants, who considered the protection of the Virgin as a
surer defence for the empire than either a well-disciplined army or a wise
administration. This was Manuel's last triumph, and the battle of Zeugmin was one of the last great victories gained by the
Byzantine arms. The splendour of the Eastern Empire now began to wane, and was
rapidly obscured, never to recover its brightness.
WAR WITH VENICE, A.D. 1171.
Though Manuel had suppressed his anger, and overlooked
at the time the insolence of the Venetians during the siege of Corfu, he never
forgot it; nor was he prudent enough to conceal the jealousy he felt at the
increasing power and wealth of the republic. His ill-will was displayed in
the strictness with which he interpreted every clause of the treaties and
charters conceding to them their commercial privileges and immunities in the
Byzantine Empire. It was natural, therefore, that the conquest of the
southern part of Dalmatia by John Ducas in 1166, and
the negotiations of Manuel with Frederic Barbarossa, should alarm the Venetian
senate, and render war with the Eastern Empire an event which it might soon be
impossible to avoid. In this state of feeling, Manuel availed himself of
some tumults between the Venetians and Lombards settled at Constantinople to
impose new restrictions on the Venetians. Ever since the time of Alexius I
the Venetians had possessed a street or quarter of their own, where their
warehouses were situated. This quarter possessed its own quay,
and enjoyed the privileges of a free port. All Venetian subjects were
bound to reside within its limits, and justice was there administered, in the
differences of Venetian subjects, according to the laws of Venice. But the
numbers of the Venetians established in the empire soon increased, and many
resided beyond the limits of the privileged quarter. Their wealth and character
obtained for them matrimonial alliances with many respectable native families.
It seems, at first sight, a strange fact that so many of the foreign races
which took up their residence within the limits of the Byzantine empire should
have increased more rapidly than the Greeks, and that relic of the Roman
conquerors which still formed the dominant portion of Byzantine society; but a
little attention to the history of the empire reveals the fact that fiscal
oppression deprived the natives of all hope of bettering their condition, and
compelled them to rest contented if they could preserve the possessions they
had inherited from their ancestors unimpaired, while among the higher ranks
social corruption and pride of caste prevented all increase of numbers. On the
other hand, the condition of foreign settlers, and particularly of the
Venetians, was very different: they escaped the worst effects of imperial
rapacity, and their social manners still rendered a numerous family a greater
enjoyment, and a surer means of obtaining consideration in the decline of life,
than a large house and a gallery of pictures and statues. But though the moral
and political state of Venetian society was superior to that of Greek, it had
also great defects. The spirit of personal independence, which gave strength
and dignity to the republic, too often degenerated in the individual Venetian
into disorderly conduct and insolence to others. They frequently raised tumults
in the streets of Constantinople, and set the imperial officers and the laws of
the empire at defiance.
Manuel determined to make the great party-quarrel of
the Venetians and Lombards the pretext for increasing his power over the
Venetians settled in his empire. Every Venetian was ordered to reside within
the quarter set apart for their habitation; all who continued to dwell without
those limits were commanded to take the oath of allegiance as subjects of the
emperor, in order to secure for themselves and their property the protection of
the Byzantine laws. Many Venetians complied with this ordinance rather than
sacrifice the landed property they possessed; but they could not so readily lay
aside their disorderly habits, and forget their party contests. The Venetians
repeated their attacks on the Lombards, overpowered their opponents, and
plundered their warehouses. The Emperor Manuel was justly enraged at the
insolent contempt shown for his authority in his own capital. To avenge the
injured laws of his empire, and, as was generally thought, to gratify at the
same time his own avarice, he ordered all the Venetians in his dominions to be
arrested, and their property to be sequestrated, (A.D. 1171.)
The government of Venice regarded the emperors conduct
in this affair as a direct violation of their treaty; they held that he was
only authorized to arrest those who had taken part in the tumult, and that any
claim for pecuniary indemnification ought to have been addressed to the
Venetian senate, whose refusal to pay the demand could alone authorize the
sequestration of private property. The republic, therefore, fitted out a fleet
to exact reparation from Manuel; and in the spring of 1172 the Doge Vital Michieli II sailed with one hundred galleys and twenty
carracks to attack the recent conquests of John Dukas in Dalmatia. Trau and Kagusa were besieged and taken, and the Byzantine forces were soon expelled from all
Dalmatia. The doge then sailed to the Archipelago, where, however, he was not
so fortunate as he had been in the Adriatic. After losing some time in a vain
attempt to render himself master of Chalcis in Euboea, he took possession of
the island of Chios, where he passed the winter. The Greeks everywhere showed
the greatest animosity to the Venetians, whose commercial immunities had robbed
them of a considerable portion of their trade, a. d. and the doge became
sensible that he had no chance of making any permanent conquest in the Aegean.
The merchants of Venice already felt the loss of their commerce with Constantinople,
and the senate began to fear lest the privileges which the Venetians had
previously enjoyed should be conferred on the Pisans or the Genoese. An embassy
was dispatched to solicit peace with the Byzantine Empire, but the terms
offered were rejected by Manuel.
In the meantime a dreadful pestilence broke out in the
Venetian fleet at Chios; while the imperial fleet, which had been almost
entirely destroyed in an unsuccessful invasion of Egypt during the year 1170,
was again ready for sea. In the spring of 1173, one hundred and fifty Byzantine
galleys issued from the Hellespont to attack the Venetians. The republican
force was so enfeebled by the ravages of the plague that the doge abandoned
Chios on the approach of the enemy, and retired successively to Lesbos, Lemnos,
and Skyros, gradually abandoning numbers of his ships, as the crews were
thinned by disease. At last he quitted the Archipelago altogether, and returned
to Venice with seventeen ships; the rest had either been abandoned from want of
hands to navigate them, or they had been captured by the Greeks.
Before quitting the Grecian seas the doge sent a
second embassy to the Emperor Manuel. One of the ambassadors was Henry Dandolo,
a man whose name will live for ever in the annals of the Byzantine Empire and
in the history of the Greek race. Thirty years after this he again visited
Constantinople, and was the principal agent in destroying the Eastern Empire
and enslaving the Greek people. The propositions of the doge were again
rejected, and the ambassadors had perhaps reason to complain of the rudeness of
their reception. The Doge Vital Michieli was held to
be responsible for misfortunes he could not prevent, and the Venetians, being
as ungovernable in their passions at home as abroad, assassinated him in a
public assembly. The social condition of the republic evidently called for
reform. It was universally admitted that there was a necessity for adding to
the vigour of the law. The ruling men in the senate made this necessity a
pretext for changing the old aristocratic democracy into an administrative
oligarchy.
To revenge themselves for their losses in the East the
Venetians resolved to destroy the city of Ancona, which was their rival in the
trade of the Adriatic, and might, through the protection of the Emperor of
Constantinople, supplant them in their commerce with the East. The Emperor
Frederic Barbarossa, who was anxious to gain possession of Ancona for himself,
joined the republic; and while the Venetian fleet blockaded the port, a German army
besieged the city by land. The inhabitants defended themselves most valiantly,
and all the attacks of the besiegers were repulsed; but towards the end of
autumn their provisions failed, and hunger compelled to demand a
capitulation. The Archbishop of Mayence,
who commanded the German army, insisted that they should surrender at
discretion, when the people of Ancona, who hesitated to accept such hard terms,
were saved from the dangerous experiment of trusting to the mercy of the
warlike ecclesiastic by the patriotism of an Italian lady and of a wealthy
citizen of Ferrara. An Italian army, levied by their exertions, advanced to
Ancona and defeated the Germans. The ships in the port, elated with the victory
of their allies, sailed out, and by their sudden attack threw the Venetians
into confusion, so that the siege and blockade were both raised. William Adelard, the patriotic citizen of Ferrara, carried the news
of this success to the Emperor Manuel, who received him with honour. The
expenses of the Italian army were repaid, rich presents were sent to the noble
Italian lady, whose name the Greek historian refuses to record, but which from
other sources we learn was Aldruda, countess of Bertinoro.
The repeated losses which the Venetians had sustained
disposed them to seek peace with the Byzantine Empire on the best terms they
could procure, while Manuel was equally desirous to terminate his unprofitable
contest with the republic, in order to devote all his forces to arrest the
progress of the Turks, who were daily increasing their power in Asia Minor. A
treaty of peace was concluded about the end of the year 1174, which restored
the Venetians to the position they occupied in 1171, before the war broke out.
Their ancient privileges were confirmed, and Manuel engaged to pay fifteen
hundred pounds’ weight of gold in a fixed number of instalments as an indemnity
for the property of the Venetian merchants which had been confiscated.
WAR WITH ANTIOCH AND ARMENIAN CILICIA.
