JEWELS OF THE WESTERN
CIVILIZATION
Preface to Greece under the Romans
Chronology
CHAPTER I. From the Conquest of Greece to the
Establishment of Constantinople as Capital of the Roman Empire. B.C. 146 — A.D.
330.
CHAPTER II. From the Establishment of Constantinople
as Capital of the Roman Empire, to the Accession of Justinian. A.D.330— A.D.
627.
CHAPTER III. The Reign of Justinian. A.D. 527— A.D.
665.
CHAPTER IV. From the Death of Justinian to the
Restoration of Roman Power in the East by Heraclius. A.D. 565— A.D. 683.
CHAPTER V. From the Mohammedan Invasion of Syria to
the Extinction of the Roman Power in the East. A.D. 633— A.D. 716.
PREFACE TO GREECE UNDER THE ROMANS.
The social and political organization of life among
the Greeks and Romans was essentially different, even during the period when
they were subject to the same government; and this difference must be impressed
on the mind, before the relative state of civilization in the Eastern and
Western Empires can be thoroughly understood.
The Romans were a tribe of warriors. All their
institutions, even those relating to property and agriculture, were formed with
reference to war. The people of the Western Empire, including the greater part
of Italy, consisted of a variety of races, who were either in a low state of
civilization at the time of their conquest by the Romans, or else had been
already subjected to foreigners. They were generally treated as inferior beings,
and the framework of their national institutions was everywhere destroyed. The
provincials of the West, when thus left destitute of every bond of national
union, were exposed to the invasions of warlike tribes, which, under the first
impulses of civilization, were driven on to seek the means of supplying new
wants. The moment, therefore, that the military forces of the Roman government
were unable to repulse these strangers, the population of the provinces was
exposed to subjection, slavery, or extermination, according as the interests or
the policy of the invading barbarians might determine.
In that portion of the Eastern Empire peopled by the
Greeks, the case was totally different. There the executive power of the Roman
government was modified by a system of national institutions, which conferred,
even on the rural population, some control over their local affairs. The
sovereign authority was relieved from that petty sphere of administration and
police, which meddles with the daily occupations of the people. The Romans
found this branch of government completely organized, in a manner not closely
connected with the political sovereignty; and though the local institutions of
the Greeks proved less powerful than the central despotism of their conquerors,
they possessed greater vitality. Their nationality continued to exist even
after their conquest; and this nationality was again called into activity when
the Roman government, from increasing weakness, gradually began to neglect the
duties of administration.
But while the conquest of Greece by the Romans had
indeed left the national existence nearly unaltered, time, as it changed the
government of Rome, modified likewise the institutions of the Greeks. Still,
neither the Roman Caesars, nor the Byzantine emperors, any more than the Frank
princes and Turkish sultans, were able to interrupt the continual transmission
of a political inheritance by each generation of the Greek race to its
successors; though it is too true that, from age to age, the value of that inheritance
was gradually diminished, until in our own times a noble impulse and a
desperate struggle restored to the people its political existence.
The history of the Greek nation, even as a subject
people, cannot be destitute of interest and instruction. The Greeks are the
only existing representatives of the ancient world. They have maintained
possession of their country, their language, and their social organization,
against physical and moral forces, which have swept from the face of the earth
all their early contemporaries, friends, and enemies. It can hardly be disputed
that the preservation of their national existence is to be partly attributed to
the institutions which they have received from their ancestors. The work now
offered to the public attempts to trace the effects of the ancient institutions
on the fortunes of the people under the Roman government, and endeavours to
show in what manner those institutions were modified or supported by other
circumstances.
It was impossible, in the following pages, to omit
treating of events already illustrated by the genius of Gibbon. But these
events must be viewed by the historian of the Roman Empire, and of the Greek
people, under very different aspects. The observations of both may be equally
true, though inferior skill and judgment may render the views, in the present
work, less correct as a picture, and less impressive as a history. The same
facts afford innumerable conclusions to different individuals, and in different
ages. History will ever remain inexhaustible; and much as we have read of the
Greeks and Romans, and deeply as we appear to have studied their records, there
is much still to be learned from the same sources.
In the references to the authorities followed in this
work, a preference will often be shown to those modern treatises, which ought
to be in the hands of the general reader. It has often required profound
investigation and long discussion to elicit a fact now generally known, or to
settle an opinion now universally adopted, and in such cases it would be
useless to collect a long array of ancient passages.
1st May, 1843.
CHRONOLOGY
B.C.
323. Death of Alexander. Lamian
war
32 a. Antipater disfranchised 12,000 Athenian citizens
321. Ptolemy founds a monarchy in Egypt.
312. Era of Seleucidae.
310. Agathocles invades Carthaginian possessions in
Africa.
303. Demetrius Poliorcetes
raises siege of Rhodes.
300. Mithridates Ariobarzanes
founds kingdom of Pontus.
280. Achaian league commenced.
Pyrrhus
landed in Italy to defend the Greeks against the Romans.
279. Gauls invade Greece,
and are repulsed at Delphi.
278. Nicomedes brings the Gauls into Asia.
271. Romans complete the conquest of Magna Graecia.
260. Romans prepare their first fleet to contend with
Carthage.
250. Parthian monarchy founded by Arsaces.
241. Attains, king of Pergamus.
228. First Roman embassy to Greece
218. Hannibal invades Italy.
212. Syracuse taken by Romans. Sicily conquered.
210. Sicily reduced to the condition of a Roman
province.
202. Battle of Zama.
197. Battle of Cynoscephalae.
196. The Greeks declared free by Flamininus
at the Isthmian games.
192. Antiochus the Great invades Greece.
188. The laws of Lycurgus abrogated by Philopoemen.
181. Death of Hannibal.
168. Battle of Pydna. End of
Macedonian monarchy.
167. One thousand Achaian citizens sent as hostages to
Rome.
155. The fine of 500 talents imposed on Athens for
plundering the Oropians remitted by the Romans.
147. Macedonia reduced to the condition of a Roman
province.
146. Corinth taken by Mummius.
Greece reduced to the condition of a Roman province.
133. Rebellion of slaves in the Attic silver mines.
130. Asia, embracing great part of the country between
the Halys and Mount Taurus, constituted a Roman
province.
96. Cyrenaica becomes a Roman possession by the will
of Ptolemy Apion.
86. Athens taken by Sulla.
77. Depredations of the pirates on the coasts of
Greece and Asia Minor at their acme.
75. Bithynia and Pontus constituted a Roman province.
67. Crete conquered by Metellus after a war of two
years and a-half, and shortly after reduced to the condition of a Roman
province. It was subsequently united with Cyrenaica.
66. Monarchy of the Seleucidae
conquered by Pompey.
65. Cilicia reduced to the condition of a Roman
province.
48. Caesar destroys Megara.
44. Caesar founds a Roman colony at Corinth.
30. Augustus founds Nicopolis.
Egypt reduced to the condition of a Roman province.
25. Galatia and Lycaonia constituted a Roman province.
24. Pamphylia and Lycia constituted a Roman province.
21. Cyprus reduced to the condition of a Roman
province. Athens deprived of its
jurisdiction over Eretria and Aegina, and the confederacy of the free Laconian
cities formed by Augustus.
14. Augustus establishes a Roman colony at Patrae.
A.D. Year of Rome 753. 194th Olympiad, 4th year, a.m.
5508 of the Byzantines, called the Aera of Constantinople; but other
calculations were adopted at Alexandria and Antioch.
18. Cappadocia reduced to the condition of a Roman
province.
22. The Roman senate restricts the right of asylum
claimed by the Greek temples and sanctuaries.
66. Nero in Greece.
67. Nero celebrates the Olympic Games.
72. Commagene reduced to a
Roman province.
73. Thrace reduced to a Roman province by Vespasian.
Rhodes, Samos, and other islands on the coast of Asia deprived of their
privileges as free states, and reduced to the condition of a Roman province
called the Islands.
74. Vespasian expels the philosophers from Rome.
90. Domitian expels the philosophers from Rome.
96. Apollonius of Tyana at
Ephesus at the time of Domitian’s death.
98. Plutarch flourishes.
103. Epictetus teaches at Nicopolis.
112. Hadrian, archon of Athens.
1 15. Martyrdom of Ignatius.
122. Hadrian visits Athens.
125. Hadrian again at Athens.
129. Hadrian passes the winter at Athens.
132. Jewish war.
135. Hadrian is at Athens towards the close of the
Jewish war.
143. Herodes Atticus consul.
162. Galen at Rome. Pausanias, Polyaenus,
Lucian, and Ptolemy flourish.
168. Disgrace of Herodes
Atticus at Sirmium.
176. Marcus Aurelius visits Athens and establishes
scholarchs of the four great philosophic sects.
180. Dio Cassius, Herodian, Athenaeus flourish.
212. Edict of Caracalla, conferring the Roman
citizenship on all the free inhabitants of the empire.
226. Artaxerxes overthrows the Parthian empire of the Arsacidae, and founds the Persian monarchy of the Sassanidae.
238. Herodian, Aelian, Philostratus.
251. The emperor Decius defeated and slain by the
Goths.
267. Athens taken by the Goths.
284. Aera of Diocletian, called Aera of the Martyrs.
312. ISt September. Cycle of
Indictions of Constantine.
325. Council of Nicaea.
330. Dedication of Constantinople.
332. Cherson assists Constantine against the Goths.
337. Constantine II, Constantius, Constans, emperors.
355. Julian appointed Caesar.
361. Julian.
363. Jovian.
364. Valentinian
I. Valens.
365. Earthquake in Greece, Asia Minor, and Sicily.
375. Earthquake felt especially in Peloponnesus.
Gratian
emperor.
378. Defeat and death of Valens.
379. Theodosius the Great
381. Second oecumenical council, at Constantinople.
394. Olympic Games abolished.
395. Arcadius and Honorius. Huns ravage Asia Minor.
Alaric invades Greece.
398. Alaric governor of Eastern Illyricum.
408. Theodosius II.
425. University of Constantinople organized.
428. Genseric invades Africa.
431. Third oecumenical council, at Ephesus.
438. Publication of the Theodosian Code.
439. Genseric takes Carthage.
441. Theodosius II sends a fleet against Genseric.
442. Attila invades Thrace and Macedonia.
447. Attila ravages the country of Thermopylae.
Walls of
Constantinople repaired by Theodosius II.
449. Council of Ephesus, called the Council of
Brigands.
450. Marcian.
451. Fourth oecumenical council, at Chalcedon.
457. Leo I, called the Great, and the Butcher.
458. Great earthquake felt from Antioch to Thrace.
460. Earthquake at Cyzicus.
465. Fire which destroyed parts of eight of the
sixteen quarters of Constantinople.
468. Leo I sends a great expedition against Genseric.
473. Leo II crowned.
474. Leo II. Zeno the Isaurian.
476. End of the Western Roman Empire.
477. Return of Zeno, twenty months after he had been
driven from Constantinople by Basiliskos.
480. Earthquakes at Constantinople during forty days.
Statue
of Theodosius the Great thrown from its column.
491. Anastasius I, called Dicorus.
499. Bulgarians invade the empire.
507. Anastasius constructs the long wall of Thrace.
514. Revolt of Vitalianus.
518. Justin I.
526. Death of Theodoric.
527. Justinian I.
Gretes, king of the Huns, receives baptism at
Constantinople.
The Tzans submit to the Roman Empire.
528. Gordas, king of the
Huns, on the Cimmerian Bosphorus, receives baptism at Constantinople, and is
murdered by his subjects on his return.
Justinian commences his lavish expenditure on fortifications and public buildings.
529. First edition of the Code of Justinian.
Schools
of philosophy at Athens closed.
531. Battle of Callinicum.
Death of Kobad, king of Persia.
Plague
commenced which ravaged the Roman Empire for fifty years.
532. Sedition of Nika.
Peace
concluded with Chosroes.
533- Conquest of the Vandal kingdom in Africa.
Institutions and Pandects published.
534. Belisarius returns to Constantinople.
Second
edition of the Code.
536. Belisarius takes Rome.
537. Siege of Rome by Goths under Witiges.
Dedication of St. Sophia.
538. Bulgarians invade the empire.
Famine
in Italy.
539. Witiges besieged in
Ravenna.
Huns
plunder Greece to the Isthmus of Corinth.
540. Surrender of Ravenna.
541. Totila king of the Groths.
Consulate abolished by Justinian.
542. Great pestilence at Constantinople.
546. Rome taken by Totila.
547. Rome taken by Belisarius.
548. Belisarius quits Italy.
Death
of Theodora.
549. Rome again taken by Totila.
Justinian’s armies occupy the country of the Lazi.
550. Sclavonians and Huns
invade the empire,
551. Silkworm introduced into the Roman Empire.
552. Totila defeated. Rome
retaken by Narses.
553. Fifth oecumenical council at Constantinople.
554. Earthquakes at Constantinople, Nicomedia, Berytus, and Cos.
Church
of Cyzicus fell during divine service.
557. Terrible earthquake at Constantinople. Justinian
did not wear his crown for forty days.
558. Zabergan, king of the
Huns, defeated near Constantinople by Belisarius.
562. Treaty of peace with Persia. Belisarius accused
of treason.
563. Belisarius restored to his rank.
565. March — death of Belisarius.
13th Nov.— death of Justinian in the thirty-ninth year
of his reign. Justin II.
567. Kingdom of Gepids
destroyed by Lombards.
568. Lombards invade Italy.
569. Justin sends the embassy of Zemarchos
to the Turks.
571. Mahomet born. Weil says he died in 632, at the
age of 63 lunar years, which places his birth in April 571.
572. War between the Roman Empire and Persia.
574. Tiberius defeated by the Avars.
Tiberius
proclaimed Caesar by Justin.
576. Battle of Melitene. Romans penetrate to Caspian
Sea.
578. Death of Justin II. Tiberius II.
579. Death of Chosroes.
581. Persian army defeated by Maurice in his fourth
campaign.
582. 14th Aug. — death of Tiberius. Maurice.
John the
Faster, patriarch of Constantinople, uses the title Ecumenic, granted to the
patriarch by Justinian.
589. Incursions of the Avars and Sclavonians
into Greece. From this time Sclavonian colonies were
settled in the Peloponnesus.
590. Maurice crowns his son Theodosius at Easter.
Hormisdas, king of Persia, dethroned and murdered.
591. Chosroes II restored to the Persian throne by the
assistance of Maurice.
Maurice
marches out of Constantinople against the Avars.
600. Maurice fails to ransom the Roman prisoners.
602. Rebellion of the army. Phocas proclaimed emperor.
603. Persian war commences.
608. Priscus, the son-in-law of Phocas, invites
Heraclius.
609. Persians lay waste Asia Minor, and reach
Chalcedon.
610. Phocas slain. Heraclius.
613. Heraclius Constantine, or Constantine III.,
crowned 22nd Jan.; he was born 3rd May 612.
614. Jerusalem taken by the Persians, and Church of
the Holy Sepulchre burned.
615. Heraclius sends the patrician Niketas
to seize the wealth of John the Charitable, patriarch of Alexandria.