The Asiatic wars of Manuel were generally commenced
and conducted with the same indifference to the dictates of sound policy and
the real interest of his empire as the European. Instead of forming a firm
alliance with the Armenian sovereigns of Cilicia and the Frank princes of
Antioch, and directing the united forces of the confederacy to break the
power of the sultans of Iconium, and to expel the Turks from Phrygia and
Bithynia, the emperor wasted the resources of the Christians and aided the
growth of the Turkish power by his repeated attacks on Cilicia and Antioch, and
his constant endeavours to force their princes to acknowledge a temporary
vassalage to the Byzantine crown. Success unfortunately favoured his arms in
the projects least conducive to his interests. Raymond of Poitiers, prince of
Antioch, was defeated, and compelled to own himself a vassal of the imperial
throne, as he had done during the life of the Emperor John. This was Manuel's
first warlike exploit as emperor, and it took place in the year 1144, during
the summer which preceded the conquest of the Christian principality of Edessa
by Zengui. Raymond perished in a battle with Noureddin, sultan of Aleppo, in 1149. Reynold of Chatillon
married Constance of Antioch, his widow, and conducted the government of the
principality more like a leader of robbers than a civilized prince. He renewed
the war with Manuel by invading Cyprus, which he plundered in the most
barbarous manner. Manuel, however, could not find time to punish Reynold until
the year 1155, but he then imposed on him the deepest humiliation. The emperor
advanced to Mopsuestia with an army which Reynold was
unable to resist. The Patriarch of Antioch, who had been grossly insulted by
the Frank prince, would have either admitted the Byzantine troops into the city
or betrayed Reynold into the emperor's hands, had Manuel not been more desirous
to chastise his enemy than to occupy his principality. The Prince of Antioch
was also in reality only the regent of his wife’s dominions. He was allowed to
retain his authority on presenting himself at the emperor's court in Mopsuestia with a rope round his neck, after marching
barefooted and bareheaded through the streets to the imperial residence. When
he entered the emperor's presence he fell on his knees, and implored mercy with
uplifted hands. After long solicitation he received his pardon, on binding
himself to furnish a contingent of troops to the Byzantine armies, and engaging
to treat the Greek patriarch with the respect due to his rank in the Orthodox
Church, and to furnish him with an official residence within the walls of
Antioch, (A.D. 1155.)
Armenian Cilicia was at this time governed by Thoros, an able prince and gallant soldier, whose position
exposed him to be attacked on every side. The Byzantine emperors regarded the
Armenian principality as a portion of their dominions; and the prosperity it
enjoyed, from being usually governed in a less oppressive manner than the
provinces of the empire, excited their rapacity. The Byzantine emperors, the
sultans of Iconium, and the princes of Antioch, were all eager to make
conquests from the Armenians, so that Thoros was
compelled either to fight with these powerful neighbours or form alliances with
one against the others as circumstances dictated. Manuel had twice
entrusted his cousin Andronicus with the command of armies destined to subdue Thoros, but the folly and rashness of that debauched prince
led to their complete defeat, AD 1145 and 1152. At length, in the year 1155,
Manuel led an army in person through the denies of Mount Taurus, and compelled Thoros to become his vassal and receive the investiture of
his dominions by a golden bull, with the title of Pansevastos,
to mark his subjection.
While Manuel remained at Mopsuestia,
his court was visited by Baldwin III, king of Jerusalem, (who subsequently
married his niece Theodora), by Reynold of Antioch—in a very humble manner, as
we have already narrated—and by Thoros, the sovereign
of Armenian Cilicia. All were solicitous of gaining the emperor’s favour, but
Manuel derived little advantage either from his own brilliant military exploits
or from the public submission of these proud and warlike princes. He had,
nevertheless, the gratification of making a triumphal entry into Antioch in the
midst of his Varangian guard—a pageant which greatly flattered his pride,
because it appeared to elevate his power above that of his father. He had also
the pleasure of exhibiting his skill in all the exercises of chivalry at a
grand tournament, where he unhorsed every antagonist, and left the Frank
knights amazed at his skill, strength, and daring. Even Noureddin,
the Sultan of Aleppo, who was as politic as he was valiant, sought to avoid war
with so powerful an enemy, and purchased peace by releasing Bertrand, the Grand
Master of the Templars, with six thousand French and German prisoners, the
remains of the armies of Louis VII and Conrad III, who were languishing in
hopeless slavery. Manuel returned to Constantinople covered with personal
renown.
In 1161 Manuel married the beautiful Maria, daughter
of Raymond of Poitiers and Constance princess of Antioch. Raymond, count of
Tripoli, who had been led to believe that the emperor was on the eve of
espousing his sister Melisenda, considered this
marriage to be an insult which he was bound to avenge. In order to obtain what
was held to be honourable satisfaction, he sent the twelve galleys he had
prepared to conduct his sister to Constantinople to plunder the islands of the
Archipelago. The Saracen pirates never committed greater cruelties than the
Christians in Raymond’s ships. They spared neither age nor sex; monasteries and
churches were pillaged, towns and villages were burned to the ground, and no
inconsiderable portion of the inhabitants in many islands were exterminated.
Yet Manuel was so occupied with his marriage festivities that he paid no
attention to the sufferings of his subjects; and when the Byzantine fleet
had chased the galleys of Raymond out of the Grecian seas, their ravages were
forgotten by the government.
The lavish and wasteful administration of Manuel
caused him to adopt many ill-judged schemes for recruiting his finances. Before
his unjust sequestration of the property of the Venetian merchants, he had
expected to fill his exhausted treasury by the spoils of Egypt. After the
termination of the Hungarian war, he joined Amaury I, king of Jerusalem, in a
project for the subjugation of Egypt, which was then in a state of anarchy. An
imperial fleet, consisting of one hundred and fifty galleys, sixty cavalry
transports, in which a well-appointed army was embarked, attended by ten dromons laden with provisions and engines of war, sailed
for Egypt under the command of Andronicus Koutostephanos.
Ten galleys of this fleet were fitted out by the city of Dyrrachium, and six by
the island of Euboea; for Manuel had not yet confiscated the municipal revenues
of the commercial cities in the empire to fill the central treasury at
Constantinople, and be wasted on the pageantry of the imperial court. When
Amaury beheld the strength of the Byzantine expedition, his avarice induced him
to delay his own preparations, and it was near the end of October 1170 before
he joined Koutostephanos under the walls of Damietta.
The Byzantine general pushed the siege with vigour, and conducted himself in a
manner worthy of the victor of Zeugmin; but the
Franks of Jerusalem afforded him little assistance, and after remaining before
the place fifty days, provisions began to fail, and Koutostephanos was compelled to conclude a truce with the Egyptians, in order to retire with
his army by land into Syria. The fleet, on its return, was dispersed by a
succession of storms, and few of the ships reached Constantinople in safety.
Amaury had thwarted, and perhaps betrayed, the Egyptian expedition; but next
year (1171) he was so alarmed at the progress of Saladin that he visited
Constantinople to solicit assistance from Manuel. He was treated by the emperor
with great magnificence; and during the three months he remained, as much money
was spent in pageants, festivals, and tournaments, as would have raised a
powerful army. Manuel seized any pretext for magnificent display; but the
disasters of the Byzantine forces before Damietta deprived him of the wish, and
weakened his power, to afford the King of Jerusalem any effective assistance.
WAR WITH THE SULTAN OF ICONIUM.
We must now review Manuel’s conduct and policy in his
relations with the Seljouk Turks, who possessed the greater part of Asia Minor,
and counted a numerous population of Greek Christians among their subjects. The
Sultan of Iconium was the nearest and most dangerous enemy of the Byzantine
Empire. Prudence required Manuel to devote his unwearied attention to oppose
the progress of a power hostile to the civilization and the laws of the
Christians, as well as to their political government. The emperor had seen that
his father, even towards the end of his reign, after he had gained many
victories over the Turks, was compelled to struggle hard to prevent their
establishing themselves on the banks of the Rhyndacus,
and had great difficulty in driving them from the plains of Bithynia. At the
commencement of his own reign, Manuel appears, indeed, to have been fully
persuaded of the necessity of circumscribing the Turkish dominions; and after
he had arranged his differences with Raymond of Antioch, he led the
well-disciplined army he had inherited from his father against the Sultan of
Iconium. The Turkish troops were defeated whenever they could be brought to
risk an engagement; yet, in this campaign of 1145, the Byzantine army was
unable to advance beyond Philomelium, and in the
following year it only reached the shores of the lake Pasgusa,
which his father had depopulated. Manuel was, nevertheless, preparing an army
to besiege Iconium, when the expedition of Roger of Sicily against Greece, and
the movements of the leaders of the second crusade, compelled him to
concentrate his best troops for the defence of Constantinople. He therefore
concluded a treaty of peace with Massoud, the Sultan
of Iconium, a measure of common prudence, which the Crusaders regarded as an
act of signal treachery to the Christian cause. This peace endured without
interruption until the death of Sultan Massoud
Had Manuel been able to appreciate the full extent of
the alarming changes which were going on during his reign in the social
condition of the various races that peopled his empire, he must have been
struck with the necessity of making great exertions to increase the resources,
the numbers, and the strength of the Greek population in the provinces nearest
to the Turks; but no measures having this object in view are noticed by the
historians of his reign. It appears, therefore, that neither the emperor nor
his ministers attached sufficient importance to the decline which was taking
place in the numbers of the Christian population of the Byzantine provinces in
Asia Minor, while, perhaps, they neglected to contrast it with the steady
increase of the Mohammedan population in the dominions of the Sultan of
Iconium. The corruption of Byzantine society was certainly not entirely
unobserved by Manuel; but his education taught him to believe that
ecclesiastical formulas and strict orthodoxy were sufficient to cure every
evil. The church, however, proved as ineffectual to oppose the progress of
Mohammedanism, under the Seljouks, as it had proved
in earlier times to arrest its advance under the Saracens; while, on the other
hand, Manuel and his contemporaries were destitute of the enlightened views and
the freedom from orthodox prejudices which had rendered Leo the Isaurian and
his Iconoclast supporters capable of infusing new vigour into society by an
equitable administration of the law. An increase of the Greek population in the
Asiatic provinces could alone have enabled the Byzantine government to resist
the progress of the Turks; but to produce this increase, a great change would
have been required both in the conduct of the administration and the condition
of the people. Manuel must have diminished the expenses of his court, lightened
the weight of taxation, improved the civil and judicial administration,
enlarged the sphere of municipal activity, and facilitated the means of
intercourse by land and sea; while the Greek people must have adopted habits of
industry, self-reliance, and truth, from which they had been long weaned by the
fiscal oppression of their masters; and they must have learned to regard the
commandments of God as more binding than the superstitions, traditions, or
canons of the church.