616. Persians invade Egypt
617. Persians occupy Chalcedon with a garrison.
618. Public distribution of bread at Constantinople
commuted for a payment in money preparatory to its abolition.
619. Avars attempt to seize Heraclius at a conference
for peace.
620. Peace concluded with the Avars.
621. Great preparations for carrying on the Persian
war.
622. Monday, 5th April — Heraclius left Constantinople
and proceeded by sea to Pylae. He collected troops
from the provinces, and exercised his army. He advanced to the frontiers of
Armenia, and made dispositions to winter in Pontus, but suddenly advanced
through Armenia into Persia. The Persians made a diversion against Cilicia,
but, on Heraclius continuing his advance, turned and pursued him. Heraclius
gained a battle, and placed his army in winter quarters in Armenia. 16th July —
Aera of the Hegira of Mahomet.
623. 25th March — Heraclius left Constantinople,
joined the army in Armenia, and was in the Persian territory by the 20th April.
Chosroes rejects terms of peace, and Heraclius takes Ganzaca
and Thebarmes. Chosroes fled by the passes into
Media, and Heraclius retired to winter in Albania.
Death
of Sisebut, king of the Visigoths, who had conquered
the Roman possessions in Spain.
624. Chosroes sends an army, under Sarablagas
and Perozites, to guard the passes by which Heraclius
was likely to invade Persia; but the emperor, making a long circuit by the
plains, engaged Sarablagas before he was joined by Sarbaraza, and gained the battle. Sarbaraza,
and then Saen, are also defeated.
The Lazes and Abasges
abandoned Heraclius in this campaign. Heraclius wintered in the Persian
territory. This was a campaign of marches and counter-marches in a mountainous
country, and Heraclius was opposed by greatly superior forces, who succeeded in
preventing his advance into Persia.
625. Heraclius resolves to return into the
south-eastern part of Asia Minor. From his winter quarters there were two roads
— a short mountain-road by Taranton, where nothing
could be found for the troops; a longer road, by the passes of Mount Taurus,
where supplies could be obtained. After a difficult march of seven days over
Taurus, Heraclius crossed the Tigris, marched by Martyropolis
to Amida, where he rested, and despatched a courier
to Constantinople. As the Persians were following, Heraclius placed guards in
the passes, crossed the Nymphius, and reached the
Euphrates, where he found the bridge of boats withdrawn. He crossed by a ford,
and passed by Samosata over Mount Taurus to Germanicia and Adana, where he
encamped between the city and the bridge over the Saros. Sarbaraza
advances to the Saros, and, after a battle, retires. Heraclius advances to Sebaste, crosses the Halys, and
puts his army into winter quarters. Chosroes plunders the Christian churches in
Persia, and compels all Christians in his dominions to profess themselves
Nestorians.
626. The scholarians make a
tumult at Constantinople because they are deprived of the bread which had
previously been distributed. John Seismos attempts to
raise the price of bread from three to eight pholles.
Constantinople besieged by the Avars from 29th July to
8th August.
A Persian army under Sarbaraza
occupies Chalcedon. Another under Saen is defeated by Theodore, the emperor’s
brother. Heraclius stations himself in Lazica, and waits until he is assured of
the defeat of the Avars before Constantinople, and the passage of the Caspian
gates by an army of Khazars under Ziebel. Meeting of
Heraclius and Ziebel took place near Tiflis, which
was occupied by a Persian garrison. The Khazars furnish Heraclius with 40,000
troops.
The church of Blachernes is
enclosed within the fortifications of the city by a new wall.
627. Heraclius appears to have derived little
advantage from the assistance of the 40,000 Khazars, unless we suppose that by
their assistance he was able to render himself master of Persarmenia
and Atropatene. They quitted him during the year 627.
9th October — Heraclius entered the district of Chamaetha, where he remained seven days, 1st December —
Heraclius reached the greater Zab, crossed and encamped near Nineveh.
Rhazetas quitted his station at Ganzaca, and pursued
Heraclius — crossed the greater Zab by a ford three miles lower down than
Heraclius passed it. Battle in which Rhazetes was
defeated on Saturday, 12th December. Sarbaraza
recalled from Chalcedon to oppose the advance of Heraclius, who occupied
Nineveh, and passed the greater Zab again.
23rd December — Heraclius passed the lesser Zab, and
rested several days in the palace of Jesdem, where he
celebrated Christmas.
628. 1st January — Heraclius passed the river Toma,
took the palace of Beglali with its parks, and Dastagerd, where Chosroes had resided for twenty-four years
and accumulated great treasures.
Heraclius recovered three hundred standards taken by
the Persians from the Romans at different times, and passed the feast of
Epiphany (6th January) at Dastagerd. He quitted Dastagerd on the 7th, and in three days reached the
neighbourhood of Ctesiphon, and encamped twelve miles from the Arba, which he found was not fordable. He then ascended the
Arba to Siazouron, and
spent the month of February in that country. In March he spent seven days at Varzan, where he received news of the revolution which had
taken place, and that Siroes had dethroned his
father. Heraclius then retired from the neighbourhood of Ctesiphon by Siarzoura, Chalchas, Jesdem. He passed mount Zara (Zagros), where there was a
great fall of snow during the month of March, and encamped near Ganzaca, which had then three thousand houses.
3rd April — An ambassador of Siroes
arrived at the camp of Heraclius. Peace concluded. 8th April — Heraclius
quitted his camp at Ganzaca.
15th May — His letters announcing peace were read in
the church of St. Sophia at Constantinople.
629. Death of Siroes, or Kabad, succeeded by his son Ardeshir.
Heraclius visits Jerusalem, and restores the Holy Cross to the keeping
of the patriarch.
630. Heraclius at Hierapolis occupied with
ecclesiastical reforms.
632. Death of Mahomet, 7th or 8th June.
Aera of
Yesdedjerd, 15th August
633. The chronology of the Saracen campaigns in Syria
is extremely uncertain. The accounts of the Greek and Arabian writers require
to be adjusted by the sequence of a few events which can be fixed with
accuracy.
Bosra besieged, and perhaps it was taken early in the
following year.
Abubekr was occupied, for some time after the death of Mahomet, in reducing the
rebellious Arabs to submission, and in subduing several false prophets.
634. 30th July— Battle of Adjnadin.
22nd August — Death of Abubekr.
September — Battle of Yerrauk
(Hieromax). Omar was already proclaimed caliph in the
Syrian army.
635. Damascus taken after a siege of several months.
The siege commenced after the battle of Yermuk.
Heraclius, taking the Holy Cross with him, quitted
Syria, and retired to Constantinople.
636. Various towns on the sea-coast taken by the
Saracens, and another battle fought
Vahan, the commander of the Roman army, appears to have
been proclaimed emperor in this or the preceding year.
637. Capitulation of Jerusalem. The date of Omar’s
entry into Jerusalem and of the duration of the siege are both uncertain.
638. Invasion of Syria by a Roman army from Diarbekr, which besieges Emesa,
but is defeated.
Antioch
taken. —
639. Jasdos takes Edessa and
conquers Mesopotamia. —
December
— Amrou invades Egypt.
640. The 19th Hegira began 2nd January 640.
The
Caliph Omar orders a census of his dominions.
Cairo
taken. Capitulation of Mokaukas for the Copts.
641. February or March — Death of Heraclius. His reign
of 30 years, 4 months, 6 days, would terminate 10th February.
Heraclius Constantine reigned 103 days, to 24th May.
Heracleonas sole emperor less than five months.
October — Constans II.
December — Alexandria taken by Saracens, retaken by
Romans, and recovered by Saracens.
643. Omar rebuilds or repairs the temple of
Jerusalem.
Canal of
Suez restored by Amrou.
644. Death of Omar.
647. Saracens drive Romans out of Africa, and impose
tribute on the province.
Moawyah invades Cyprus.
648. Moawyah besieges Aradus, and takes it by capitulation.
Constans
II publishes the Type.
653. Moawyah takes Rhodes,
and destroys the Colossus.
654. Pope Martin banished to Cherson.
655. Constans II defeated by the Saracens in a great
naval battle off Mount Phoenix in Lycia.
656. Othman assassinated, 17th June.
658. Expedition of Constans II against the Sclavonians.
Peace
concluded with Moawyah.
659. Constans II puts his brother Theodosius to death.
661. Murder of Ali, 22nd January.
Constans
II quits Constantinople, and passes the winter at Athens.
662. Saracens ravage Romania (Asia Minor), and carry
off many prisoners.
663. Constans II visits Rome.
668. The Saracens advance to Chalcedon, and take Amorium, where they leave a garrison; but it is soon
retaken.
Constans II assassinated at Syracuse,
Constantine IV (Pogonatus).
669. The Saracens carry off 180,000 prisoners from
Africa.
The
troops of the Orient theme demand that the brothers of Constantine IV should
receive the imperial crown, in order that three emperors might reign on earth
to represent the Trinity in heaven.
670. Saracens pass the winter at Cyzicus.
671. Saracens pass the winter at Smyrna and in
Cilicia.
672. Constantine IV prepares ships to throw Greek fire
on the Saracens, who besiege Constantinople.
673. Saracens, who have wintered at Cyzicus, penetrate
into the port of Constantinople, and attack Magnaura
and Cyclobium, the two forts at the continental
angles of the city.
Saracens
again pass the winter at Cyzicus
674. Third year of the siege of Constantinople.
Saracen
troops pass the winter in Crete.
677. Sixth year of the siege of Constantinople.
The Mardaites alarm the Caliph Moawyah
by their conquests on Mount Lebanon.
Thessalonica besieged by the Avars and Sclavonians.
678. Seventh year of the siege of Constantinople.
The
Saracen fleet destroyed by Greek fire invented by Callinicus.
Bulgarians found a monarchy south of the Danube, in the country still
called Bulgaria.
Peace
concluded with the Caliph Moawyah.
679. War with the Bulgarians.
680. Death of the Caliph Moawyah.
Sixth
general council of the church.
681. Heraclius and Tiberius, the brothers of
Constantine IV, are deprived of the imperial title.
684. The Caliph Abdalmelik
offers to purchase peace by the payment of an annual tribute of 365,000 pieces
of gold, 365 slaves, and 365 horses.
685. September — Death of Constantine IV (Pogonatus).
Justinian II ascends the throne, aged sixteen.
686. Treaty of peace between the emperor and the
caliph.
687. Emigration of Mardaites.
The Sclavonians of Strymon
carry their piratical expeditions into the Propontis.
689. Justinian II forces the Greeks to emigrate from
Cyprus.
691. Defeat of Justinian II, and desertion of the Sclavonian colonists.
692. General council of the
church in Trullo,
The haratch established by the caliph.
695. Justinian II deposed and his nose cut off, and he
is banished to Cherson.
Leontius emperor.
697. Saracens carry off great numbers of prisoners
from Romania (Asia Minor).
First
doge of Venice elected.
Carthage
taken by the Romans, and garrisoned.
698. Carthage retaken by the Saracens.
Leontius dethroned and his nose cut off.
Tiberius
III (Apsimar), emperor.
703. Saracens defeated in Cilicia by Heraclius, the
brother of Tiberius III.
705- Justinian II (Rhinotmetus)
recovers possession of the empire.
708. The Saracens push their ravages to the Bosphorus.
709. Moslemah transports 80,000 Saracens from Lampsacus into Thrace.
710. Ravenna and Cherson treated with inhuman cruelty
by Justinian II.
711. Justinian II dethroned and murdered.
Philippicus emperor.
713. Philippicus dethroned, and his eyes put out.
Anastasius II emperor.
716. Anastasius II dethroned.
Theodosius III emperor.
Leo the
Isaurian relieves Amorium, concludes a truce with
Moslemah, and is proclaimed emperor by the army.
VOLUME I
GREECE UNDER THE ROMANS
CHAPTER I
From the Conquest of Greece to the Establishment of
Constantinople as Capital of the Roman Empire. B.C. 146 — A.D. 330,
The conquests of Alexander the Great effected a
permanent change in the political condition of the Greek nation, and this
change powerfully influenced its moral and social state during the whole period
of its subjection to the Roman empire. The international system of policy by
which Alexander connected Greece with Western Asia and Egypt, was only effaced
by the religion of Mahomet and the conquests of the Arabs. Though Alexander was
himself a Greek, both from education, and the prejudices cherished by the pride
of ancestry, still neither the people of Macedonia, nor the chief part of the
army, whose discipline and valour had secured his victories, was Greek, either
in language or feelings. Had Alexander, therefore, determined on organizing his
empire with the view of uniting the Macedonians and Persians in common feelings
of opposition to the Greek nation, there can be no doubt that he could easily
have accomplished the design. The Greeks might then have found themselves
enabled to adopt a very different course in their national career from that
which they were compelled to follow by the powerful influence exercised over
them by Alexander’s conduct. Alexander himself, undoubtedly, perceived that the
greater numbers of the Persians, and their equality, if not superiority, in
civilization to the Macedonians, rendered it necessary for him to seek some
powerful ally to prevent the absorption of the Macedonians in the Persian
population, the loss of their language, manners, and nationality, and the
speedy change of his empire into the sovereignty of a mere Graeco-Persian
dynasty. It did not escape his discernment, that the political institutions of
the Greeks created a principle of nationality capable of combating the
unalterable laws of the Medes and Persians.
Alexander was the noblest model of a conqueror; his
ambition aspired at eclipsing the glory of his unparalleled victories by the
universal prosperity which was to flow from his civil government. New cities
and extended commerce were to found an era in the world’s history. Even the
strength of his empire was to be based on a political principle which he has
the merit of discovering, and of which he proved the efficacy; this principle
was the amalgamation of his subjects into one people by permanent institutions.
All other conquerors have endeavoured to augment their power by the subjection
of one race to another. The merit of Alexander is very much increased by the
nature of his position with regard to the Greek nation. The Greeks were not
favourably disposed either towards his empire or his person; they would
willingly have destroyed both as the surest way of securing their own liberty.
But the moral energy of the Greek national character did not escape the
observation of Alexander, and he resolved to render this quality available for
the preservation of his empire, by introducing into the East those municipal
institutions which gave it vigour, and thus facilitate the infusion of some
portion of the Hellenic character into the hearts of his conquered subjects.
The moderation of Alexander in the execution of his
plans of reform and change is as remarkable as the wisdom of his extensive
projects. In order to mould the Asiatics to his
wishes, he did not attempt to enforce laws and constitutions similar to those
of Greece. He profited too well by the lessons of Aristotle to think of
treating man as a machine. But he introduced Greek civilization as an important
element in his civil government, and established Greek colonies with political
rights throughout his conquests. It is true that he seized all the unlimited
power of the Persian monarchs, but, at the same time, he strove to secure
administrative responsibility, and to establish free institutions in municipal
government. Any laws or constitution which Alexander could have promulgated to
enforce his system of consolidating the population of his empire into one body,
would most probably have been immediately repealed by his successors, in
consequence of the hostile feelings of the Macedonian army. But it was more difficult
to escape from the tendency imprinted on the administration by the systematic
arrangements which Alexander had introduced. He seems to have been fully aware
of this fact, though it is impossible to trace the whole series of measures he
adopted to accelerate the completion of his great project of creating a new
state of society, and a new nation, as well as a new empire, in the imperfect
records of his civil administration which have survived. His death left his own
scheme incomplete, yet his success was wonderful; for though his empire was
immediately dismembered, its numerous portions long retained a deep imprint of
that Greek civilization which he had introduced. The influence of his
philanthropic policy survived the kingdoms which his arms had founded, and
tempered the despotic sway of the Romans by its superior power over society;
nor was the influence of Alexander’s government utterly effaced in Asia until
Mahomet changed the government, the religion, and the frame of society in the
East.
The monarchs of Egypt, Syria, Pergamus,
and Bactriana, who were either Macedonians or Greeks,
respected the civil institutions, the language, and the religion of their
native subjects, however adverse they might be to Greek usages; and the
sovereigns of Bithynia, Pontus, Cappadocia, and Parthia, though native princes,
retained a deep tincture of Greek civilization after they had thrown off the
Macedonian yoke. They not only encouraged the arts, sciences, and literature of
Greece, but they even protected the peculiar political constitutions of the
Greek colonies settled in their dominions, though at variance with the Asiatic
views of monarchical government.
The Greeks and Macedonians long continued separate
nations, though a number of the causes which ultimately produced their fusion
began to exert some influence shortly after the death of Alexander. The moral
and social causes which enabled the Greeks to acquire a complete superiority
over the Macedonian race, and ultimately to absorb it as a component element of
their own nation, were the same which afterwards enabled them to destroy the
Roman influence in the East. For several generations, the Greeks appeared the
feebler party in their struggle with the Macedonians. The new kingdoms, into
which Alexander’s empire was divided, were placed in very different
circumstances from the older Greek states. Two separate divisions were created
in the Hellenic world, and the Macedonian monarchies on the one hand, and the
free Greeks on the other, formed two distinct international systems of policy.
The Macedonian sovereigns had a balance of power to maintain, in which the free
states of Europe could only be directly interested when the overwhelming
influence of a conqueror placed their independence in jeopardy. The multifarious
diplomatic relations of the free states among themselves required constant
attention, not only to maintain their political independence, but even to
protect their property and civil rights. These two great divisions of Hellenic
society were often governed by opposite views and feelings in morals and
politics, though their various members were continually placed in alliance as
well as collision by their struggles to preserve the balance of power of their
respective systems.
The immense power and wealth of the Seleucidae and Ptolemies rendered vain all the efforts of
the small European states to maintain the high military, civil, and literary
rank they had previously occupied. Their best soldiers, their wisest statesmen,
and their ablest authors, were induced to emigrate to a more profitable and
extensive scene of action. Alexandria became the capital of the Hellenic world.
Yet the history of the European states still continued to maintain its
predominant interest, and as a political lesson, the struggles of the Achaian.
League to defend the independence of Greece against Macedonia and Rome, are not
less instructive than the annals of Athens and Sparta. The European Greeks at
this period perceived all the danger to which their liberties were exposed from
the wealth, and power of the Asiatic monarchies, and they vainly endeavoured to
effect a combination of all the free states into one federal body. Whatever
might have been the success of such a combination, it certainly offered the
only hope of preserving the liberty of Greece against the powerful states with
which the altered condition of the civilized world had brought her into
contact.
At the very time when the Macedonian kings were
attacking the independence of Greece, and the Asiatic courts undermining the
morals of the Greek nation, the Greek colonies, whose independence, from their
remote situation, was secured against the attacks of the Eastern monarchs, were
conquered by the Romans. Many circumstances tending to weaken the Greeks, and
over which they had no control, followed one another with fatal celerity. The
invasion of the Gauls, though bravely repulsed,
inflicted great losses on Greece. Shortly after, the Romans completed the
conquest of the Greek states in Italy. From that time the Sicilian Greeks were
too feeble to be anything but spectators of the fierce struggle of the Romans
and Carthaginians for the sovereignty of their island, and though the city of
Syracuse courageously defended its independence, the struggle was a hopeless
tribute to national glory. The cities of Cyrenaica had been long subject to the
Ptolemies, and the republics on the shores of the Black Sea had been unable to
maintain their liberties against the repeated attacks of the sovereigns of
Pontus and Bithynia.
Though the Macedonians and Greeks were separated into
two divisions by the opposite interests of the Asiatic monarchies and the
European republics, still they were united by a powerful bond of national
feelings. There was a strong similarity in the education, religion, and social
position of the individual citizen in every state, whether Greek or Macedonian.
Wherever Hellenic civilization was received, the free citizens formed only one
part of the population, whether the other was composed of slaves or subjects;
and this peculiarity placed their civil interests as Greeks in a more important
light than their political differences as subjects of various states. The
Macedonian Greeks of Asia and Egypt were a ruling class, governed, it is true,
by an absolute sovereign, but having their interest so identified with his, in
the vital question of retaining the administration of the country, that the
Greeks, even in the absolute monarchies, formed a favoured and privileged
class. In the Greek republics, the case was not very dissimilar; there, too, a
small body of free citizens ruled a large slave or subject population, whose
numbers required not only constant attention on the part of the rulers, but
likewise a deep conviction of an ineffaceable separation in interests and
character, to preserve the ascendency. This peculiarity in the position of the
Greeks cherished their exclusive nationality, and created a feeling that the
laws of honour and of nations forbade free men ever to make common cause with
slaves. The influence of this feeling was visible for centuries on the laws and
education of the free citizens of Greece, and it was equally powerful wherever
Hellenic civilization spread.
Alexander’s conquests soon exercised a widely extended
influence on the commerce, literature, morals, and religion of the Greeks. A
direct communication was opened with India, with the centre of Asia, and with
the southern coast of Africa. This immense extension of the commercial
transactions of the Asiatic and Egyptian Greeks diminished the relative wealth
and importance of the European states, while, at the same time, their
stationary position assumed the aspect of decline from the rapidly increasing
power and civilization of Western Europe. A considerable trade began to be
carried on directly with the great commercial depots of the East which had
formerly afforded large profits to the Greeks of Europe by passing through
their hands. As soon as Rome rose to some degree of power, its inhabitants, if
not its franchised citizens, traded with the East, as is proved by the
existence of political relations between Rome and Rhodes, more than three
centuries before the Christian era. There can be no doubt that the connection
between the two states had its origin in the interests of trade. New channels
were opened for mercantile enterprise as direct communications diminished the
expense of transport. The increase of trade rendered piracy a profitable
occupation. Both the sovereigns of Egypt and the merchants of Rhodes favoured
the pirates who plundered the Syrians and Phoenicians, so that trading vessels
could only navigate with safety under the protection of powerful states, in
order to secure their property from extortion and plunder, These alterations in
commercial affairs proved every way disadvantageous to the small republics of
European Greece; and Alexandria and Rhodes soon occupied the position once held
by Corinth and Athens.
The literature of a people is so intimately connected
with the local circumstances which influence education, taste, and morals, that
it can never be transplanted without undergoing a great alteration. It is not
wonderful, therefore, that the literature of the Greeks, after the extension of
their dominion in the East, should have undergone a great change; but it seems
remarkable that this change should have proved invariably injurious to all its
peculiar excellencies. It is singular, at the same time, to find how little the
Greeks occupied themselves in the examination of the stores of knowledge
possessed by the Eastern nations. The situation and interests of the Asiatic
and Egyptian Greeks must have compelled many to learn the languages of the
countries which they inhabited, and the literature of the East was laid open to
their investigation. They appear to have availed themselves very sparingly of
these advantages. Even in history and geography, they made but small additions
to the information already collected by Herodotus, Ctesias,
and Xenophon; and this supercilious neglect of foreign literature has been the
cause of depriving modern times of all records of the powerful and civilized
nations which flourished while Greece was in a state of barbarism. Had the
Macedonians or Romans treated the history and literature of Greece with the
contempt which the Greeks showed to the records of the Phoenicians, Persians,
and Egyptians, it is not probable that any very extensive remains of later
Greek literature would have reached us. At a subsequent period, when the Arabs
had conquered the Syrian and Egyptian Greeks, their neglect of the language and
literature of Greece was severely felt.
The munificence of the Ptolemies, the Seleucidae, and the kings of Pergamus,
enabled their capitals to eclipse the literary glory of the cities of Greece.
The eminent men of Europe sought their fortunes abroad; but when genius
emigrated it could not transplant those circumstances which created and
sustained it. In Egypt and in Syria, Greek literature lost its national
character; and that divine instinct in the portraiture of nature, which had
been the charm of its earlier age, never emigrated. This deficiency forms,
indeed, the marked distinction between the literature of the Grecian and
Macedonian periods; and it was a natural consequence of the different
situations held by literary men. Among the Asiatic and Alexandrine population,
literature was a trade, knowledge was confined to the higher classes, and
literary productions were addressed to a public widely dispersed and dissimilar
in many tastes and habits. The authors who addressed themselves to such a
public could not escape a vagueness of expression on some subjects, and an
affectation of occult profundity on others. Learning and science, in so far as
they could be rendered available for upholding literary renown, were most
studiously cultivated, and most successfully employed; but deep feeling, warm
enthusiasm, and simple truth were, from the very nature of the case,
impossible.
The frame of society in earlier times had been very
different in the free states of Greece. Literature and the fine arts then
formed a portion of the usual education and ordinary life of every citizen in
the State; they were consequently completely under the influence of public
opinion, and received the impress of the national mind which they reflected
from the mirror of genius. The effects of this popular character in Greek
literature and art are evident, in the total freedom of all the productions of
Greece, in her best days, from anything that partakes of mannerism or
exaggeration. The truer to nature any production could be rendered, which was
to be offered to the attention of the people, the abler would they be to
appreciate its merits, and their applause would be obtained with greater
certainty; yet, at the same time, the farther the expression of nature could be
removed from vulgarity, the higher would be the degree of general admiration.
The sentiment necessary for the realization of ideal perfection, which modern
civilization vainly requires from those who labour only for the polished and
artificial classes of a society broken into sections, arose in profusion, under
the free instinct of the popular mind to reverence simplicity and nature, when
combined with beauty and dignity.
The connection of the Greeks with Assyria and Egypt,
nevertheless, aided their progress in mathematics and scientific knowledge; yet
astrology was the only new object of science which their Eastern studies added
to the domain of the human intellect. From the time Berosus
introduced astrology into Cos, it spread with inconceivable rapidity in Europe.
It soon exercised a powerful influence over the religious opinions of the
higher classes, naturally inclined to fatalism, and assisted in demoralizing
the private and public character of the Greeks. From the Greeks it spread with
additional empiricism among the Romans: it even maintained its ground against
Christianity, with which it long strove to form an alliance, and it has only
been extirpated in modern times. The Romans, as long as they clung to their
national usages and religious feelings, endeavoured to resist the progress of a
study so destructive to private and public virtue; but it embodied opinions
which were rapidly gaining ground. In the time of the Caesars, astrology was
generally believed, and extensively practised.
The general corruption of morals which followed from
the Macedonian conquests, was the inevitable effect of the position in which
mankind were everywhere placed. The accumulated treasures of the Persian
Empire, which must have amounted to between seventy and eighty millions
sterling, were suddenly thrown into general circulation, and the large sums
which passed into the hands of the soldiery enriched the very worst classes of
society. The Greeks profited greatly by the expenditure of these treasures, and
their social position became soon so completely changed by the facilities
afforded them of gaining high pay, and of enjoying luxury in the service of
foreign princes, that public opinion ceased to exercise a direct influence on
private character . The mixture of Macedonians, Greeks, and natives, in the
conquered countries of the East, was very incomplete, and they generally formed
distinct classes of society: this circumstance alone contributed to weaken the
feelings of moral responsibility, which are the most powerful preservatives of
virtue. It is difficult to imagine a state of society more completely destitute
of moral restraint than that in which the Asiatic Greeks lived. Public opinion
was powerless to enforce even an outward respect for virtue; military
accomplishments, talents for civil administration, literary eminence, and
devotion to the power of an arbitrary sovereign, were the direct roads to
distinction and wealth; honesty and virtue were very secondary qualities. In
all countries or societies where a class becomes predominant, a conventional
character is formed, according to the exigencies of the case, as the standard
of an honourable man; and it is usually very different indeed from what is
really necessary to constitute a virtuous, or even an honest citizen.
With regard to the European Greeks, high rank at the
Asiatic courts was often suddenly, and indeed accidentally, placed within their
reach by qualities that had in general only been cultivated as a means of
obtaining a livelihood. It is not, therefore, wonderful that wealth and power,
obtained under such circumstances, should have been wasted in luxury, and
squandered in the gratification of lawless passions. Yet, in spite of the
complaints most justly recorded in history against the luxury, idleness,
avarice, and debauchery of the Greeks, it seems surprising that the people
resisted, so effectually as it did, the powerful means at work to accomplish
the national ruin. There never existed a people more perfectly at liberty to
gratify every passion. During two hundred and fifty years, the Greeks were the
dominant class in Asia; and the corrupting influence of this predominance was
extended to the whole frame of society, in their European as well as their
Asiatic possessions. The history of the Achaian League, and the endeavours of
Agis and Cleomenes to restore the ancient
institutions of Sparta, prove that public and private virtue were still admired
and appreciated by the native Greeks. The Romans, who were the loudest in
condemning and satirizing the vices of the nation, proved far less able to
resist the allurements of wealth and power; and in the course of one century,
their demoralization far exceeded the corruption of the Greeks. The severe tone
in which Polybius animadverts on the vices of his countrymen, must always be
contrasted with the picture of Roman depravity in the pages of Suetonius and
Tacitus, in order to form a correct estimate of the moral position of the two
nations. The Greeks afford a sad spectacle of the debasing influence of wealth
and power on the higher classes; but the Romans, after their Asiatic conquests,
present the loathsome picture of a whole people throwing aside all moral
restraint, and openly wallowing in those vices which the higher classes
elsewhere have generally striven to conceal.
The religion of the Greeks was little more than a
section of the political constitution of the State. The power of religion
depended on custom. Strictly speaking, therefore, the Greeks never possessed
anything more than a national form of worship, and their religious feelings
produced no very important influence on their moral conduct. The conquests of
Alexander effected as great a change in religion as in manners. The Greeks
willingly adopted the superstitious practices of the conquered nations, and,
without hesitation, paid their devotions at the shrines of foreign divinities;
but, strange to say, they never appear to have profoundly investigated either
the metaphysical opinions or the religious doctrines of the Eastern nations. They
treated with neglect the pure theism of Moses, and the sublime religious system
of Zoroaster, while they cultivated a knowledge of the astrology, necromancy,
and sorcery of the Chaldaeans, Syrians, and
Egyptians.
The separation of the higher and lower ranks of
society, which only commenced among the Greeks after their Asiatic conquests,
produced a marked effect on the religious ideas of the nation. Among the
wealthy and the learned, indifference to all religions rapidly gained ground.