The Sultan Massoud, at his
death, divided his dominions among his children, and his eldest son, Kilidy-Arslan II, succeeded to the sovereignty of Iconium.
As Manuel was marching carelessly through the Turkish territory on his return
from Antioch in the early part of the year 1157, his troops were attacked by
the Turks. The war was renewed; but the new sultan, finding himself too weak to
encounter the Byzantine army in the field, endeavoured to avert hostilities
with the Christians until he had regained possession of the territories ceded
to his brothers. Manuel, having induced many of the bands of Crusaders, who
were in the habit of touching at Rhodes on their passage to Palestine, to join
his army by the high pay he offered, collected an immense number of chariots
and oxen in the Thrakesian theme to transport his military stores, and
threatened to attack Iconium. Kilidy-Arslan, however,
succeeded in averting the attack by consenting to surrender every place the
Turks had occupied since the death of John II, by engaging to maintain an
auxiliary corps of Turkish cavalry in the emperor’s service, and by
promising to prevent any hostile inroads of the nomadic Turkmans into the
Byzantine territory. These conditions prove that the Greeks had been
losing ground during the reign of Manuel; and that, in spite of the great force
he had assembled for the conquest of Iconium, he felt the difficulty of
retaining possession of that city, even if he succeeded in taking it. Shortly
after the conclusion of this treaty, Kilidy-Arslan
visited Constantinople, where he was received with great pomp. This visit had a
bad effect on the fortunes of the empire. Manuel despised the sultan on account
of his mean appearance and submissive behaviour; while the astute Mussulman,
who concealed his envious and daring character, perceived many of the weak
points of the Byzantine power, and became eager to acquire a share of the
wealth which he saw so ill defended.
The peace between the emperor and the sultan was in
reality only a truce, during which both parties were ready to avail themselves
of any opportunity of renewing the war with advantage. Both sovereigns found
themselves ready for action about the same time. Kilidy-Arslan,
having subdued all his brothers, reunited all the central provinces of Asia
Minor under his dominion. Manuel, who had seen all his schemes of distant
conquest, and all his labour for the acquisition of military glory prove
delusive, now, when it was already too late, turned his attention to what ought
to have been his first military duty as Emperor of Constantinople. He resolved
to devote all his energies to driving back the tide of Turkish emigration. For
this purpose he repeopled and fortified Dorylaeum,
and a place at the most distant sources of the Maeander called Subleon. The sultan complained of the construction of these
works as an infringement of the treaty; for both Dorylaeum and Subleon were situated in the midst of districts
occupied by Turkish settlers. Manuel, however, whose object was to stop the
constant encroachments of the Turkish nomads, persisted in completing these
fortresses as the only means of expelling the Turks from the country round.
The war recommenced in the year 1176. The sultan had
obtained large reinforcements from the Turks of Mesopotamia, who were
accustomed to engage the chivalry of Europe on the plains of Syria, where they
had begun to show themselves superior to the Franks. The emperor, besides
assembling all his veterans from the frontiers of Hungary, enrolled new corps
of Franks and Patzinaks. He collected large supplies of cattle for provisioning
the army, and prepared a train of three thousand waggons for the transport of
the stores and military engines necessary for the siege of Iconium. In the
month of September, the army advanced, under the immediate command of Manuel,
by Laodicea to Chonae (then a large and populous
town), the birthplace of the historian Nicetas, who
has left us a minute account of the events that followed. The emperor advanced,
occupying Lampe Celaense, to Choma,
and to a ruined fortress called Myriokephalon, which
has become memorable by the total defeat of the Byzantine army. At this place
Manuel received an embassy from Kilidy-Arslan,
offering to conclude peace on the conditions of their former treaty; but the
emperor replied that he would give an answer at Iconium, and immediately
marched forward from Myriokephalon into the pass of Tzyvritze. The Turks had already begun to hang about the
army, carrying away all the forage, and destroying the wells and springs, so
that fatigue and bad water had already spread disease among the Christians.
Everything indicated the necessity of marching with
caution; and the fate of the armies of Conrad of Germany and Louis of France
ought to have served as an additional warning to Manuel Yet Manuel pushed
forward without adopting the commonest precautions. Without sending forward his
cavalry to clear the defiles and protect his flanks, he entered the valley of Tzyvritze, a long pass, over the southern side of which the
mountains protrude in bold precipitous rocks, while to the north the hills
which bound it open into several wide ravines. Into this dangerous defile the
Byzantine army plunged with such carelessness that its different divisions were
ten miles apart, separated by the long trains of waggons and cattle which
accompanied their march. The Turks, who watched all the movements of the
Christians from their ambuscades, began the attack as soon as the baggage
reached the middle of the pass. The front and rear of the Byzantine army were
assailed at the same time; but the advanced guard, driving back the Turkish
cavalry that attempted to dispute their passage, secured the command of the
summits which overlooked the exit, and formed a camp. In the meantime, other
corps of Infidels had issued from concealment, and manned the summits on the
southern side of the valley wherever the road compelled the Christians to
approach the rocks. The right wing of the Byzantine army, commanded by Baldwin,
the brother of the empress, was attacked in unfavourable ground, where it was
cut off from the rest of the army by the long train of baggage-waggons, and,
unable either to draw out its ranks to retreat or to receive any assistance, it
was overwhelmed by the Turks, who descended from the heights: Baldwin and the
bravest officers were slain, and the whole corps destroyed. Encouraged by this
success, the victorious Turks seized the baggage-waggons, and employed them to
close up the road, while they opened a communication with their countrymen
placed in ambuscade among the ravines on the north side of the valley. The
Turks then attacked the central division of the army, where the emperor
commanded in person, surrounded by the imperial guard. The officers in vain
attempted to form their troops, for they could find no space to charge the
enemy. The narrow valley was blocked up by the sudden stoppage of the line of
march. Waggons, cattle, cavalry, and infantry were soon crowded together in
the wildest confusion. The heavy-armed Byzantine lancers, which in an open
field could have swept the Turkish hordes before them, stood useless amidst the
overturned carriages and slaughtered oxen. The rear was now vigorously
assailed, and fresh squadrons of the Mohammedans issued from the branches of
the great valley to attack the flanks. Defence and flight were equally
hopeless; the slaughter was immense, and the emperor, perplexed by the extent
of the calamity, ceased to give any farther orders, but fought to deliver
himself with his own sword like a common soldier. Some faithful followers kept
close to him, and at last, by a desperate charge, he opened a passage through
the enemy, and escaped with a few attendants. He had been recognised by the
Turks, who eagerly sought to make him prisoner, and his armour was deeply
stained with blood, and bore the mark of many a blow, before he gained the camp
of his advanced guard at the issue of the defile.
When Manuel’s bodily exertions ceased, his mental
sufferings commenced. On calling for a drink of water, he could only obtain it
from the stream in the valley, which was stained with blood: he turned away with
loathing, and as he poured it on the ground, exclaimed, “This is horrible! it
is the blood of Christians”; but an officer standing near, to whom the recent
disaster seemed a natural consequence of the emperor's inconsiderate rashness,
coolly observed, “Never mind, O emperor! you have often drained Christian blood
while you were expending the treasures extorted from your subjects”. Shortly
after, a party of mules, laden with treasure, was overtaken by the Turks within
sight of the camp; and as the Infidels deliberately cut open the money-bags,
and began to divide the spoil, Manuel called to the troops to sally out and
divide the treasure among themselves. But he was again rebuked for thus
endangering the safety of his remaining soldiers. The same officer rudely
exclaimed, “Your majesty would have done well to leave this treasure in the
possession of your subjects; but it is better the Turks should now carry it off
and retire with it, than that it should be recovered by the blood of your
surviving troops, merely to excite them to assail us with greater vigour”. The
emperor felt the justice of the rebuke, and the Turks carried off the treasure.