The philosophical speculations of Alexander’s age tended towards scepticism;
and the state of mankind, in the following century, afforded practical proofs
to the ancients of the insufficiency of virtue and reason to insure happiness
and success either in public or private life. The consequence was, that the
greater number embraced the belief in a blind overruling destiny, — while a few
became atheists. The absurdities of popular paganism had been exposed and
ridiculed, while its mythology had not yet been explained by philosophical
allegories. No system of philosophy, on the other hand, had sought to enforce
its moral truths among the people, by declaring the principle of man's
responsibility. The lower orders were without philosophy, the higher without
religion.
This separation in the feelings and opinions of the
different ranks of society, rendered the value of public opinion comparatively
insignificant to the philosophers; and consequently, their doctrines were no
longer addressed to the popular mind. The education of the lower orders, which
had always depended on the public lessons they had received from voluntary
teachers in the public places of resort, was henceforward neglected; and the
priests of the temples, the diviners and soothsayers, became their instructors
and guides. Under such guidance, the old mythological fables, and the new
wonders of the Eastern magicians, were employed as the surest means of
rendering the superstitious feelings of the people, and the popular dread of
supernatural influences, a source of profit to the priesthood. While the
educated became the votaries of Chaldaeans and
astrologers, the ignorant were the admirers of Egyptians and conjurors.
The Greek nation, immediately before the conquest of
the Romans, was rich both in wealth and numbers. Alexander had thrown the
accumulated treasures of centuries into circulation; the dismemberment of his
empire prevented his successors from draining the various countries of the
world, to expend their resources on a single city. The number of capitals and independent
cities in the Grecian world kept money in circulation, enabled trade to
flourish, and caused the Greek population to increase. The elements of national
prosperity are so various and complex, that a knowledge of the numbers of a
people affords no certain criterion for estimating their wealth and happiness;
still, if it were possible to obtain accurate accounts of the population of all
the countries inhabited by the Greeks after the death of Alexander, such
knowledge would afford better means of estimating the real progress or decline
of social civilization, than either the records which history has preserved of
the results of wars and negotiations, or than the memorials of art and
literature. The population of Greece, as of every other country, must have
varied very much at different periods; even the proportion of the slave to the
free inhabitants can never have long remained exactly the same. We are,
unfortunately, so completely ignorant of the relative density of the Greek
population at different periods, and so well assured that its absolute numbers
depended on many causes which it is now impossible to appreciate fully, that it
would be a vain endeavour to attempt to fix the period when the Greek race was
most numerous. The empire of the Greeks was most extensive during the century
which elapsed immediately after the death of Alexander; but it would be unsafe
to draw, from that single fact, any certain conclusion concerning the numbers
of the Greek race at that period, as compared with the following century.
The fallacy of any inferences concerning the
population of ancient times, which are drawn from the numbers of the
inhabitants in modern times, is apparent, when we reflect on the rapid increase
of mankind, in the greater part of Europe, in late years. Gibbon estimates the
population of the Roman Empire, in the time of Claudius, at one hundred and
twenty millions, and he supposed modern Europe to contain, at the time he
wrote, one hundred and seven millions. Seventy years have not elapsed, and yet
the countries which he enumerated now contain upwards of two hundred and ten
millions. The variations which have taken place in the numbers of the Jews at
different periods, illustrate the vicissitudes to which an expatriated
population, like a large portion of the Greek nation, is always liable. The
Jews have often been far less — perhaps they have been frequently more numerous
— than they are at present, yet their numbers now seem to equal what they were
at the era of the greatest wealth, power, and glory of their nation under
Solomon. A very judicious writer has estimated the population of continental
Greece, Peloponnesus, and the Ionian Islands, at three millions and a half,
during the period which elapsed from the Persian wars to the death of Alexander.
Now, if we admit a similar density of population in Crete, Cyprus, the islands
of the Archipelago, and the colonies on the coasts of Thrace and Asia Minor,
this number would require to be more than doubled. The population of European
Greece declined after the time of Alexander. Money became more abundant; it was
easy for a Greek to make his fortune abroad; increased wealth augmented the
wants of the free citizens, and the smaller states became incapable of
supporting as large a free population as in earlier times, when wants were
fewer, and emigration difficult. The size of properties and the number of
slaves, therefore, increased. The diminution which had taken place in the
population of Greece must, however, have been trifling, when compared with the
immense increase in the Greek population of Asia and Egypt; in Magna Graecia,
Sicily, and Cyrene, the number of the Greeks had not decreased. Greek
civilization had extended itself from the banks of the Indus to the Pillars of
Hercules, and from the shores of the Palus Maeotis to the island of Dioscorides.
It may therefore be admitted, that the Greeks were, at no earlier period of
their history, more numerous than at the time the Romans commenced the
subjugation of the countries which they inhabited.
The history of the Greeks under the Roman domination
tends to correct the opinion that national changes are to be solely attributed
to those remarkable occurrences which occupy the most prominent place in the
annals of states. It not unfrequently happened that those events which produced
the greatest change on the fortunes of the Romans, exerted no very important or
permanent influence on the fate of the Greeks ; while, on the other hand, some
change in the state of India, Bactria, Ethiopia, or Arabia, by altering the
direction of commerce, powerfully influenced their prosperity and future
destinies. A revolution in the commercial intercourse between Europe and
eastern Asia, which threw ancient Greece out of the direct line of trade,
assisted in producing the great changes which took place in the Greek nation,
from the period of the subjection of Greece by the Romans, to that of the
conquest of the semi-Greek provinces which had belonged to the Macedonian
empire, by the Saracens. The history of mankind requires a more accurate
illustration than has yet been undertaken, of the causes of the depopulation
and impoverishment of the people, as well as of the general degradation of all
the political governments with which we are acquainted, during the period
embraced in this volume; but the task belongs to universal history. To obtain a
correct view of the social condition of the European nations in the darkest
periods of the middle ages, it is necessary to examine society through a Greek
as well as a Roman medium, and to weigh the experience and the passions of the
East against the force and the prejudices of the West. It will then be found,
that many germs of that civilization which seemed to have arisen in the dark
ages as a natural development of society, were really borrowed from the Greek
people and the Byzantine empire, in which a Graeco-Macedonian civilization long
pervaded society.
Sect. I
Immediate
causes of the Conquest of Greece by the Romans
The great difference which existed in the social
condition of the Greeks and Romans during the whole of their national
existence, must be kept in view, in order to form a just idea of their relative
position when ruled by the same government. The Romans formed a nation with the
organization of a single city; their political government, always partaking of
its municipal origin, was a type of concentration in administrative power, and
was enabled to pursue its objects with undeviating steadiness of purpose. The
Greeks were a people composed of a number of rival states, whose attention was
incessantly diverted to various objects. The great end of existence among the
Romans was war; they were the children of Mars, and they reverenced their
progenitor with the most fervent enthusiasm. Agriculture itself was only
honoured from necessity. Among the Greeks, civil virtues were called into
action by the multifarious exigencies of society, and were honoured and deified
by the nation. Linked together by an international system of independent
states, the Greeks regarded war as a means of obtaining some definite object,
in accordance with the established balance of power. A state of peace was, in
their view, the natural state of mankind. The Romans regarded war as their
permanent occupation; their national and individual ambition was exclusively
directed to conquest. The subjection of their enemies, or a perpetual struggle
for supremacy, was the only alternative that war presented to their minds.
The success of the Roman arms and the conquest of
Greece were the natural results of concentrated national feelings, and superior
military organization, contending with an ill-cemented political league, and an
inferior military system. The Roman was instructed to regard himself merely as
a component part of the republic, and to view Rome as placed in opposition to
the rest of mankind. The Greek, though he possessed the moral feeling of
nationality quite as powerfully as the Roman, could not concentrate equal
political energy. The Greeks after the period of the Macedonian conquests,
occupied the double position of members of a widely-spread and dominant people,
and of citizens of independent states. Their minds were enlarged by this
extension of their sphere of civilization; but what they gained in general
feelings of philanthropy, they appear to have lost in patriotic attachment to
the interest of their native states.
It would be a vain exercise of ingenuity to speculate
on the course of events, and on the progress of the ancient world, had the
national spirit of Greece been awakened in her struggle with Rome, and the war
between the two peoples involved the question of Greek nationality, as well as
political independence. On the one hand, Greece and Rome might be supposed
existing as rival states, mutually aiding the progress of mankind by their emulation;
on the other, the extinction of the Greek people, as well as the destruction of
their political government, might be regarded as a not improbable event. No
strong national feeling was, however, raised in Greece by the wars with Rome,
and the contest remained only a political one in the eyes of the people;
consequently, even if the military power of the belligerents had been more
nearly balanced than it really was, the struggle could hardly have terminated
in any other way than by the subjugation of the Greeks.
It seems at first sight more difficult to explain the
facility with which the Greeks accommodated themselves to the Roman sway, and
the rapidity with which they sank into political insignificancy, than the ease
with which they were vanquished in the field. The fact, however, is undeniable,
that the conquest was generally viewed with satisfaction by the great body of
the inhabitants of Greece, who considered the destruction of the numerous small
independent governments in the country as a necessary step towards improving
their own condition. The political constitutions even of the most democratic
states of Greece excluded so large a portion of the inhabitants from all share
in the public administration, and after the introduction of large mercenary
armies, military service became so severe a burden on the free citizens, that
the majority looked with indifference on the loss of their independence, when
that loss appeared to insure a permanent state of peace. The selfishness of the
Greek aristocracy, which was prominently displayed at every period of history,
proved peculiarly injurious in the latter days of Greek independence. The
aristocracy of the Greek cities and states indulged their ambition and cupidity
to the ruin of their country. The selfishness of the Roman aristocracy was
possibly as great, but it was very different. It found gratification in
increasing the power and glory of Rome, and it identified itself with pride and
patriotism; Greek selfishness, on the contrary, submitted to every meanness
from which an aristocracy usually recoils; and to gratify its passions, it
sacrificed its country. Greece had arrived at that period of civilization, when
political questions were determined by financial reasons, and the hope of a
diminution of the public burdens was a powerful argument in favour of
submission to Rome. When the Romans conquered Macedonia, they fixed the tribute
at one half the amount which had been paid to the Macedonian kings.
At the period of the Roman conquest, public opinion
had been vitiated, as well as weakened, by the corrupt influence of the Asiatic
monarchies. Many of the Greek princes employed large sums in purchasing the
military services and civic flatteries of the free states. The political and
military leaders throughout Greece were thus, by means of foreign alliances,
rendered masters of resources far beyond what the unassisted revenues of the
free states could have placed at their disposal. It soon became evident that
the fate of many of the free states depended on their alliances with the kings
of Macedonia, Egypt, Syria, and Pergamus; and the
citizens could not avoid the despairing conclusion that no exertion on their
part could produce any decisive effect in securing the tranquillity of Greece.
They could only increase their own taxes, and bring to their own homes all the
miseries of a most inhuman system of warfare. This state of public affairs
caused the despair which induced the Acarnanians and the citizens of Abydos to
adopt the heroic resolution not to survive the loss of their independence; but
its more general effect was to spread public and private demoralization through
all ranks of society. Peace alone, to the reflecting Greeks, seemed capable of
restoring security of property, and of re-establishing due respect for the
principles of justice; and peace seemed only attainable by submission to the
Romans. The continuation of a state of war, which was rapidly laying the
fortified towns in ruin, and consuming the resources of the land, was regarded
by the independent Greeks as a far greater evil than Roman supremacy. So
ardently was the termination of the contest desired, that a common proverb,
expressive of a wish that the Romans might speedily prevail, was everywhere
current. This saying, which was common after the conquest, has been preserved
by Polybius: “If we had not been quickly ruined, we should not have been
saved”.
It was some time before the Greeks had great reason to
regret their fortune. A combination of causes, which could hardly have entered
into the calculations of any politician, enabled them to preserve their
national institutions, and to exercise all their former social influence, even
after the annihilation of their political existence. Their vanity was flattered
by their admitted superiority in arts and literature, and by the respect paid
to their usages and prejudices by the Romans. Their political subjection was at
first not very burdensome; and a considerable portion of the nation was allowed
to retain the appearance of independence. Athens and Sparta were honoured with
the title of allies of Rome. The nationality of the Greeks was so interwoven
with their municipal institutions, that the Romans found it impossible to
abolish the local administration; and an imperfect attempt, made at the time of
the conquest of Achaia, was soon abandoned. These local institutions ultimately
modified the Roman administration itself, long before the Roman Empire ceased
to exist; and, even though the Greeks were compelled to adopt the civil law and
judicial forms of Rome, its political authority in the East was guided by the
feelings of the Greeks, and moulded according to Greek customs.
The social rank which the Greeks held in the eyes of
their conquerors, at the time of their subjection, is not to be overlooked. The
bulk of the Greek population in Europe consisted of landed proprietors,
occupying a position which would have given some rank in Roman society. No
class precisely similar existed at Rome, where a citizen that did not belong to
the senate, the aristocracy, or the administration, was of very little account,
for the people always remained in an inferior social rank. The higher classes
at Rome always felt either contempt or hostility towards the populace of the
city; and even when the emperors were induced to favour the people, from a wish
to depress the great families of the aristocracy, they were unable to efface the
general feeling of contempt with which the people was regarded. To the Greeks,
— who had always maintained a higher social position, not only in Europe, but
also in the kingdoms of the Seleucidae and the
Ptolemies, — a high position was conceded by the Roman aristocracy, as it
awakened no feelings either of hostility or jealousy. Polybius was an example.
Sect. II
Treatment of Greece after its Conquest
The Romans generally commenced by treating their
provinces with mildness. The government of Sicily was arranged on a basis which
certainly did not augment the burdens of the inhabitants. The tribute imposed
on Macedonia was less than the amount of taxation which had been previously
paid to the native kings; and there is no reason for supposing that the burdens
of the Greeks, whose country was embraced in the province of Achaia, were
increased by the conquest. The local municipal administration of the separate
cities was allowed to exist, but, in order to enforce submission more readily,
their constitutions were modified by fixing a census, which restricted the
franchise in the democratic commonwealths. Some states were long allowed to
retain their own political government, and were ranked as allies of the
republic. It is impossible to trace the changes which the Romans gradually
effected in the financial and administrative condition of Greece with
chronological precision. Facts, often separated by a long series of years,
require to be gleaned; and caution must be used in attributing to them a
precise influence on the state of society at other periods. The Roman senate
was evidently not without great jealousy and some fear of the Greeks; and great
prudence was displayed in adopting a number of measures by which they were
gradually weakened, and cautiously broken to the yoke of their conquerors. This
caution proves that the despair of the Achaeans had produced a considerable
effect on the Romans, who perceived that the Greek nation, if roused to a
general combination, possessed the means of offering a determined and dangerous
resistance. Crete was not reduced into the form of a Roman province until about
eight years after the subjection of Achaia, and its conquest was not effected
without difficulty by a consular army during a war which lasted three years.
The resistance offered by the Cretans was so determined that the island was
almost depopulated before it could be conquered. It was not until after the
time of Augustus, when the conquest of every portion of the Greek nation had
been completed, that the Romans began to view the Greeks in the contemptible
light in which they are represented by later writers.
No attempt was made to introduce uniformity into the
general government of the Grecian states; any such plan, indeed, would have
been contrary to the principles of the Roman government, which had never
aspired at establishing unity even in the administration of Italy. The
attention of the Romans was directed to the means of ruling their various
conquests in the most efficient manner, of concentrating all the military power
in their own hands, and of levying the greatest amount of tribute which
circumstances would permit. Thus, numerous cities in Greece, possessing but a
very small territory, as Delphi, Thespiae, Tanagra,
and Elatea, were allowed to retain that degree of
independence, which secured to them the privilege of being governed by their
own laws and usages, so late even as the times of the emperors. Rhodes also
long preserved its own government as a free state, though it was completely
dependent on Rome. The Romans adopted no theoretical principles which required
them to enforce uniformity in the geographical divisions, or in the
administrative arrangements of the provinces of their empire, particularly
where local habits or laws opposed a barrier to any practical union.
The Roman government, however, early adopted measures
tending to diminish the resources of the Greek allies, and the condition of the
servile population which formed the bulk of the labouring classes was
everywhere rendered very hard to be endured. Two insurrections of slaves
occurred in Sicily, and contemporary with one of these there was a great
rebellion of the slaves employed in the silver mines of Attica, and tumults
among the slaves at Delos and in other parts of Greece. The Attic slaves seized
the fortified town of Sunium, and committed extensive
ravages before the government of Athens was able to overpower them. It is so
natural for slaves to rebel when a favourable occasion presents itself, that it
is hazardous to look beyond ordinary causes for any explanation of this
insurrection, particularly as the declining state of the silver mines of Laurium, at this period, rendered the slaves less valuable,
and would cause them to be worse treated, and more negligently guarded. Still
the simultaneous rebellion of slaves, in these distant countries, seems not
unconnected with the measures of the Roman government towards its subjects. For
we learn from Diodorus that the fiscal oppression of
the collectors of the tribute in Sicily was so great that free citizens were
reduced to slavery and sold in the slave markets as far as Bithynia.
If we could place implicit faith in the testimony of
so firm and partial an adherent of the Romans as Polybius, we must believe,
that the Roman administration was at first characterized by a love of justice,
and that the Roman magistrates were far less venal than the Greeks. If the
Greeks, he says, are intrusted with a single talent of public money, though
they give written security, and though legal witnesses be present, they will
never act honestly; but if the largest sums be confided to the Romans engaged
in the public service, their honourable conduct is secured simply by an oath.
Under such circumstances, the people must have appreciated highly the advantages
of the Roman domination, and contrasted the last years of their troubled and
doubtful independence with the just and peaceful government of Rome, in a
manner extremely favourable to their new masters. Less than a century of
irresponsible power effected a wonderful change in the conduct of the Roman
magistrates. Cicero declares, that the senate made a traffic of justice to the
provincials. There is nothing so holy, that it cannot be violated, nothing so
strong, that it cannot be destroyed by money, are his words. But as the
government of Rome grew more oppressive, and the amount of the taxes levied on
the provinces was more severely exacted, the increased power of the republic
rendered any rebellion of the Greeks utterly hopeless. The complete separation
in the administration of the various provinces, which were governed like so
many separate kingdoms, viceroyalties, or pashalics,
and the preservation of a distinct local government in each of the allied
kingdoms and free states, rendered their management capable of modification,
without any compromise of the general system of the republic; and this
admirable fitness of its administration to the exigencies of the times,
remained an attribute of the Roman state for many centuries. Each state in
Greece, continuing in possession of as much of its peculiar political
constitution as was compatible with the supremacy and fiscal views of a foreign
conqueror, retained all its former jealousies towards its neighbours, and its
interests were likely to be as often compromised by disputes with the
surrounding Greek states as with the Roman government. Prudence and local
interests would everywhere favour submission to Rome; national vanity alone
would whisper incitements to venture on a struggle for independence.
Sect. III
Effects of the Mithridattc
War on the State of Greece
For sixty years after the conquest of Achaia, the
Greeks remained docile subjects of Rome. During that period, the policy of the
government aided the tendencies of society towards the accumulation of property
in the hands of few individuals. The number of Roman usurers increased, and the
exactions of Roman publicans became more oppressive, but the rich were the
principal sufferers; so that when the army of Mithridates invaded Greece, B. C.
86, while Rome appeared plunged in anarchy by the civil broils of the partisans
of Marius and Sulla, the Greek aristocracy conceived the vain hope of
recovering their independence. When they saw the king drive the Romans out of
Asia and transport a large army into Europe, they expected him to rival the
exploits of Hannibal, and to carry the war into Italy. But the people in
general did not take much interest in the contest; they viewed it as a struggle
for supremacy between the Romans and the King of Pontus; and public opinion
favoured the former, as likely to prove the milder and more equitable masters.
Many of the leading men in Greece, and the governments of most of those states
and cities which retained their independence, declared in favour of
Mithridates. Some Lacedaemonian and Achaian troops joined his army, and Athens
engaged heartily in his party. As soon, however, as Sulla appeared in Greece
with his army, every state hastened to submit to Rome, with the exception of
the Athenians, who probably had some particular cause of dissatisfaction at
this time. The vanity of the Athenians, puffed up by constant allusions to
their ancient power, induced them to engage in a direct contest with the whole
force of Rome. They were commanded by a demagogue and philosopher named Aristion, whom they had elected Strategos and intrusted
with absolute power. The Roman legions were led by Sulla. The exclusive vanity
of the Athenians, while it cherished in their hearts a more ardent love of
liberty than had survived in the rest of Greece, blinded them to their own
insignificancy when compared with the belligerents into whose quarrel they
rashly thrust themselves. But though they rushed precipitately into the war,
they conducted themselves in it with great constancy. Sulla was compelled to
besiege Athens in person; and the defence of the city was conducted with such
courage and obstinacy, that the task of subduing it proved one of great
difficulty to a Roman army commanded by that celebrated warrior. When the
defence grew hopeless, the Athenians sent a deputation to Sulla to open
negotiations; but the orator beginning to recount the glories of their
ancestors at Marathon, as an argument for mercy, the proud Roman cut short the
discussion with the remark, that his country had sent him to Athens to punish
rebels, not to study history. Athens was at last taken by assault, and it was
treated by Sulla with unnecessary cruelty; the rapine of the troops was
encouraged, instead of being checked, by their general. The majority of the
citizens were slain; the carnage was so fearfully great, as to become memorable
even in that age of bloodshed; the private movable property was seized by the
soldiery, and Sulla assumed some merit to himself for not committing the rifled
houses to the flames. He declared that he saved the city from destruction, and
allowed Athens to continue to exist, only on account of its ancient glory. He
carried off some of the columns of the temple of Jupiter Olympius,
to ornament Rome; but as that temple was in an unfinished state, and he
inflicted no injury on any public building, it seems probable that he only
removed materials which were ready for transport, without pulling down any part
of the edifice. From the treasury of the Parthenon, however, he carried off 40
talents of gold and 600 of silver. The fate of the Piraeus, which he utterly
destroyed, was more severe than that of Athens. From Sulla’s campaign in
Greece, the commencement of the ruin and depopulation of the country is to be
dated. The destruction of property caused by his ravages in Attica was so
great, that Athens from that time lost its commercial as well as its political
importance. The race of Athenian citizens was almost extirpated, and a new
population, composed of a heterogeneous mass of settlers, received the right of
citizenships. Still as Sulla left Athens in possession of freedom and autonomia, with the rank of an allied city, the vitality of
Greek institutions inspired the altered body; the ancient forms and laws
continued to exist in their former purity, and the Areopagus is mentioned by
Tacitus, in the reign of Tiberius, as nobly disregarding the powerful
protection of Piso, who strove to influence its
decisions and corrupt the administration of justice.
Athens was not the only city in Greece which suffered
severely from the cruelty and rapacity of Sulla. He plundered Delos, Delphi,
Olympia, and the sacred enclosure of Aesculapius, near Epidaurus; and he razed Anthedon, Larymna, and Halae to the ground. After he had defeated Archelaus, the
general of Mithridates, at Chaeronea, he deprived Thebes of half its territory,
which he consecrated to Apollo and Jupiter. The administration of the temporal
affairs of the pagan deities was not so wisely conducted as the civil business
of the municipalities. The Theban territory declined in wealth and population
under the care of the two gods, and in the time of Pausanias the Cadmea or citadel was the only inhabited portion of ancient
Thebes. Both parties, during the Mithridatic war, inflicted severe injuries on
Greece, plundered the country, and destroyed property most wantonly. Many of
the losses were never repaired. The foundations of national prosperity were
undermined; and it henceforward became impossible to save from the annual
consumption of the inhabitants the sums necessary to replace the accumulated
capital of ages, which this short war had annihilated. In some cases the wealth
of the communities became insufficient to keep the existing public works in
repair.
Sect. IV
Ruin of the Country by the Pirates of Cilicia
The Greeks, far from continuing to enjoy permanent
tranquillity under the powerful protection of Rome, found themselves exposed to
the attacks of every enemy, against whom the policy of their masters did not
require the employment of a regular army. The conquest of the eastern shores of
the Mediterranean by the Romans destroyed the maritime police which had been
enforced by the Greek states as long as they possessed an independent navy.
Even Rhodes, after its services ceased to be indispensable, was watched with
jealousy, though it had remained firmly attached to Rome and given asylum to
numbers of Roman citizens who fled from Asia Minor to escape death at the hands
of the partisans of Mithridates. The caution of the senate did not allow the
provinces to maintain any considerable armed force, either by land or sea; and
the guards whom the free cities were permitted to keep, were barely sufficient
to protect the walls of their citadels. Armies of robbers and fleets of
pirates, remains of the mercenary forces of the Asiatic monarchs, disbanded in
consequence of the Roman victories, began to infest the coasts of Greece. As
long as the provinces continued able to pay their taxes with regularity, and
the trade of Rome did not suffer directly, little attention was paid to the
sufferings of the Greeks.
The geographical configuration of European Greece,
intersected, in every direction, by high and rugged mountains, and separated by
deep gulfs and bays into a number of promontories and peninsulas, renders
communication between the thickly peopled and fertile districts more difficult
than in most other regions. The country opposes barriers to internal trade, and
presents difficulties to the formation of plans of mutual defence between the
different districts, which it requires care and judgment, on the part of the general
government, to remove. The armed force that can instantly be collected at one
point, must often be small; and this circumstance has marked out Greece as a
suitable field where piratical bands may plunder, as they have it in their
power to remove their forces to distant spots with great celerity. From the
earliest ages of history to the present day, these circumstances, combined with
the extensive trade which has always been carried on in the eastern part of the
Mediterranean, have rendered the Grecian seas the scene of constant piracies.
At many periods, the pirates have been able to assemble forces sufficient to
give their expeditions the character of regular war ; and their pursuits have
been so lucrative, and their success so great, that their profession has ceased
to be viewed as a dishonourable occupation.
A system of piracy, which was carried on by
considerable armies and large fleets, began to be formed soon after the
conclusion of the Mithridatic war. The indefinite nature of the Roman power in
the East, the weakness of the Asiatic monarchs and of the sovereigns of Egypt,
the questionable nature of the protection which Rome accorded to her allies,
and the general disarming of the European Greeks, all encouraged and
facilitated the enterprises of these pirates. A political, as well as a
military organization, was given to their forces by the seizure of several
strong positions on the coast of Cilicia. From these stations they directed
their expeditions over the greater part of the Mediterranean. The wealth which
ages of prosperity had accumulated in the many towns and temples of Greece was
now defenceless; the country was exposed to daily incursions, and a long list
of the devastations of the Cilician pirates is recorded in history. Many even
of the largest and wealthiest cities in Europe and Asia were successfully
attacked and plundered, and the greater number of the celebrated temples of
antiquity were robbed of their immense treasures. Samos, Clazomene,
and Samothrace, the great temples at Hermione, Epidaurus, Taenarus, Calauria, Actium, Argos, and the Isthmus of Corinth, were
all pillaged. To such an extent was this system of robbery carried, and so
powerful and well-disciplined were the forces of the pirates, that it was at
last necessary for Rome either to share with them the dominion of the sea, or
to devote all her military energies to their destruction. In order to destroy
these last remains of the mercenaries who had upheld the Macedonian empire in
the East, Pompey was invested with extraordinary powers as commander-in-chief
over the whole Mediterranean. An immense force was placed at his absolute
disposal, and he was charged with a degree of authority over the officers of
the republic, and the allies of the State, which had never before been
intrusted to one individual. His success in the execution of this commission
was considered one of his most brilliant military achievements; he captured
ninety ships with brazen beaks, and took twenty thousand prisoners. Some of
these prisoners were established in towns on the coast of Cilicia; and Soli,
which he rebuilt, and peopled with these pirates, was honoured with the name of
Pompeiopolis. The Romans, consequently, do not seem
to have regarded them as having engaged in a disgraceful warfare, otherwise
Pompey would hardly have ventured to make them his clients.
The proceedings of the senate during the piratical war
revealed to the Greeks the full extent of the disorganization which already
prevailed in the Roman government. A few families who considered themselves
above the law, and who submitted to no moral restraint, ruled both the senate
and the people, so that the policy of the republic changed and vacillated
according to the interests and passions of a small number of leading men in
Rome. Some events during the conquest of Crete afford a remarkable instance of
the incredible disorder in the republic, which foreshadowed the necessity of a
single despot as the only escape from anarchy. While Pompey, with unlimited
power over the shores and islands of the Mediterranean, was exterminating
piracy and converting pirates into citizens, Metellus, under the authority of
the senate, was engaged in conquering the island of Crete, in order to add it
to the list of Roman provinces of which the senate alone named the governors. A
conflict of authority arose between Pompey and Metellus. The latter was cruel
and firm; the former mild but ambitious, and eager to render the whole maritime
population of the East his dependents. He became jealous of the success of
Metellus, and sent one of his lieutenants to stop the siege of the Cretan towns
invested by the Roman army. But Metellus was not deterred by seeing the ensigns
of Pompey’s authority displayed from the walls. He pursued his conquests, and
neither Pompey nor the times were yet prepared for an open civil war between
consular armies.