The rear of the army was commanded by Andronicus Koutostephanos, and that experienced general, with a small
body of men whom he had rallied round him, succeeded, by a well-combined series
of attacks on the Turks, in forcing his way through the whole length
of the valley, and reached the camp of the advanced guard in the
evening. His success afforded the strongest proof that the terrible disaster of
the army was caused by the incapacity of Manuel as a general, rather than by
the superior tactics of the Turkish force, or the insuperable difficulties of
the ground. The conduct of Manuel, after the defeat, was as disgraceful as his
military ignorance during the battle. He proposed to save his own person by
flight, leaving the generals to conduct the retreat of the remains of his army
as they should think fit. But Koutostephanos boldly
opposed this arrangement, which had probably been suggested by some of the
courtiers who would have accompanied the emperor, and who therefore persuaded
Manuel that it was his duty to preserve the person of a Roman emperor from
death or captivity at any sacrifice. There was as much sound policy as
cowardice in the advice, for as Manuel had only an infant son, the danger of
anarchy in the empire would have been great had he fallen. But it was now too
late to make such reflections, and the remonstrances of Koutostephanos,
who pointed out that the emperor's departure would cause the immediate
dissolution of the army, and allow the Turks to advance to the shores of the
Bosphorus without opposition, induced Manuel to abandon his disgraceful
project.
The condition of the Byzantine troops proved to be much
better than it appeared at the moment of the defeat. A considerable army of
veterans had reached the camp in safety, and though they were far inferior in
numbers to the Turkish squadrons that surrounded them, they felt themselves
still superior to their enemy in a fair field of battle. They were no longer
encumbered with a train of baggage to impede their movements, and they were
consequently enabled to choose their point of attack. On the other hand, the
Turkish army was disorganized by its victory, which had put the auxiliaries and
nomad tribes in possession of so much booty that they were too much occupied in
securing their own gains to pay attention to the Byzantine army. The wary
sultan, who saw the numbers of his troops rapidly decreasing, determined to
treat of peace with the emperor while his enemies were still under the
influence of the panic caused by their disaster. On the day after the battle he
sent an envoy to the imperial camp, and Manuel readily agreed to all the terms
proposed by Kilidy-Arslan. He engaged to destroy the
fortifications he had recently erected at Dorylaeum and Subleon, and to cede to the Turks all the country
they had colonized during his reign. The Byzantine army then commenced its
retreat, but many independent bands of Turkomans hung on its flanks, and
molested it by desultory attacks. The first day’s march led the army over the
field of slaughter, where the extent of Manuel's folly was forced on his
attention by the most revolting aspect of heaps of unburied bodies. The surviving
troops were soon placed in good quarters at Chonae and Philadelphia. Subleon, which was in the
neighbourhood, was immediately dismantled and abandoned; but in a short time
the emperor gained sufficient courage to act a dishonourable part and violate the
engagements he had entered into to save himself and his army. He refused to
destroy the fortifications of Dorylaeum. This caused
the renewal of the war.
The sultan opened the campaign of 1177 by sending an
army of twenty-four thousand men into the Byzantine territory, with orders to
lay waste the country as far as the sea, and bring back from the coast some
salt-water, some sea-sand, and the oars of an imperial galley. This army spread
over the rich valley of the Meander, gained possession of Tralles and Antiocheia by capitulation, took Louma and Pentecheira by storm,
and laid waste the country to the sea-shore. But as it was returning, laden
with other booty besides the saltwater, the sea-sand, and the oars which the
sultan was so anxious to see, it was attacked on the banks of the Maeander by
John Vatatzes, and completely defeated. This victory restored the character and
courage of the Byzantine troops.
The last military exploit of Manuel was a rapid march
to relieve Claudiopolis, which was closely besieged
by another Turkish army. His approach caused the enemy to raise the siege. Both
the emperor and sultan being now satisfied that they were wasting the resources
of their dominions in unprofitable hostilities, they entered into negotiations
which soon led to the conclusion of peace.
The mind of Manuel never recovered from the shock his
pride had received at the battle of Myriokephalon.
The wounds and bruises appeared to affect his body in a very trifling degree,
but he became melancholy, and his health gradually declined. His family affairs
now forced themselves on his attention, and he was surprised to find that he
had allowed his beautiful daughter Maria to attain the age of thirty without
celebrating her marriage, though she had been betrothed to Bela III king of
Hungary, and asked in marriage by the Emperor Frederic Barbarossa as a wife for
his son Henry. In the month of March 1078, her marriage was celebrated with
Rayner, son of the Marquess of Montferrat, a youth only seventeen years old;
and at the same time Alexius, the emperor’s son by Mary of Antioch, who was in
his eleventh year, was married to Agnes, daughter of Louis VII of France, who
was only seven years old. Alexius and Agnes received the imperial crown, and
were proclaimed emperor and empress.
Manuel displayed during his last illness all the
deficiencies of an ill-regulated and undisciplined mind. Though confident in
his faith and orthodoxy, he placed great dependence on the predictions of
astrologers, and while his strength was rapidly declining he allowed these
impostors to persuade him that the stars announced that he should still reign
with glory for fourteen years. But in the month of September he became suddenly
aware that his end was near: feeling his own pulse, he sighed deeply, struck
his thigh with his hand, and ordered his attendants to bring him instantly the
habit of a monk. In a few minutes he was divested of the imperial robes,
and clad in a monachal garb which proved much too short for his tall figure. He
expired, on the 24th of September 1180, at the age of fifty-eight, after a
reign of thirty-seven years, and with him the power and glory of the Byzantine
Empire perished. No sovereign of the Eastern Empire had possessed more absolute
power. His reign was undisturbed by rebellion, and the circumstances of the age
allowed the greatest latitude for social and political reforms. Men’s minds
were in a state of fermentation in Western Europe; and though Roman political
self-sufficiency and Greek ecclesiastical orthodoxy kept the population of the
Eastern Empire in a comparatively torpid state, the necessity of making some
great changes to prevent the decline of society was generally felt. Yet, while
the Latin Christians were actively advancing in their progressive improvements,
the Greeks remained stationary and conservative. In the West, the Crusades
produced a revolution in ideas as well as in property. The popes made a bold
attempt to constitute themselves the centre of all dominion in Europe, under
the pretext of restraining the tyranny of kings. Liberty, not yet
trammelled by the prejudices of Roman law nor overpowered by the authority of
despotic centralization, made a noble effort in the north of Italy to unite
municipal independence with political order. There can, therefore, be no
doubt that, if the Emperor Manuel had possessed a mind capable of understanding
the events which were passing before his eyes, without allowing his judgment to
be obscured by traditions founded on social contingencies that no longer
existed, he might have reformed the administration and laws of his empire, and
laid the foundation of social improvements sufficiently extensive to have
awakened the Greeks from the civil and ecclesiastical torpor into which their
minds had fallen. By vigorous reforms, such as Leo III had adopted at the
commencement of the eighth century, Manuel could, in all probability, have
restored vital power to the Byzantine Empire, but he clung with conservative
prejudices to a political and ecclesiastical order of things from which the
life had departed. The consequence was that the crisis during which reform
was practicable passed away, and the empire putrefied into a mass of political
corruption.
Sect. IV
Reigns of Alexius II and Andronicus I,
A.D. 1180-1185
The latter years of Manuel’s life effaced the lessons
of prudence inculcated by his father. Following the guidance of his passions
instead of his judgment, he had selected subservient courtiers to act as his
ministers of state, so that, on his deathbed, it was not in his power to place
his son under the guardianship of an independent-minded counsellor like his
father’s friend Axouchos. As soon as Manuel was dead,
every member of the imperial family, which was very numerous, aspired at the
office of prime-minister; the court was thrown into a state of revolution, and
the administration became a scene of anarchy. Unfortunately, no individual, who
from his rank could pretend to the regency during the minority of Alexius II,
possessed that moral rectitude of character which commands universal respect.
Everyone knew that his rivals were as worthless as himself. All history
testifies the importance of moral character in political contests; yet, strange
to say, politicians and statesmen appear rarely to have fully appreciated its practical
value.
Alexius was only thirteen years old at his father's
death. His education was from that moment utterly neglected. His mother, Maria
of Antioch, in the first paroxysms of her grief was so alarmed at her
unprotected position, amidst an unprincipled nobility, that she retired into a
monastery, and took the name of Xene. Alexius
Comnenus, a grandson of the Emperor John II, who held the rank of protosevastos, secured to himself the office of
prime-minister; and in order to strengthen his influence he persuaded the
empress to quit her retirement and appear again at court, where her
beauty, gaiety of heart, and sweetness of manner, gave her considerable power
over the young nobility. Her steady support of the protosevastos,
whose arrogance rendered him extremely unpopular, exposed Maria to many
calumnies; and in spite of his age, personal defects, and disgusting
effeminacy, it was generally believed that a criminal attachment induced her to
maintain him in office. We must call to mind the prevalence of calumny in
Byzantine history, the proneness of courtiers to employ calumny as an efficient
weapon in their party contests, the readiness of the Greeks to hate Maria for
her Latin descent, and the universal disposition of the people in a despotic
government to speak evil of their superiors, before we admit the corruption
that reigned in the court of Constantinople as a presumption of Maria’s
immorality.