Crete had been filled with the strongholds of the
pirates as well as Cilicia, and there is no doubt that their ranks were filled
with Greeks who could find no other means of subsistence. Despair is said to
have driven many of the citizens of the states
conquered by the Romans to suicide; it must have forced a far greater number to
embrace a life of piracy and robbery. The government of Rome was at this time
subject to continual revolutions; and the Romans lost all respect for the
rights of property either at home or abroad. Wealth and power were the only
objects of pursuit, and the force of all moral ties was broken. Justice ceased
to be administered, and men, in such cases, always assume the right of
revenging their own wrongs. Those who considered themselves aggrieved by any
act of oppression, or fancied they had received some severe injury, sought
revenge in the way which presented itself most readily; and when the oppressor
was secure against their attacks, they made society responsible. The state of
public affairs was considered an apology for the ravages of the pirates even in
those districts of Greece which suffered most severely from their lawless
conduct. They probably spent liberally among the poor the treasures which they
wrested from the rich; and so little, indeed, were they placed beyond the pale
of society, that Pompey himself settled a colony of them at Dyme,
in Achaia, where they seem to have prospered. Though piracy was not
subsequently carried on so extensively as to merit a place in history, it was
not entirely extirpated even by the fleet which the Roman emperors maintained
in the East; and that cases still continued to occur in the Grecian seas is
proved by public inscriptions. The carelessness of the senate in superintending
the administration of the distant provinces caused a great increase of social
corruption, and left crimes against the property and persons of the provincials
often unpunished. Kidnapping by land and sea became a regular profession. The
great slave-mart of Delos enabled the man-stealers to sell thousands in a
single day. Even open brigandage was allowed to exist in the heart of the
eastern provinces at the time of Rome’s greatest power. Strabo mentions several
robber chiefs who maintained themselves in their fastnesses like independent
princes.
Sect. V
Nature of the Roman Provincial Administration in
Greece
The Romans reduced those countries where they met with
resistance into the form of provinces, a procedure which was generally
equivalent to abrogating the existing laws, and imposing on the vanquished a
new system of civil as well as political administration. In the countries
inhabited by the Greeks this policy underwent considerable modification. The
Greeks, indeed, were so much farther advanced in civilization than the Romans,
that it was no easy task for a Roman proconsul to effect any great change in the
civil administration. He could not organize his government, without borrowing
largely from the existing laws of the province. The constitution of Sicily,
which was the first Greek province of the Roman dominions, presents a number of
anomalies in the administration of its different districts. That portion of the
island which had composed the kingdom of Hiero was
allowed to retain its own laws, and paid the Romans the same amount of taxation
which had been formerly levied by its own monarchs. The other portions of the
island were subjected to various regulations concerning the amount of their
taxes and the administration of justice. The province contained three allied
cities, five colonies, five free and seventeen tributary cities. Macedonia,
Epirus, and Achaia, when conquered, were treated very much in the same way, if
we make due allowance for the increasing severity of the fiscal government of
the Roman magistrates. Macedonia, before it was reduced to the condition of a
province, was divided into four districts, each of which was governed by its
own magistrates elected by the people. When Achaia was conquered, the walls of
the towns were thrown down, the aristocracy was ruined, and the country
impoverished by fines. But as soon as the Romans were convinced that Greece was
too weak to be dangerous, the Achaeans were allowed to revive some of their old
civic usages and federal institutions. As the province of Achaia embraced the
Peloponnesus, northern Greece, and southern Epirus, the revival of local confederacies,
and the privileges accorded to free cities and particular districts, really
tended to disunite the Greeks, without affording them the means of increasing
their national strength. Crete, Cyprus, Cyrene, and Asia Minor were
subsequently reduced to provinces, and were allowed to retain much of their
laws and usages. Thrace, even so late as the time of Tiberius, was governed by
its own sovereign, as an ally of the Romans. Many cities within the bounds of
the provinces retained their own peculiar laws, and, as far as their own
citizens were concerned, they continued to possess the legislative as well as
the executive power, by administering their own affairs, and executing justice
within their limits, without being liable to the control of the proconsul.
As long as the republic continued to exist, the
provinces were administered by proconsuls or praetors, chosen from among the
members of the senate, and responsible to that body for their administration.
The authority of these provincial governors was immense; they had the power of
life and death over the Greeks, and the supreme control over all judicial,
financial, and administrative business was vested in their hands. They had the
right of naming and removing most of the judges and magistrates under their orders,
and most of the fiscal arrangements regarding the provincials depended on their
will. No power ever existed more liable to be abused; for while the
representatives of the most absolute sovereigns have seldom been intrusted with
more extensive authority, they have never incurred so little danger of being
punished for its abuse. The only tribunal before which the proconsuls could be
cited for any acts of injustice which they might commit was that very senate
which had sent them out as its deputies, and received them back into its body
as members.
When the imperial government was consolidated by
Augustus, the command of the whole military force of the republic devolved on
the emperor; but his constitutional position was not that of sovereign. The
early emperors concentrated in their persons the offices of commander-in-chief
of the military and naval forces of Rome, of minister of war and of finance,
and of Pontifex Maximus, which gave them a sacred character, as head of the
religion of the State, and their persons were inviolable, as they were invested
with the tribunician power; but the senate and people were still possessed of
the supreme legislative authority, and the senate continued to direct the civil
branches of the executive ad-ministration. In consequence of this relation
between the jurisdiction of the senate and the emperors, the provinces were
divided into two classes: Those in which the military forces were stationed
were placed under the direct orders of the emperor, and were governed by his
lieutenants or legates; the other provinces, which did not require to be
constantly occupied by the legions, remained dependent on the senate, as the
chief civil authority in the State, and were governed by proconsuls or propraetors. Most of the countries inhabited by the Greeks
were in that peaceable condition which placed them in the rank of senatorial
provinces. Sicily, Macedonia, Epirus, Achaia, Crete, Cyrene, Bithynia, and Asia
Minor remained under the control of the senate. Cyprus, from its situation as
affording a convenient post for a military force to watch Cilicia, Syria, and
Egypt, was at first classed among the imperial provinces; but Augustus
subsequently exchanged it for the more important position of Dalmatia, where an
army could be stationed to watch Rome, and separate Italy and the proconsular
provinces of Greece.
The proconsuls and propraetors
occupied a higher rank in the State than the imperial legates; but their
situation deprived them of all hope of military distinction, the highest object
of Roman ambition. This exclusion of the aristocracy from military pursuits, by
the emperors, is not to be lost sight of in observing the change which took
place in the Roman character. Avarice was the vice which succeeded in stifling
feelings of self-abasement and disappointed ambition; and as the proconsuls
were not objects of jealousy to the emperors, they were enabled to gratify
their ruling passion without danger. They surrounded themselves with a splendid
court; and a numerous train of followers, officials, and guards, who were at
their orders, was maintained at the expense of their province. As they were
themselves senators, they felt assured of finding favourable judges in the
senate under any circumstances. Irresponsible government soon degenerates into
tyranny, and the administration of the Roman proconsuls became as oppressive as
that of the worst despots, and was loudly complained of by the provincials. The
provinces under the government of the emperor were better administered. The
imperial lieutenants, though inferior in rank to proconsuls, possessed a more
extensive command, as they united in their persons the chief civil and military
authority. The effect of their possessing more power was, that the limits of
their authority, and the forms of their proceedings, were determined with
greater precision — were more closely watched, and more strictly controlled by
the military discipline to which they were subjected; while, at the same time,
the constant dependence of all their actions on the immediate orders of the
emperor and the various departments of which he was the head opposed more
obstacles to arbitrary proceedings.
The expenses of the proconsular administration being
paid by the provinces, it was chiefly by abuses augmenting their amount that
the proconsuls were enabled to accumulate enormous fortunes during their short
tenure of government. The burden was so heavily felt by Macedonia and Achaia,
even as early as the reign of Tiberius, that the complaints of these two
provinces induced that emperor to unite their administration with that of the
imperial province of Moesia; but Claudius restored them to the senate. Thrace,
when it was reduced to a Roman province by Vespasian, was also added to the
imperial list. As the power of the emperors rose into absolute authority over
the Roman world and the pageant of the republic faded away, all distinction
between the different classes of provinces disappeared. They were distributed
according to the wish of the reigning emperor, and their administration
arbitrarily transferred to officers of whatever rank he thought fit to select.
The Romans, indeed, had never affected much system in this, any more than in
any other branch of their government. Pontius Pilate, when he condemned our
Saviour, governed Judaea with the rank of procurator of Caesar; he was vested
with the whole administrative, judicial, fiscal, and military authority, almost
as completely as it could have been exercised by a proconsul, yet his title was
only that of a finance officer, charged with the administration of those
revenues which belonged to the imperial treasury.
The provincial governors usually named three or four
deputies to carry on the business of the districts into which the province was
divided, and each of these deputies was controlled and assisted by a local
council. It may be remarked, that the condition of the inhabitants of the
western portion of the Roman Empire was different from that of the eastern; in
the west the people were generally treated as little better than serfs; they
were not considered the absolute proprietors of the lands they cultivated.
Hadrian first gave them a full right of property in their lands, and secured to
them a regular system of law. In Greece, on the other hand, the people retained
all their property and private rights. Some rare exceptions indeed occurred, as
in the case of the Corinthian territory, which was confiscated for the benefit
of the Roman state, and declared ager publicus after the destruction of the city by Mummius. Throughout all the countries inhabited by the
Greeks, the provincial administration was necessarily modified by the
circumstance of the conquered being much farther advanced in social
civilization than their conquerors. To facilitate the task of governing and
taxing the Greeks, the Romans found themselves compelled to retain much of the
civil government, and many of the financial arrangements, which they found
existing; and hence arose the marked difference which is observed in the
administration of the eastern and western portions of the empire. When the
great jurist Scaevola was proconsul of Asia, he published an edict for the
administration of his province, by which he allowed the Greeks to have judges
of their own nation, and to decide their suits according to their own laws; a
concession equivalent to the restoration of their civil liberties in public
opinion, according to Cicero, who copied it when he was proconsul of Cilicia.
The existence of the free cities, of the local tribunals and provincial
assemblies, and the respect paid to their laws, gave the Greek language an
official character, and enabled the Greeks to acquire so great an influence in
the administration of their country, as either to limit the despotic power of
their Roman masters, or, when that proved impossible, to share its profits. But
though the arbitrary decisions of the proconsuls received some check from the
existence of fixed rules and permanent usages, still these barriers were
insufficient to prevent the abuse of irresponsible authority. Those laws and
customs which a proconsul dared not openly violate, he could generally nullify
by some concealed measure of oppression. The avidity displayed by Brutus in
endeavouring to make Cicero enforce payment of forty-eight per cent, interest
when his debtors, the Salaminians of Cyprus, offered
to pay the capital with twelve per cent, interest, proves with what injustice
and oppression the Greeks were treated even by the mildest of the Roman
aristocracy. The fact that throughout the Grecian provinces, as well as in the
rest of the empire, the governors superintended the financial administration,
and exercised the judicial power, is sufficient to explain the ruin and poverty
which the Roman government produced. Before the wealth of the people had been
utterly consumed, an equitable proconsul had it in his power to confer
happiness on his provinces, and Cicero draws a very favourable picture of his
own administration in Cilicia: but a few governors like Verres and Caius
Antonius soon reduced a province to a state of poverty, from which it would
have required ages of good government to enable it to recover. The private
letters of Cicero afford repeated proofs that the majority of the officers
employed by the Roman government openly violated every principle of justice to
gratify their passions and their avarice. Many of them even condescended to
engage in trade, and, like Brutus, became usurers.
The early years of the empire were certainly more
popular than the latter years of the republic in the provinces. The emperors
were anxious to strengthen themselves against the senate by securing the
goodwill of the provincials, and they consequently exerted their authority to
check the oppressive conduct of the senatorial officers, and to lighten the
fiscal burdens of the people by a stricter administration of justice. Tiberius,
Claudius, and Domitian, though Rome groaned under their tyranny, were
remarkable for their zeal in correcting abuses in the administration of
justice, and Hadrian established a council of jurisconsults and senators to
assist him in reviewing the judicial business of the provinces as well as of
the capital.
Sect. VI
Fiscal Administration of the Romans
The legal amount of the taxes, direct and indirect,
levied by the Romans on the Greeks, was probably not greater than the sum paid
to their national governments in the days of their independence. But a small
amount of taxation arbitrarily imposed, unjustly collected, and injudiciously
spent, weighs more heavily on the resources of the people, than immense burdens
properly distributed and wisely employed. The wealth and resources of Greece
had been greatest at the time when each city formed a separate state, and the
inhabitants of each valley possessed the power of employing the taxes which
they paid, for objects which ameliorated their own condition. The moment the
centralization of political power enabled one city to appropriate the revenues
of another to its wants, whether for its architectural embellishment or for its
public games, theatrical representations, and religious ceremonies, the decline
of the country commenced: but all the evil effects of centralization were not
felt until the taxes were paid to foreigners. When the tributes were remitted
to Rome, it was difficult to persuade absent administrators of the necessity of
expending money on a road, a port, or an aqueduct, which had no direct
connection with Roman interests. Had the Roman government acted according to
the strictest principles of justice, Greece must have suffered from its dominion;
but its avarice and corruption, after the commencement of the civil wars, knew
no bounds. The extraordinary payments levied on the provinces soon equalled,
and sometimes exceeded, the regular and legal taxes. Sparta and Athens, as
allied states, were exempt from direct taxation; but, in order to preserve
their liberty, they were compelled to make voluntary offerings to the Roman
generals, who held the fate of the East in their hands, and these sometimes
equalled the amount of any ordinary tribute. Cicero supplies ample proof of the
extortions committed by the proconsuls, and no arrangements were adopted to
restrain their avarice until the time of Augustus. It is, therefore, only under
the empire that any accurate picture of the fiscal administration of the Romans
in Greece can be attempted.
Until the time of Augustus, the Romans had maintained
their armies by seizing and squandering the accumulated capital hoarded by all
the nations of the world. They emptied the treasuries of all the kings and
states they conquered; and when Julius Caesar marched to Rome, he dissipated
that portion of the plunder of the world which had been laid up in the coffers
of the republic. When that source of riches was exhausted, Augustus found
himself compelled to seek for regular funds for maintaining the army: “And it
came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus
that all the world should be taxed”. A regular survey of the whole empire was
made, and the land-tax was assessed according to a valuation taken of the
annual income of every species of property. A capitation-tax was also imposed
on all the provincials whom the land-tax did not affect.
The ordinary provincial taxes in the East were this
land-tax, which generally amounted to a tenth of the produce, though, in some
cases, it constituted a fifth, and in others fell to a twentieth. The land-tax
was rendered uniform in all the provinces and converted at last into a money
payment, by Marcus Aurelius. It was not assessed annually: but a valuation was
made at stated periods for a determinate number of years, and the annual amount
was called the Indictio
before the time of Constantine, when the importance of this fiscal measure to
the well-being of the inhabitants of the Roman empire is attested by the cycle
of indictions becoming the ordinary chronological
record of time. Italy itself was subjected to the land-tax and capitation by
Galerius, A.D. 306, but the first indiction of the
cycle of fifteen years used for chronological notation commenced on the 1st of
September 312. The subjects of the empire paid also a tax on cattle, and a
variety of duties on importation and exportation, which were levied even on the
conveyance of goods from one province to another. In Greece, the free cities
also retained the right of levying local duties on their citizens.
Contributions of provisions and manufactures were likewise exacted for feeding
and clothing the troops stationed in the provinces. Even under Augustus, who
devoted his personal attention to reforming the financial administration of the
empire, the proconsuls and provincial governors continued to avail themselves
of their position, as a means of gratifying their avarice. Licinus
accumulated immense riches in Gaul. Tiberius perceived that the weight of the Roman
fiscal system was pressing too severely on the provinces, and he rebuked the
prefect of Egypt for remitting too large a sum to Rome, as the amount proved he
had overtaxed his province. The mere fact of a prefect’s possessing the power
of increasing or diminishing the amount of his remittances to the treasury, is
enough to condemn the arbitrary nature of the Roman fiscal administration. The
prefect was told by the emperor that a good shepherd should shear, not flay,
his sheep. But no rulers ever estimated correctly the amount of taxes that
their subjects could advantageously pay; and Tiberius received a lesson on the
financial system of his empire from Baton, King of Dalmatia, who, on being
asked the cause of a rebellion, replied, that it arose from the emperor’s
sending wolves to guard his flocks instead of shepherds.
The financial policy of the Roman republic was to
transfer as much of the money circulating in the provinces, and of the precious
metals in the hands of private individuals, as it was possible, into the
coffers of the State. The city of Rome formed a drain for the wealth of all the
provinces, and the whole empire was impoverished for its support. When Caligula
expressed the wish that the Roman people had only one neck, in order that he might
destroy them all at a single blow, the idea found a responsive echo in many a
breast. There was a wise moral in the sentiment uttered in his frenzy; and many
felt that the dispersion of the immense pauper population of Rome, which was
nourished in idleness by the public revenues, would have been a great benefit
to the rest of the empire. The desire of seizing wealth wherever it could be
found continued to be long the dominant feeling in the personal policy of the
emperors, as well as the proconsuls. The provincial governors enriched
themselves by plundering their subjects, and the emperors filled their
treasuries by accusing the senators of those crimes which entailed confiscation
of their fortunes. From the earliest periods of Roman history, down to the time
of Justinian, confiscation of private property was considered an ordinary and
important branch of the imperial revenue. When Alexander the Great conquered
Asia, the treasures which he dispersed increased the commerce of the world,
created new cities, and augmented the general wealth of mankind. The Romans
collected far greater riches from their conquests than Alexander had done, as
they pushed their exactions much farther; but the rude state of society, in
which they lived at the time of their first great successes, prevented their
perceiving, that by carrying off or destroying all the movable capital in their
conquests, they must ultimately diminish the amount of their own revenues. The
wealth brought away from the countries inhabited by the Greeks was incredible;
for the Romans pillaged the conquered, as the Spaniards plundered Mexico and
Peru, and ruled them as the Turks subsequently governed Greece. The riches
which centuries of industry had accumulated in Syracuse, Tarentum, Epirus,
Macedonia, and Greece, and the immense sums seized in the treasuries of the
kings of Cyprus, Pergamus, Syria, and Egypt, were
removed to Rome, and consumed in a way which virtually converted them into
premiums for neglecting agriculture. They were dispersed in paying an immense
army, in feeding an idle populace, which was thus withdrawn from all productive
occupations, and in maintaining the household of the emperor, the senators, and
the imperial freedmen. The consequence of the arrangements adopted for
provisioning Rome was felt over the whole empire, and seriously affected the
prosperity of the most distant provinces. It is necessary to notice them, in
order to understand perfectly the financial system of the empire during three
centuries.
The citizens of Rome were considered entitled to a
share of the revenues of the provinces which they had conquered, and which were
long regarded in the light of a landed estate of the republic. The Roman State
was held to be under an obligation of supporting all who were liable to
military service, if they were poor and without profitable employment. The
history of the public distributions of grain, and of the measures adopted for
securing ample supplies to the market, at low prices, forms an important chapter
in the social and political records of the Roman people. An immense quantity of
grain was distributed in this way, which was received as tribute from the
provinces. Caesar found three hundred and twenty thousand persons receiving
this gratuity. It is true he reduced the number one half. The grain was drawn
from Sicily, Africa, and Egypt, and its distribution enabled the poor to live
in idleness, while the arrangements adopted by the Roman government, for
selling grain at a low price, rendered the cultivation of land around Rome
unprofitable to its proprietors. A large sum was annually employed by the State
in purchasing grain in the provinces, and in transporting it to Rome, where it
was sold to the bakers at a fixed price. A premium was also paid to the private
importers of grain, in order to insure an abundant supply. In this manner a
very large sum was expended to keep bread cheap in a city where a variety of
circumstances tended to make it dear. This singular system of annihilating
capital, and ruining agriculture and industry, was so deeply rooted in the
Roman administration, that similar gratuitous distributions of grain were
established at Antioch and Alexandria, and other cities, and they were
introduced at Constantinople when that city became the capital of the empire.
It is not surprising that Greece suffered severely
under a government equally tyrannical in its conduct and unjust in its
legislation. In almost every department of public business the interests of the
State were placed in opposition to those of the people, and even when the
letter of the law was mild, its administration was burdensome. The customs of
Rome were moderate, and consisted of a duty of five per cent, on exports and
imports. Where the customs were so reasonable, commerce ought to have
flourished; but the real amount levied under an unjust government bears no
relation to the nominal payment. The government of Turkey has ruined the
commerce of its subjects, with duties equally moderate. The Romans despised
commerce; they considered merchants as little better than cheats, and concluded
that they were always in the wrong when they sought to avoid making any payment
to government. The provinces in the eastern part of the Mediterranean are
inhabited by a mercantile population. The wants of many parts can only be
supplied by sea; and as the various provinces and small independent states were
often separated by double lines of custom-houses, the subsistence of the
population was frequently at the mercy of the revenue officers. The customs
payable to Rome were let to farmers, who possessed extensive powers for their
collection, and a special tribunal existed for the enforcement of their claims;
these farmers of the customs were consequently powerful tyrants in all the
countries round the Aegean Sea.
The ordinary duty on the transport of goods from one
province to another amounted to two and a half per cent.; but some kinds of
merchandise were subjected to a tax of an eighth, which appears to have been
levied when the article first entered the Roman Empire.
The provincial contributions pressed as heavily on the
Greeks as the general taxes. The expense of the household of the proconsuls was
very great; they had also the right of placing the troops in winter quarters,
in whatever towns they thought fit. This power was rendered a profitable means
of extorting money from the wealthy districts. Cicero mentions that the island
of Cyprus paid two hundred talents — about forty-five thousand pounds annually
— in order to purchase exemption from this burden. The power of the fiscal
agents, charged to collect the extraordinary contributions in the provinces,
was unlimited. One of the ordinary punishments for infringing the revenue laws
was confiscation, — a punishment which was converted by the collectors of the
revenue into a systematic means of extortion. A regular trade in usury was
established, in order to force proprietors to sell their property; and
accusations were brought forward in the fiscal courts, merely to levy fines, or
compel the accused to incur debts. Free Greeks were constantly sold as slaves
because they were unable to pay the amount of taxation to which they were
liable. The establishment of posts, which Augustus instituted for the
transmission of military orders, was soon converted into a burden on the
provinces, instead of being rendered a public benefit, by allowing private
individuals to make use of its services. The enlisting of recruits was another
source of abuse. Privileges and monopolies were granted to merchants and manufacturers;
the industry of a province was ruined, to raise a sum of money for an emperor
or a favourite.
The free cities and allied states were treated with as
much injustice as the provinces, though their position enabled them to escape
many of the public burdens. The crowns of gold, which had once been given by
cities and provinces as a testimony of gratitude, were converted into a forced
gift, and at last extorted as a tax of a fixed amount.
In addition to the direct weight of the public
burdens, their severity was increased by the exemption which Roman citizens
enjoyed from the land-tax, the customs, and the municipal burdens, in the
provinces, the free cities, and the allied states. This exemption filled Greece
with traders and usurers, who obtained the right of citizenship as a
speculation, merely to evade the payment of the local taxes. The Roman
magistrates had the power of granting this immunity; and as they were in the
habit of participating in the profits even of their enfranchised slaves, there can
be no doubt that a regular traffic in citizenship was established, and this
cause exercised considerable influence in accelerating the ruin of the allied
states and free cities, by defrauding them of their local privileges and
revenues. When Nero wished to render himself popular in Greece, he extended the
immunity from tribute to all the Greeks; but Vespasian found the financial
affairs of the empire in such disorder that he was compelled to revoke all
grants of exemption to the provinces. Virtue, in the old times of Rome, meant
valour; liberty, in the time of Nero, signified freedom from taxation. Of this
liberty Vespasian deprived Greece, Byzantium, Samos, Rhodes, and Lycia.
The financial administration of the Romans inflicted,
if possible, a severer blow on the moral constitution of society than on the
material prosperity of the country. It divided the population of Greece into
two classes, one possessing the title of Roman citizens, — a title often
purchased by their wealth, and which implied freedom from taxation; — the other
consisting of the Greeks who, from poverty, were unable to purchase the envied
privilege, and thus by their very poverty were compelled to bear the whole
weight of the public burdens laid on the province. The rich and poor were thus
ranged in two separate castes of society.
By the Roman constitution, the knights were intrusted
with the management of the finances of the State. They were a body in whose eyes
wealth, on which their rank substantially depended, possessed an undue value.
The prominent feature of their character was avarice, notwithstanding the
praises of their justice which Cicero has left us. The knights acted as
collectors of the revenues, but they also frequently farmed the taxes of a
province for a term of years, subletting portions, and they formed companies
for farming the customs besides employing capital in public or private loans.
They were favoured by the policy of Rome; while their own riches, and their
secondary position in political affairs, served to screen them from attacks in
the forum. For a long period, too, all the judges were selected from their
order, and consequently knights alone decided those commercial questions which
most seriously affected their individual profits.
The heads of the financial administration in Greece
were thus placed in a moral position unfavourable to an equitable collection of
the revenues. The case of Brutus, who attempted to oblige the Salaminians of Cyprus to pay him compound interest, at the
rate of four per cent, a month, shows that avarice and extortion were not
generally considered dishonourable in the eyes of the Roman aristocracy. The
practices of selling the right of citizenship, of raising unjust fiscal
prosecutions to extort fines, and enforce confiscation to increase landed
estates, have been already mentioned. They produced effects which have found a
place in history. The existence of all these crimes is well known; their
effects may be observed in the fact that a single citizen, Julius Eurycles, had in the time of Augustus rendered himself
proprietor of the whole island of Cythera, and caused a rebellion in Laconia by
the severity of his extortions. During the republic the authority of Romans of
high rank was so great in the provinces that no Greek ventured to dispute their
commands. Caius Antonius, the colleague of Cicero in the consulship, resided at
Cephalonia when he was banished for extortion, and Strabo informs us that this
criminal treated the inhabitants as if the island had been his private
property.
Roman citizens in Greece escaped the oppressive powers
of the fiscal agents, not only in those cases wherein they were by law exempt
from provincial taxes, but also because they possessed the means of defending
themselves against injustice by the right of carrying their causes to Rome for
judgment by appeal. These privileges rendered the number of Roman citizens
engaged in mercantile speculation and trade very great. A considerable multitude
of the inhabitants of Rome had, from the earliest times, been employed in trade
and commerce, without obtaining the right of citizenship at home. They did not
fail to settle in numbers in all the Roman conquests, and, in the provinces,
they were correctly called Romans. They always enjoyed from the republic the
fullest protection, and soon acquired the rights of citizenship. Even Roman
citizens were sometimes so numerous in the provinces that they could furnish
not a few recruits to the legions. Their numbers were so great at the
commencement of the Mithridatic war (B. C. 88) that eighty thousand were put to
death in Asia when the king took up arms against the Romans. The greater part
undoubtedly consisted of merchants, traders, and money-dealers. The Greeks at
last obtained the right of Roman citizenship in such multitudes, that Nero may
have made no very enormous sacrifice of public revenue when he conferred
liberty, or freedom from tribute, on all the Greeks.
It is unnecessary to dwell at any length on the
effects of the system of general oppression and partial privileges which has
been described. Honest industry was useless in trade, and political intrigue
was the easiest mode of obtaining some privilege or monopoly which ensured the
speedy accumulation of a large fortuned
In enumerating the causes of the impoverishment and
depopulation of the Roman Empire, the depreciation of the coinage must not be
overlooked. Considerable changes were made in the Roman mint by Augustus, but
the great depreciation which destroyed capital, diminished the demand for
labour, and accelerated the depopulation of the provinces, dates from the reign
of Caracalla.
Augustus fixed the standard at 40 gold pieces (aurei) to a pound of pure gold and he
coined 84 denarii from a pound of silver, but he did not always observe
strictly the standard which he had established. And in the interval between his
reign and that of Nero coins of less than the legal standard were frequently
minted. Nero reduced the standard to 45 aurei
to a pound of gold and coined 96 denarii
from a pound of silver, retaining the proportion of 25 denarii to an aureus.
Caracalla again reduced the standard, coining 50 aurei from a pound of gold and making a great addition of alloy in
the silver coinage. Great irregularities were not uncommon in the Roman mint at
every period under the republic and the empire. Indeed, order and system appear
to have been introduced very slowly into some branches of the Roman
administration, and great irregularities were of constant recurrence in the
mint. Temporary necessities caused the legal standard to be at times lowered
and at others violated even in the best days of the republic, and the arbitrary
power of the emperors is more completely exhibited in the coinage than in the
historical records of the empire. Before the time of Nero aurei were coined of 45 to a pound, and before the time of
Caracalla of 50 to a pound.
In the time of Diocletian a great change was made in
the coinage when every other branch of the administration was reformed. The
standard was fixed at 60 aurei to a
pound of pure gold, but this rate was not preserved for any length of time, and
in the reign of Constantine the Great 72 gold pieces were coined from a pound
of metal. Order and unity were at last introduced into the fabric of the Roman
government, but, as too often happens in the history of human institutions, we
find these benefits obtained by the loss of local rights and personal liberty.
The gold standard adopted by Constantine became one of the immutable
institutions of the Roman Empire, and it was retained until the eastern empire
was extinguished by the conquest of Constantinople in 1204. These pieces,
called at first solidi, and known
afterwards to the western nations by the name of byzants, were minted without
change in the weight and purity of the metal for a period of nearly 900 years.
The public taxes and the tribute of the provinces were
generally exacted in gold. It was therefore the interest of the emperors to
maintain the purity of the gold coinage. But as large payments were made by
weight, a profit could often be made by issuing from the mint coins of less
than the standard weight, and that this fraud was often perpetrated by the
emperors is attested by the existence of innumerable well- preserved gold
coins.
The silver coinage was in a different condition from
the gold. From the time of Augustus to that of Caracalla it formed the ordinary
circulating medium in the eastern part of the empire, and several cities
possessed the right of coining silver in their local mints. Both the imperial
and the local mints often derived an illicit gain by diminishing the weight or
debasing the purity of the silver coins. Augustus, as has been already
mentioned, coined 84 denarii from a
pound of silver and Nero 96. Hadrian, though he made no change in the legal
standard, permitted the mint to issue silver coins of less than the standard
purity, and many of his successors imitated his bad example. The relative value
of the aureus and the denarius underwent a change as soon as a
considerable quantity of the silver coinage, whether issued by the imperial or
local mints, was of debased metal, and aurei
of standard weight were sold by the money-changers at an agio. The emperors appear to have defrauded those they paid in
silver by issuing base denarii as well as cheated those they paid in gold by
counting out light aurei.