Though the protosevastos held the reins of government, he was unable to repress the seditious movements
of the aristocracy: some nobles intrigued to drive him from his post; others
threatened to oppose him unless he silenced their opposition by bestowing on
them high rank and lucrative offices. The citizens of Constantinople, being
without a political organization that entitled them to declare their opinions
in public, were a mere mob, led away by every prejudice and rumour of the
moment. The lowest of the population, consisting of men collected from every
province of the empire, and every trading city of the East, were always eager
for sedition as a means of pillage. Such a society, vibrating between
servility and rebellion, and guided by personal ambition and individual
avarice, was utterly deaf to the voice of patriotism.
For about a year and a half the young emperor was
allowed to amuse himself with hunting and gambling, while the whole court was
occupied with plots and party intrigues. At last the Princess Maria, the
emperor's sister, thought the moment favourable for driving the protosevastos from power by a popular sedition. But Alexius
had taken care to secure the support of the numerous corps of foreign
mercenaries in the capital; and Maria was compelled to retreat, with her young
husband, the Caesar, and her armed partisans, into the precincts of St
Sophia’s. Many, however, rallied to her standard, and a bloody battle was
fought in the streets of Constantinople. The protosevastos feared to pursue the sister of his sovereign to extremity; and the Patriarch
effected a compromise between the hostile parties, leaving matters as they
were before the insurrection. This state of things could not continue long, and
a darker storm was now gathering. All the discontented turned their eyes
towards Andronicus, the adventurous and unprincipled cousin of the Emperor
Manuel, whose strange personal exploits gave him a degree of fame he little
deserved, but whose vices were now forgotten in consequence of his long absence
from court. He had passed the latter years of Manuel's life as an exile in
Paphlagonia; his reputation for courage and ability was great; time was
supposed to have moderated the violence of his passions; and his hypocritical
piety imposed on the superstitious Greeks, who thought that the saints and holy
images he adored could efface, even from his conscience, the black stains of
murder and incest. All ranks concurred in soliciting his presence at
Constantinople; and he soon approached the capital, declaring that his object
was to deliver the young emperor from the hands of the evil counsellors who
surrounded him. His march met with little opposition on the part of the
government; and the protosevastos Alexius was easily
driven from power, and condemned to lose his sight. The Latins in
Constantinople, who were attached to his interests through the support given
him by the Empress Maria of Antioch, were massacred by the Greek populace with
circumstances of the greatest cruelty; nor did Andronicus make any effort to
put a stop to these murders. The property of all the Latins was pillaged, their
houses destroyed; and men, women, children, and priests, torn from the
sanctuaries to which they had fled, were barbarously slain. Many of the Franks,
nevertheless, escaped to their ships in the port, and endeavoured to repay
themselves for the losses they had sustained by plundering the coasts of the
Propontis and the islands of Greece. This bloody tumult greatly widened the
breach between the Latins and the Greeks, and inflamed the western nations of
Europe with a thirst for revenge that soon filled the Aegean Sea with Frank
pirates. It was avenged twenty years after by the Latin conquest of
Constantinople.
It is needless to give a detailed account of the
crimes of Andronicus; he used his unlimited power as all prudent persons must
have foreseen that he would use it. The Princess Maria and her husband the
Caesar were poisoned. The Empress Maria of Antioch was condemned to death for
what was termed treasonable correspondence with her brother-in-law, Bela III,
king of Hungary, and strangled. Andronicus Koutostephanos,
the best general in the empire, was deprived of sight. John Vatatzes, who
defeated the Turks at the Maeander, died shortly after raising the standard of
revolt. The Patriarch Theodosius was removed from office, and Basilios Kamateros placed at the head of the Greek church, on his
promising to do everything that Andronicus might desire. Andronicus then
ordered himself to be proclaimed emperor, and immediately took precedence of
Alexius II, who was soon after deposed, on the pretext that a single emperor
was necessary in order to re-establish order in the empire. The unfortunate
youth, who was not yet fifteen years old, was strangled with a bowstring in the
prison to which he had been committed; and when Andronicus examined the corpse
in order to be assured of his death, he kicked it carelessly, and exclaimed,
“Thy father was a villain, thy mother a prostitute, and thou a fool”.
The corrupted state of society had brought the
Byzantine Empire to the verge of ruin; Andronicus, who was no incorrect type of
the higher classes in the nation over which he reigned, accelerated its
destruction. The nobility and the higher clergy were the partners of his guilt,
and often the agents of his crimes; while the citizens of Constantinople were generally
the delighted spectators of his greatest cruelties.
Andronicus was the grandson of the Emperor Alexius I;
Isaac, the younger brother of the Emperor John II, was his father. It has been
noticed that Isaac’s rash and unsteady temper induced him to quit his brother’s
court, and reside for a time with the Sultan of Iconium. His children were more
violent and vicious than their father. The manner in which his eldest son John
joined the Turks, and abjured the Christian religion, has also been recounted. The
vanity of the Greeks, at a later period, sought consolation for
their actual sufferings by forging a tale concerning the marriage of this
Byzantine renegade with a daughter of the Seljouk sultan of Iconium; and from
the offspring of this imaginary alliance it was pretended that the Ottoman
dynasty was descended. Andronicus was Isaac’s second son; his expressive
countenance, handsome figure, and tall robust frame were rendered doubly
attractive by a singularly sweet and powerful voice, an easy-flowing elocution,
and a graceful manner. These advantages, joined to daring courage and great
skill in military exercises, made him for some time a favourite with his cousin
the Emperor Manuel. His unprincipled conduct at last estranged them; and his
life was subsequently marked by a series of the strangest adventures. No
wandering Crusader nor nomad Turk ever lived a wilder or more romantic life
than the princely Andronicus.
Early in the reign of Manuel he was taken prisoner by
the Turks, as he had wandered from the emperor’s escort on a hunting party
while crossing the Turkish territory in Phrygia. During the time he remained a
captive at the court of Sultan Massoud he cultivated
the acquaintance of the leading Turks, into whose society he was introduced by
his Mussulman brother; and he learned the Turkish language, which was
often useful to him in his future adventures. Manuel was accused of having
neglected to pay his ransom, from jealousy of his skill in military exercises;
but after his return, he saved his life by interposing his own arm to ward off
a blow aimed at his cousin’s head. Andronicus was twice entrusted by the
Emperor Manuel with the command of the army in Cilicia; on both occasions he
was shamefully defeated by the Armenian prince Thoros.
Subsequently he was appointed governor of Belgrade and Branisova,
the two principal Byzantine fortresses on the Hungarian frontier; and either
his negligence or treachery exposed the empire to serious danger. His public
conduct at last completely alienated the affection of Manuel.
Though addicted to pleasure, and leading a life of the
most shameless profligacy, Andronicus kept aloof from the rest of the court,
and always assumed a marked superiority. Though no one was more eager in the
chase, he never mixed in the noisy revels of the nobility, and showed himself
an enemy to the pleasures of the table. He was a sober and abstemious
profligate: his dinner was generally a single dish of roast meat; and after the
fatigues of the longest day his supper frequently consisted of a crust of bread
and a goblet of wine. But he indulged his two favourite passions, love and
ambition, without respect for Divine or human laws. No principle of duty, and
no bond of gratitude, restrained him when he thought power was within his grasp;
and when inflamed by lust, he knew no ties of morality or religion. His amours
were often carried on in the circle of his nearest relatives; and in the
opinion of his countrymen, he, as well as the Emperor Manuel, was stained with
the crime of incest. Eudocia, the daughter of Manuel’s elder brother
Andronicus, was the paramour of his youth, while her sister Theodora was the
mistress of her uncle the emperor. Another Theodora, also the emperor’s niece,
being the daughter of his brother Isaac, became his mistress at a later period,
when she was the widow of Baldwin III, king of Jerusalem. Both these ladies
shared his company with his lawful wife, and divided his affections with a
crowd of actresses and dancing girls. The loves of Eudocia and Andronicus excited
more anger in her family than the incestuous intercourse of her
sister with the emperor; the rank of the sinner hid the crime of
the blacker dye. After vainly endeavouring to separate the criminals, John, the
brother of Eudocia, and Cantacuzenos, her brother-in-law,
resolved to avenge their family by assassinating Andronicus. The court was
encamped at Pelagonia in palaces of canvass, like
those which may be still seen when an Oriental sovereign takes the field in
state. As Andronicus was in the habit of visiting his cousin at unseasonable
hours, a band of armed men was stationed to murder him as he quitted Eudocia.
The lady’s spies warned her of the danger; and while her female attendants were
making a noise to bring in lights, Andronicus cut a small passage with his
sword in the back of the tent, and, creeping between the ropes and pegs, gained
the canvass wall that enclosed Eudocia’s tents. This
he also cut through, and crept away unobserved.
The political conduct of Andronicus, on several
occasions, excited just suspicions. He was accused of holding treasonable
intercourse with the King of Jerusalem, with the Sultan of Iconium, and with
the King of Hungary; and there can be little doubt that he was only prevented
from making an attempt to dethrone Manuel, by the superior political ability
and the systematic energy of the emperor. Andronicus was so convinced of
Manuel’s personal superiority that he appears to have designed assassinating
him. At an imperial hunting-party he presented himself, uninvited, with the
numerous train of armed followers which the great nobles of the Byzantine
Empire maintained in their palaces; the emperor’s escort was too strong for any
attempt at open violence; but during the night Andronicus was found disguised
in an Italian dress, armed with a dagger, lurking near the tent of
Manuel. His suspicious behaviour, scandalous conduct, and bitterly
satirical expressions, gave his enemies an opportunity of bringing so many
charges against him that the emperor at length committed him to prison.
Andronicus passed nine years
of his life in confinement; his escapes from imprisonment and his captures were
as singular as his crimes, and mark the restless activity of his mind, his
self-possession, and his rashness. During his first imprisonment, chance led
him to discover a secret recess in the tower where he was confined. After
laying up a store of provisions, he withdrew into this retreat, and every
search was made for him in vain. At last his wife was arrested as privy to his
escape, and confined in the tower from which it was supposed he had escaped. On
retiring into her bedchamber, the spectre of her husband made its appearance.
He soon informed her how matters stood, and made arrangements with her for
continuing his concealment, and obtaining a supply of provisions. The two
prisoners lived most affectionately together, and their son John was the fruit
of this period of domestic felicity. The guards were careless in watching the
princess, whom they believed was their only prisoner, so that Andronicus at
last found means of escaping. He was, however, soon recognised, arrested at Melangia in Bithynia, and again committed to prison, where
he was loaded with chains. He was fortunate enough to escape a second time, by
procuring an impression of the keys of his dungeon in wax. His son Manuel
contrived to get new keys made from these models, and to convey them to his
father, with a coil of ropes, in an amphora of wine. On a dark and rainy night
Andronicus opened his prison doors unobserved, and reached the garden of
the imperial palace, from the outer walls of which he descended at the place
where John Zimiskes had mounted to murder Nicephorus; there he found a boat
waiting to receive him. He reached Anchialus in safety, and Pupakes, whose gallant conduct at the siege of
Corfu has been already mentioned, owing him gratitude for some
personal obligations, furnished him with the means of continuing his flight.
Andronicus was again tantalized with the fear of returning to a worse captivity
than that from which he had escaped. He was recognised by a party of Vallachians, who resolved to deliver him up to the emperor.
From their hands he escaped by stratagem. Counterfeiting a violent diarrhoea
and excessive weakness, he persuaded his guards to make frequent halts; and
when evening approached, and he was allowed to retire for a short distance from
the road, he fixed his cloak and hat on the stick with which he had apparently
supported himself with difficulty, and plunged into a neighbouring forest, from
whence he ultimately reached the Russian principality of Halicz or Galicia.
The share Pupakes took in
aiding the flight of his benefactor was discovered, and Manuel, forgetting the
former services of the valiant Turk, ordered him to be publicly scourged, and
led through the streets of Constantinople with a rope round his neck, preceded
by a crier, who proclaimed at intervals, “This man is disgraced and punished
for having aided the enemies of the emperor”. To which Pupakes himself always added, “There is no dishonour in the punishment, for it was
incurred in assisting a benefactor instead of betraying him”. After this
indignity Pupakes quitted the empire, and returned to
the possessions of his uncle, who was an emir in the Seljouk Empire of Iconium,
where Manuel met him once again charged with Andronicus, who could neither
command his temper nor restrain his tongue in prosperity, was good-humoured and
fair-spoken in adversity. At the court of Yaroslaf the prince of Galicia he became a great favourite, and was soon the constant
companion of the prince. They hunted the urus together, and formed plans for
invading the Byzantine Empire. Manuel at last considered that there was so much
danger to be apprehended from the continuance of his cousin’s residence in
Galicia, that he granted him a full pardon, and induced him to return to
Constantinople.
It was after this flight that Andronicus was entrusted
with the chief command in Cilicia for the second time. His conduct was that of
a madman, and he marched to attack the Armenian prince Thoros with his army drawn up in a new and ill-judged manner. The experienced Armenian
took immediate advantage of his folly, and broke his troops in many places,
scattering the Byzantine army in utter confusion. Nicetas pretends that when Andronicus saw the defeat of his army, he conceived the hope
of redeeming his blunders by an act of daring valour. He charged Thoros with his lance, though he was surrounded by a
numerous staff, and the Armenian had barely time to interpose his shield
between his breast and his enemy’s lance when he was hurled from his horse.
Andronicus, abandoning his lance, which he believed was quivering in the heart
of Thoros instead of being only fixed in his shield,
burst through the Armenian guards, striking every man who encountered him to
the ground with his mace. But before he could rally his own fugitive
battalions, Thoros, who had risen from the ground
unhurt, resumed the direction of the pursuit, prevented the scattered divisions
of the Byzantine army from attempting a junction, and compelled Andronicus to
seek safety in precipitate flight.
After this disgraceful defeat, it is probable that
Andronicus was immediately superseded; but as both his liberty and his eyesight
were in danger had he returned to Constantinople, he collected all the money he
was able, and, quitting Cilicia with a splendid suite before the arrival of his
successor, he presented himself at the court of Reynold of Antioch. Here he
soon fell in love with the Princess Philippa, the sister of the Empress Maria,
and inspired her with a passion so violent that she set at naught the counsels
of her family, and consented to a marriage with her debauched lover. It is not
easy to say how long Andronicus remained at Antioch, but he became at last
alarmed lest he should be arrested by order of the Emperor Manuel in that
vassal principality, and he fled to Jerusalem, where his passions soon involved
him in new difficulties. At Jerusalem he met Theodora, the daughter of his
cousin Isaac, whom he had not seen since her childhood. She was now the widow
of Baldwin III of Jerusalem, and enjoyed the admiration and esteem of all the
Frank nobles on account of her beauty, talents, and prudence. Andronicus became
deeply enamoured with his fair cousin, and she returned his passion with equal
violence. The state of society among the Latin Christians in Jerusalem was as
debauched as at the court of Constantinople, so that the lovers carried on
their amours with little affectation of secrecy. But when Manuel heard of this
new insult to his brother’s family, he sent messages to the Syrian barons,
offering great rewards to anyone who should seize Andronicus and put out his
eyes; at the same time he requested Amaury, king of Jerusalem, with whom he had
a close alliance, to arrest the fugitive. Theodora obtained information of
these communications in time to warn Andronicus of his danger, and as there was
no longer any hope of safety among the Christians, she consented to fly with
him to the Turks. After visiting Damascus, and wandering for some time in
Mesopotamia and Iberia, they settled at Koloneia,
in Chaldea, where Andronicus, assembling a band of Turkish mercenaries, of
renegades and refugees, formed a camp for making incursions into the empire,
and carrying off Christians to sell as slaves. From this brigand life he
derived a considerable revenue, and it is strange to find that the wretch who
had maintained himself for years as a slave-dealer was subsequently invited to
ascend the throne of Constantinople. In this infamous exile Theodora bore
him two sons. The Greek church, it is true, excommunicated him for living
with his cousin’s daughter, and making slaves of its flock; but Andronicus, who
despised Divine laws, had no fear of ecclesiastical censures, from which either
the possession of political power or the payment of a large sum of money could
at any time release him.
The evils he inflicted on the Byzantine territory were
so great, that Manuel repeatedly sent troops with orders to pursue him
incessantly and capture his strongholds; but these operations were attended
with little result until Nicephorus Paleologos, the governor of Trebizond,
succeeded in capturing the fortress in which Theodora had sought safety. Her
captivity induced Andronicus to negotiate his own pardon, and he received
permission to present himself to the emperor. As he was now seriously alarmed
for his future safety, he adopted every artifice his crafty mind suggested for
flattering the vanity of Manuel. At a public audience, as soon as he entered
the hall of reception, he fell on his knees, and drew from under his clothes a
heavy iron chain, made fast to a collar round his neck; then, holding up his
hands, he implored pardon from the emperor, weeping, protesting his repentance,
and quoting passages from Scripture. Though a bitter sneerer, he was a profound
hypocrite and an admirable actor; so that, in spite of his previous conduct, he
more than once in his life persuaded everyone who beheld him that he had become
an altered man. The Emperor Manuel, on seeing his cousin’s abasement, requested
him to stand, and assured him of full pardon; but Andronicus continued his
hypocritical wailings until he induced one of the courtiers to drag him by the
chain to the emperor’s footstool. Some years later, when Andronicus was dragged
through the streets of Constantinople, to perish in a frightful manner, men
remembered that Isaac Angelos, his successor, had
been the courtier who dragged him to Manuel’s feet. After receiving his pardon,
Andronicus was ordered to reside at Oenaion in
Pontus.
From this place of exile he had watched the progress
of the intrigues in the Byzantine court after Manuel’s death, and he easily
found partisans among the dissatisfied courtiers, who demanded his presence in
the capital. His agents, however, were also employed in gaining the people; for
wicked and worthless as Andronicus was, he perceived that the unprincipled
behaviour of the court had excited a deep-rooted aversion to the whole family
of Comnenos, and that, unless the people of the capital
should declare boldly in his favour, the mercenary troops of the government
might defeat his attacks. He therefore affected to pay the greatest attention
to the last oath he had publicly taken in the Byzantine court, in which he had
promised never to conceal from the emperor anything contrary to the interests
of the empire, but as soon as such a thing might come to his knowledge to
oppose it with all his power. This oath was now made a pretext for writing to
the young emperor, and censuring the measures of the protosevastos;
and the letters were of course composed rather with reference to the effect
they were likely to produce on the public than on the court. His remonstrances
were of course useless, so he resolved to save the empire by force. The treachery
of Andronicus Angelos, the general of the imperial
army, and of Andronicus Koutostephanos, the grand
admiral, rendered him master of Constantinople.
Prosperity soon revived all the evil passions which
age was supposed to have eradicated from the heart of Andronicus. The innate
cruelty of his disposition, and the unforgiving malice of his depraved
feelings, soon revealed themselves in his treatment of the most influential
nobles. The aristocracy saw its leaders put to death on account of the influence
they possessed, or merely to confiscate their wealth; while the people, whose
burdens Andronicus lightened, and whose vengeance he gratified, loudly
applauded his conduct. Angelos and Koutostephanos now saw their error, and conspired to drive
Andronicus from the post of prime-minister, to which their treachery had raised
him. The plot was discovered, and the brave Koutostephanos was arrested with his four sons, and other conspirators, all of whom were
deprived of sight. The cowardly Angelos and his sons
escaped. From that time the servility of the Byzantine nobles became greater
than ever, and it only increased the contempt of Andronicus for their persons,
while, by exciting his distrust, it increased his cruelty. John Cantacuzenos, in order to ingratiate himself with the
tyrannical regent, ill-treated one of the eunuchs of the young emperor, who had
attempted to warn his sovereign of the dangerous position of public
affairs, and to persuade the prince to devote some attention to serious
business, instead of publicly trifling away his time in idle, expensive, and
vicious amusements, which were sure to render him unpopular. Cantacuzenos struck the eunuch on the face in the presence
of Andronicus; but the wily old villain, suspecting that this enthusiastic meanness
covered evil intentions, ordered the eyes of Cantacuzenos to be put out on hearing that he held some slight communication with his
brother-in-law Constantine Angelos, who was in
confinement on a charge of treason.
As soon as Andronicus had put to death all those who
he thought possessed the power of resisting his schemes, and accumulated as
much wealth in the public treasury as would enable him to diminish the public
burdens, he ascended the throne, and put the young Alexius to death. He now
looked forward to the tranquil enjoyment of power, and indulged his cruelty by
putting to death the wealthiest members of the aristocracy. Yet so perverted
was his character, that he could not refrain from insulting the universal
feelings of mankind by outrages which no class could pardon. The Patriarch Theodosios was compelled to quit his office, because he
refused to sanction the marriage of Alexius and Irene, the incestuous offspring
of himself and Manuel with the two Theodoras; but the
Greek church was at this time in the same demoralized condition as the
Byzantine court, and the marriage ceremony was performed by the Archbishop or
Patriarch of Bulgaria.
The nobility were not inclined to submit tamely to be
decimated; some were eager to obtain power, some were burning to revenge their
relations, and some, perhaps, were impelled by the duty of avenging the murder
of their lawful prince. Various nobles took up arms at Nicaea, Prusa, and Lopadion before the
murder of the young Alexius; but for a time, fortune smiled on the enterprises
of the tyrant, and all these rebels were subdued and punished with unheard-of
cruelty: numbers were hanged on the largest trees, and few were dismissed
without losing a hand or a foot; even the Bishop of Prusa was deprived of his sight. Andronicus Lapardas, one
of the generals of the army on the frontiers of Hungary who attempted to avenge
the death of Alexius II, was also taken prisoner and deprived of sight.
Andronicus appears to have formed some general plan of
improving the civil administration, and reforming the judicial system, by which
he expected to render himself popular, and secure the support of the great body
of the population. He reduced the expenditure of the court; but in rendering it
less brilliant, he did not render it less vicious. He was too old to find
pleasure in tournaments and fêtes. He had learned moderation in exile, and his
habits of self-indulgence led him to live in a retired manner, even after he
obtained the throne. This mode of life, however, made him neglect the
amusements of the populace of Constantinople; and he soon became unpopular with
the mob, who accused him of avarice in plundering the nobles for his own
solitary gratification; while, in their opinion, it was one of the principal
duties of the emperor to preside at the games of the hippodrome, and to plan a
succession of fêtes for the public gratification. Old age had rendered
Andronicus inactive, and his intense selfishness and domineering insolence of
disposition persuaded him that all mankind would bend to his opinions. His
first care, as emperor, was to prepare for lightening the public burdens by
making extensive fiscal reforms. He abolished the practice of selling
official charges, a measure which enabled him to suppress many useless offices.
He selected able and experienced lawyers to act as judges, on whom he conferred
ample salaries from the public treasury, prohibiting them, at the same time,
under the severest penalties, from extorting money from the people. Indeed, it
is possible that, if he had been able to control the malicious violence of his
temper, and if his reign had been prolonged, the cultivators of the soil
throughout the empire might have derived some permanent advantage from his
government.
(Nicetas gives Andronicus
great praise for his exertions to abolish the practice of plundering
shipwrecked vessels which prevailed among the Greeks, and which preceding
emperors had vainly endeavoured to suppress. The Emperor Manuel I, as well as
his successors, had inserted a clause in the commercial treaties with the
Italian republics to put an end to this barbarous custom. Andronicus himself
would have been astonished at the system of salvage exacted by our law in
favour of the British navy)
But his personal conduct inflamed the hatred of every
class at Constantinople, where he was very soon regarded as a monster, in whose
death all would rejoice. The seclusion in which he lived concealed from him the
change that had taken place in the popular mind, and he continued to pursue his
old course of cruelty, living shut up in his palace. His strange behaviour kept
the attention of the capital fixed on his actions. The memory of the murdered
Alexius seemed to haunt every man’s mind but his own. To calm the superstitious
scruples of his instruments, he induced the Greek clergy to grant absolution to
himself and his partisans for having violated their oaths of allegiance to
Alexius II, thus allowing the church to assume the power of pardoning treason
and murder. Heretics might well say that the Greek Church was now more corrupt
and degraded than the imperial government; for the emperor committed his crimes
to gain some definite object, but the clergy gratuitously assailed the
principles of morality and religion. As an additional insult to the feelings of
mankind, Andronicus, who had reached the age of seventy, though he still
retained the appearance of a man of middle age, thought fit to marry Agnes of
France, the child-widow of his murdered sovereign. The young empress was only
eleven years old when she was led to the imperial palace by the hoary sinner,
and placed among a crowd of actresses and dancing girls to complete her
education.
REBELLION OF CYPRUS, A.D. 1184.
The vicious condition of every class of society had
now undermined the political fabric of the empire. Few acknowledged the
restraints of duty and religion, and the few who did so retired from public
life. The successful rebellion of a man, almost as depraved, and far less able
than Andronicus, revealed the facility with which the empire might be
dismembered. Isaac, whose father’s name is unknown, but who was the nephew of
Theodora, queen of Jerusalem, and who adopted the name of Comnenus, had been
appointed governor of Tarsus in the reign of Manuel; and having been taken
prisoner by the Armenians of Cilicia, was delivered from captivity by
Andronicus, who authorized him to draw sixty thousand byzants from the revenues
of Cyprus in order to pay his ransom. Reuben, the Prince of Armenian Cilicia,
had made over his captive to Bohemund III, prince of Antioch, who, on receiving
payment of half the ransom, allowed Isaac to visit Cyprus in order to expedite
the collection of the remainder. Isaac, on reaching the island, availed himself
of the authority he had received from Andronicus to dispose of the revenue, to
act as governor, and, as soon as he could collect together a body of troops, he
proclaimed himself emperor, as the only means of retaining his power. He
equalled the cruelty of Andronicus in his public administration. This
rebellion filled the heart of the tyrant with fear and rage.
A prediction declared that a man, whose name commenced
with the letter I, was destined to deprive him of his crown and his life; and
this prediction now alarmed him, for he had no fleet which he could immediately
dispatch with a force sufficient to suppress the rebellion. The island of
Cyprus was completely separated from the Byzantine Empire. It was shortly after
conquered by Richard, king of England, and its Greek inhabitants have ever
since been subjected to foreign domination.
Constantine Makrodukas and Andronikos Dukas, two of the
worst agents of the emperor’s cruelty, had become sureties for the good conduct
of Isaac when Andronicus granted him the money necessary to pay his ransom.
Undeterred by any feelings of political prudence, the tyrant determined to
gratify his revenge by a public exhibition of his rage. On Ascension Day it was
usual for the whole court to pay their respects to the sovereign. Andronicus
was residing at the palace of Philopation, and
thither the two sureties of the rebel Isaac repaired as suppliants, waiting in
the inner court, lifting up their hands as petitioners, and seeking to be
judged by a tribunal in order to prove their innocence. Even the tyrant’s most
intimate friends thought the culprits would escape severe punishment. One man
alone was entrusted with the order for their execution, and instructed how it
was to be carried into effect. Stephen Aghiochristophorites,
the agent of many murders, entered the assembly, and, taking up a large stone,
struck Makrodukas with it, calling, at the same time,
to all the nobles present who honoured the emperor to take stones from a pile
placed purposely in the court of the palace, and put the enemies of their
sovereign to death. The imperial guards stood by to watch their behaviour, so
that none dared to appear dilatory. In this strange and barbarous manner the
sureties of the rebel emperor of Cyprus were murdered by the servile nobles of
Constantinople. Worthless as the Byzantine nobility had become, they could not
conceal their indignation at this insult, and Alexius, the incestuous offspring
of Manuel, whom Andronicus had married to his own illegitimate child Irene,
conceived the monstrous idea of mounting the throne. His plot was
discovered—his fellow-conspirators were put to death in the cruellest
manner—his secretary was burned alive in the hippodrome—his own eyes were put
out—and Irene was banished from her father’s presence for weeping over the misfortune
of her husband.
The mad career of Andronicus was now drawing to an
end. Alexius Comnenos, one of the grand-nephews of
Manuel, had escaped to the court of William II, king of Sicily, where his
account of the state of the Byzantine empire agreed so well with the reports
which were daily brought by recent fugitives, that the Sicilian monarch
resolved to support Alexius’ pretensions to the throne, in the hope of making
some valuable conquests for himself A Sicilian fleet, under the command of
Tancred, the cousin and successor of William II, and the Admiral Margaritone, with an army commanded by the Counts Richard d'Acerra and Aldoin, entered the
Adriatic, and took Dyrrachium by assault, after a siege of a few days. The
troops marched thence by land to attack Thessalonica, while the fleet
circumnavigated the Peloponnesus. Andronicus seemed to feel little alarm when
he heard of this attempt to drive him from the throne; he thought that the
danger could not be great, as his rival’s name did not begin with I. His second
son, John, who had been invested with the imperial title, was sent to assemble
an army to relieve Thessalonica; and David Comnenos,
who commanded in the place, was ordered to defend it to the last. The
incapacity of David, the disorder that reigned in the garrison, and the
discontent of the inhabitants, enabled the Norman troops to take Thessalonica
on the 15th of August 1185, after a siege of ten days.
The cruelties committed by the Sicilians after they
gained possession of Thessalonica, roused the indignation of the Byzantine
population, and did more to arrest their further progress than the troops of
Andronicus. The Latins and Greeks now regarded one another as heretics as well
as political enemies; and their hostilities were marked by horrors of which we
may estimate the fearful violence by reflecting on the cruelty of the
government and populace of Constantinople, and remembering that it affords the
best type of the feelings of society in the East. Nicetas furnishes us with a dreadful picture of the proceedings of the Silician army. Nineteen years after, he was himself a
spectator of similar scenes acted by a Latin army in Constantinople. Many of
the inhabitants of Thessalonica were expelled from their houses; people of rank
were tortured to compel them to deliver up the treasures they were supposed to
have concealed; some were hung up by the feet and suffocated by burning straw
beneath them. Insult was added to cruelty: the altars in the Greek churches
were denied; the religious ceremonies of the Greeks were ridiculed; and when
the priests chanted their service in the nasal melody prevalent in the East,
the Norman soldiers howled out a chorus in imitation of beaten hounds. At last,
however, Eustathius, the celebrated Archbishop of
Thessalonica, by his prudent conduct succeeded in conciliating the Sicilian
generals, and inducing them to restrain the license of their troops, which they
had too long tolerated.
The Sicilian army at last quitted Thessalonica to
march to Constantinople; but all ranks were so eager for plunder that its
progress was slow. Andronicus made some dispositions for the defence of his
capital; and it was reported that he proposed to put every person to death who
was imprisoned on a charge of treason. The report filled the population of
Constantinople with alarm, for almost every family of any standing had one of
its members in prison; the nobles were rendered desperate by a sense of
danger—the people were indignant at the dismemberment of the empire, and at the
conquests of the Latins. The tyrant, having given his orders to the agents of
his cruelty, considered that the tranquillity of the capital was assured, and
retired to enjoy himself with a crowd of parasites and courtesans at the palace
of Meludion, on the shores of the Bosphorus.
INSURRECTION IN CONSTANTINOPLE
The storm that drove him from the throne, and
terminated his existence, burst suddenly on his head from a quarter whence it
was least expected. Aghiochristophorites deemed it
necessary to arrest Isaac Angelos, though the emperor
had such a contempt for his incapacity and cowardice that he refused to sign an
order for his condemnation. The minister was therefore obliged to make the
arrest in person, on his own responsibility. When Isaac heard that the terrible Aghiochristophorites, who was universally known to be
the agent of the emperor’s greatest cruelties, was in the court of his palace,
his very cowardice rendered him courageous, for he derived fury from despair.
Instead of submitting tamely, he mounted his horse, and, rushing at Aghiochristophorites with his drawn sword, slew him on the
spot. But he had neither the ability nor the courage to take any farther
measures for his defence, and he sought an asylum in St Sophia’s. The absence
of the emperor and the death of the minister allowed Isaac Angelos to remain unmolested. His friends ventured to join him; and the people, hearing
that Aghiochristophorites was slain, rose in
rebellion. The prisons were broken open, armed bands were formed, and Isaac was
proclaimed emperor. All the nobility now assembled in the church of St Sophia,
and the crown of Constantine, which stood on the high altar, was taken down in
order to perform the ceremony of coronation; but the timidity of Isaac was so
great that he sought to decline the dangerous honour. His uncle, John Dukas, stepped forward and offered his bald head to receive
the crown his nephew feared to accept; but the people, thinking that he bore
some resemblance to Andronicus, shouted loudly, “We will have no more old men
to rule us, and no man with a forked beard shall be emperor”. Isaac was
therefore compelled to receive the crown. It is remarkable that the coins of
Andronicus distinctly portray the forked beard which excited the antipathy of
the populace.
Andronicus hastened to Constantinople as soon as he
was informed of the insurrection, and attempted to defend himself in the great
palace; but his guards refused to attack the people, even though he himself
mounted one of the towers and shot a few arrows against the crowd. The
assailants, meeting with no opposition, burst open the gate Karea;
and Andronicus, throwing off the imperial robes, and disguising himself in a
pointed Russian bonnet, embarked in the galley which had brought him from the
palace of Meludion, accompanied by his young empress
Agnes of France, a favourite concubine named Maraptika,
remarkable for her musical skill, and a few personal attendants. His object was
to escape into Russia, but contrary winds kept him on the Bithynian coast, and
he was captured by the agents of Isaac, brought back to Constantinople, and
imprisoned in the tower of Anemas, with a heavy chain
round his neck, and irons on his limbs.
We have not ventured to describe the torments
Andronicus had often inflicted on his victims when he made a public display of
his worst acts of cruelty, but the people now showed that they had been
apt scholars. Isaac allowed the old emperor to be dragged by the chain from his
prison, to be conducted through the streets of the capital, undergoing every
insult, and then to be tortured in the most inhuman manner. The populace,
headed by the relations of those whom he had put to death, among whom the women
were conspicuous, beat the old man in the cruellest way, tore his hair from his
head and his beard from his face. The Emperor Isaac insulted him when he was
brought into his presence, and ordered his right hand to be cut off and his
right eye to be put out. After this treatment he was thrust back into prison,
where he remained more than a day without food or attendance. At last he was
led out, and abandoned to the people for execution, who put out his remaining
eye, and conducted him to the place where he was to suffer, mounted on a lean
camel. Crowds followed throwing stones at him, beating him with long poles, and
pricking him with spears. Hot water was thrown from the windows on his head,
and he was compelled for hours to suffer tortures which nature recoils from
recording. At last he was taken to the hippodrome, and hung up by the feet
between two columns, near a group of ancient sculpture representing a she-wolf
and a hyaena, where his sufferings were terminated by two Latin soldiers, who
plunged their swords into his heart. Andronicus had borne all his torments with
the greatest fortitude, exclaiming only at intervals, “Lord have mercy upon me,
and bruise not a broken reed”.
(The reign of Andronicus lasted only a year, from
September 1184 to September 1185; and his administration as guardian of Alexius
II commenced about a year earlier. Nicetas gives a
minute account of this period, and he is our only authority of any value. He
records many curious anecdotes concerning Andronicus, which show that he was a
man of sense when not governed by his passions. One anecdote is worth
recording, as it relates to the historian John Cinnamus,
who has so often been our guide in the preceding pages. Andronicus overheard
the Bishop of New Patras (Hypate) and John Cinnamus disputing concerning the words of Christ, “My
Father is greater than I”,—and though he was well reading Greek theology, his
anger was so much excited by the sophistical distinctions and quibbles of the ecclesiastical disputants, that he threatened
to throw the divine and the historian into the river Rhyndacus,
which was flowing near, unless they ceased their cavils concerning the Divine
words, which he deemed sufficiently explicit).
THE FALL OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE
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