When Caracalla coined fifty aurei to the pound, he seems to have proposed restoring the
relative value of the gold and silver money. To do this it was necessary to
issue a new silver coin of which twenty-five should be equal to the new aureus. Instead of restoring the
denarius to its true proportion in weight and purity, he issued the larger
piece, in which the emperor is represented with a radiated crown, called argenteus. These contain a considerable
portion of alloy, and were minted at the rate of sixty to a pound of the new
silver standard. The proportion adopted by Caracalla for the silver coinage was
not observed. A deterioration is apparent even during the reigns of Alexander
Severus, Maximinus, and Gordianus
Pius, though these emperors evidently made some efforts to arrest the
depreciation of the ordinary circulating medium by large issues of copper sestertii of full weight. They appear to
have hoped to sustain the value of the silver currency by keeping up the value
of the copper coin which circulated as its fractions.
The proportion of alloy in the silver coinage was
rapidly increased after the time of Gordianus Pius,
and at last Gallienus put an end to the silver
coinage by issuing plated money and copper pieces washed with tin as a
substitute for silver. Thus a base denarius of his latter
years was of less value than an as of the former part of his reign, which ought
to have been its sixteenth part.
Gallienus threw the whole coinage of the empire into confusion. He repeatedly
reduced the size of the aureus
according to his temporary exigencies, but he preserved the standard purity of
the metal, for while he paid his own debts by tale he exacted payment of the
tribute of the provinces by weight. The intolerable oppression of his monetary
frauds and exactions, added to the disorder that prevailed in every branch of
the imperial government, goaded the provinces into rebellion. The rise of the
thirty tyrants, as the rebel emperors were called, must in some degree be
connected with the depreciation of the coinage, for the troops as well as the
provincials were sufferers by the frauds of his mint. The troops were ready to
support any emperor who would pay them a donative in coin of full weight, and
the provincials were ready to support any rebel who could resist the
transmission of the gold in the province to Rome.
The depreciation of the ordinary currency during the
reign of Gallienus has no parallel in history unless
it be found in the recent depreciations of the Othoman
currency. Five hundred of the washed denarii or argentei of his latter coinage
were required to purchase an aureus,
while government compelled its subjects to receive these base coins at the rate
of twenty-five to an aureus.
The emperors defrauded their subjects, but the masters
of the mint and the corporation of moneyers shared the profits of these frauds,
and rendered the debasement of the coinage and the agio on gold a source of gain independent of the government. When
Aurelian endeavoured to restore the unity of the empire it was necessary for
him to re-establish uniformity in the currency. But when he attempted to reform
the abuses in the imperial mint, the masters of the mint and the corporation of
moneyers openly rebelled, and their power and numbers were so great that he is
said to have lost seven thousand men in suppressing their revolt.
The depreciation in the value of the circulating
medium during the fifty years between the reign of Caracalla and the death of Gallienus annihilated a great part of the trading capital
in the Roman Empire, and rendered it impossible to carry on commercial
transactions not only with foreign countries but even with distant provinces.
Every payment was liable to be greatly diminished in real value, even when it
was nominally the same. This state of things at last induced capitalists to
hoard their coins of pure gold and silver for better days; and as these better
days did not occur, all memory of many hoards was lost, and the buried treasures,
consisting of select coins, have often remained concealed until the present
time. Thus the frauds of the Roman emperors have filled the cabinets of
collectors and the national museums of modem Europe with well-preserved coins.
The special effects of the depreciation of the Roman
coinage on the wealth of Greece cannot be traced in detail, for no facts are
recorded by historians which connect it prominently with any private or public
event. The local mints ceased to exist, when even their copper coins became of
greater intrinsic value than the money of the imperial mint of which they were
nominally fractions. The as of the
provincial city was more valuable than the denarius
of the capital. Zosimus informs us that this monetary confusion produced
commercial anarchy, and it requires no historian to tell us that political
anarchy is a natural consequence of national bankruptcy. The laws which
regulate the distribution, the accumulation and the destruction of wealth, the
demand for labour and the gains of industry, attest that the depreciation of
the currency was one of the most powerful causes of the impoverishment and
depopulation of the Roman empire in the third century, and there can be no
doubt that Greece suffered severely from its operation.
Sect. VII
Depopulation of Greece caused by the Roman Government
Experience proves that the same law of the progress of
society which gives to an increasing population a tendency to outgrow the means
of subsistence, compels a declining one to press on the limits of taxation. A
government may push taxation up to that point when it arrests all increase in
the means of subsistence; but the moment this stationary condition of society
is produced, the people will begin to consume a portion of the wealth previously
absorbed by the public taxes, and the revenues of the country will have a
tendency to decrease; or, what is the same thing, in so far as the political
law is concerned, the government will find greater difficulty in collecting the
same amount of revenue, and, if it succeed, will cause a diminution in the
population.
The depopulation of the Roman provinces was, however,
not caused entirely by the financial oppression of the government. In order to
secure new conquests against rebellion, the armed population was generally
exterminated, or reduced to slavery. If the people displayed a spirit of
independence, they were regarded as robbers, and destroyed without mercy; and
this cruelty was so engrafted into the system of the Roman administration that
Augustus treated the Salassi in this manner, when
their disorders could easily have been effectually prevented by milder
measures. At the time the Romans first engaged in war with the Macedonians and
Greeks, the contest was of so doubtful a nature that the Romans were not likely
to relax the usual policy which they adopted for weakening their foes;
Macedonia, Epirus, Aetolia, and Achaia, were therefore treated with the
greatest severity at the time of their conquest. Aemilius
Paulus, in order to secure the submission of Epirus, destroyed seventy cities,
and sold one hundred and fifty thousand of the inhabitants as slaves. The
policy which considered a reduction of the population necessary for securing
obedience, would not fail to adopt efficient measures to prevent its again
becoming either numerous or wealthy. The utter destruction of Carthage, and the
extermination of the Carthaginians, is a fact which has no parallel in the
history of any other civilized stated Mummius razed
Corinth to the ground, and sold its whole population as slaves. Delos was the
great emporium of the trade of the East about the time of the conquest of
Greece; it was plundered by the troops of Mithridates, and again by the orders
of Sulla. It only recovered its former state of prosperity under the Romans as
a slave-market. Sulla utterly destroyed several cities of Boeotia, and
depopulated Athens, the Piraeus, and Thebes. The inhabitants of Megara were
nearly exterminated by Julius Caesar; and a considerable number of cities in
Achaia, Aetolia, and Acarnania, were laid waste by order of Augustus, and their
inhabitants were settled in the newly established Roman colonies of Nicopolis and Patrae. Brutus
levied five years’ tribute in advance from the inhabitants of Asia Minor. His
severity made the people of Xanthus prefer extermination to submission.
Cassius, after he had taken Rhodes, treated it in the most tyrannical manner,
and displayed a truly Roman spirit of fiscal rapacity. The celebrated letter of
Sulpicius to Cicero, so familiar to the lovers of
poetry from the paraphrase of Lord Byron, affords irrefragable testimony to the
rapid decline of Greece under the Roman government.
During the civil wars, the troops which Greece still
possessed were compelled to range themselves on one side or the other. The
Aetolians and Acarnanians joined Caesar; the Athenians, Lacedaemonians, and
Boeotians, ranged themselves as partisans of Pompey. The Athenians, and most of
the other Greeks, afterwards espoused the cause of Brutus and Cassius; but the
Lacedaemonians sent a body of two thousand men to serve as auxiliaries of
Octavius. The destruction of property caused by the progress through Greece of
the various bodies of troops, whose passions were inflamed by the disorders of
the civil war, was not compensated by the favours conferred on a few cities by
Caesar, Antony, and Augustus. The remission of a few taxes, or the present of
additional revenues to an oligarchical magistracy, could exercise no influence
on the general prosperity of the country.
The depopulation caused by war alone might have been
very soon repaired, had the government of Greece been wisely administered. But
there are conditions of society which render it difficult to replace capital or
recruit population when either of them has undergone any considerable
diminution. Attica appears never to have recovered from the ravages committed
by Philip V of Macedon as early as the year B.C. 200, when he burned down the
buildings and groves of Cynosarges and the Lyceum in
the immediate vicinity of Athens, and the temples, olive-trees, and vineyards
over the whole country. The Athenians had even then lost the social and moral
energy necessary for repairing the damage produced by a great national
calamity. They could no longer pursue a life of agricultural employment: their
condition had degenerated into that of a mere city population, and the thoughts
and feelings of Greek freemen were those of a town mob. In such circumstances
the ravages of an enemy permanently diminished the resources of the country, for
in a land like Greece, ages of labour and the accumulated savings of
generations are required to cover the arid limestone mountains with olive and
fig trees, and to construct the cisterns and canals of irrigation which are
necessary to render a dry soil capable of yielding abundant supplies of food.
In Athens bad government, social corruption, literary presumption, and national
conceit, were nourished by liberal donations from foreign princes, who repaid
flattery by feeding a worthless city population. Servility became more
productive than honest industry, and the depopulation which resulted from wars
and revolutions continued when Greece enjoyed peace under the domination of
Rome. The statues of the gods erected in temples which had fallen into ruins,
sculptured dedications and marble tombs, monuments of a wealthy and dense rural
population of free citizens in the agricultural demes of Attica, were seen in
the times of Hadrian, as the turbaned tombstone may now be seen in Turkey near
the solitary desolation of the ruined mosque, testifying the rapid depopulation
and destruction of vested capital which is now going on in the Othoman empire. A Roman writer says, that in Attica there
were more gods and heroes than living men. It is impossible to point out, in precise
detail, all the various measures by which the Roman administration undermined
the physical and moral strength of the Greek nation; it is sufficient to
establish the fact, that too much was exacted from the body of the people in
the shape of public burdens, and that the neglect of all its duties on the part
of the government gradually diminished the productive resources of the country.
Works of utility were neglected; bands of robbers were allowed to infest the
provinces for long periods without molestation. The extortions of the Roman
magistrates, however, were more injurious, and rendered property more insecure,
than the violence of the banditti. The public acts of robbery are those only
which have been preserved by history; but for each open attack on public
property, hundreds of private families were reduced to poverty, and thousands
of free Greeks sold as slaves. Fulvius despoiled the
temples of Ambracia of their most valuable ornaments,
and even carried away the statues of the gods. Verres, on his passage through
Greece to his post in Cilicia, carried off a quantity of gold from the temple
of Minerva at Athens. Piso, while proconsul of
Macedonia, plundered both it and Greece, and allowed them to be ravaged by
Thracian banditti. Even under the cautious and conciliatory administration of
Augustus, the oppressive conduct of the Romans caused seditions, both in
Laconia — which was a favoured district, from its having taken part with the
emperor against Antony— and in Attica, where the weakness to which the city was
reduced seemed to render any expression of discontent impossible. The Greeks
had not, in the time of Augustus, entirely lost their ancient spirit and
valour, and though comparatively feeble, their conduct was an object of some
solicitude to the Roman government.
The moral causes of depopulation were perhaps even
more powerful than the political. They had been long in operation, and had
produced great changes in the Greek character before the Roman conquest; and as
some similar social evils were acting on the Romans themselves, the moral
condition of Greece was not improved by the Roman government. The most
prevalent evil was a spirit of self-indulgence and utter indifference to the
duty of man in private life, which made every rank averse to marriage, and
unwilling to assume the responsibility of educating a family. The Greeks never
adorned the vestibules of their houses with the statues and busts of their
ancestors; their inordinate self-conceit taught them to concentrate their
admiration on themselves. And the Romans, even with the family pride which led
to this noble practice, were constantly losing the glories of their race by
conferring their name on adopted scions of other houses. The religion, and
often the philosophy, of the ancients encouraged vicious indulgence, and the
general rule of society in the first century of the Roman Empire was to live
with concubines selected from a class of female slaves educated for this
station. The land, which had formerly maintained a thousand free citizens
capable of marching to defend their country as hoplites, was now regarded as
affording a scanty provision for the household of a single proprietor who
considered himself too poor to marry. His estate was cultivated by a tribe of
slaves, while he amused himself with the music of the theatre, or the equally
idle sounds of the philosophic schools. The desire to occupy larger properties
than their ancestors had cultivated, has already been noticed as an effect of
the riches obtained by the Macedonian conquests; and its influence as a moral
check on the population of Greece has been adverted to . This cause of
depopulation increased under the Roman government. The love of immense parks,
splendid villas and luxurious living, fostered vice and celibacy to such an
extent in the higher ranks, that the wealthy families became gradually extinct.
The line of distinction between the rich and the poor was constantly becoming
more marked. The rich formed an aristocratic class, the poor were sinking into
a dependent grade in society; they were fast approaching the state of coloni or serfs.
In this state of society, neither class shows a tendency to in- crease. It
appears indeed to be a law of human society, that all classes of mankind which
are separated, by superior wealth and privileges, from the body of the people,
and by their oligarchical constitution, liable to a rapid decline. As the
privileges which they enjoy have created an unnatural position in life, vice is
increased beyond that limit which is consistent with the duration of society.
The fact has been long observed with regard to the oligarchies of Sparta and
Rome. It had its effect even on the more extended citizenship of Athens, and it
even affected, in our times, the two hundred thousand electors who formed the
oligarchy of France during the reign of Louis Philippe.
Sect. VIII
Roman Colonies
established in Greece.
Two Roman colonies, Corinth and Patrae,
were established in Greece. They soon became the principal cities, and were for
ages the centres of the political administration. Their influence on Greek
society was very great, yet Latin continued to be the spoken language of the
inhabitants, and their institutions and local government remained exclusively
Roman until the decree of Caracalla extended the Roman franchise to all Greece.
The site of Corinth was devoted to the gods when Mummius destroyed the city and exterminated its
inhabitants. From that time it remained desolate until, after an interval of
more than a hundred years, Julius Caesar repeopled it with a colony of Romans.
The advantages of its position, its rich territory, its impregnable citadel,
its narrow isthmus, and its ports on two seas, made it equally valuable as a
military and naval station, and as a commercial mart. Caesar refortified the
Acro-Corinth, repaired the temples, rebuilt the city, restored the ports, and
established a numerous population of veteran legionaries and industrious
freedmen in the new city. Corinth became once more flourishing and populous.
Its colonial coinage from the time of Julius to that of Gordian III is
abundant, and often beautiful. It attests the extent of its trade and the taste
of its inhabitants. But the new Corinth was not a Greek city. The mother of so
many Hellenic colonies was now a foreign colony in Hellas. Her institutions
were Roman, her language was Latin, her manners were tinctured with the lupine
ferocity of the race of Romulus. Shows of gladiators were the delight of her
amphitheatre; and though she shed a strong light over fallen Greece, it was
only a lurid reflection of the splendour of Rome.
The position of Corinth was admirably suited for a
military station to overlook the proceedings of the Greeks who were opposed to
Caesar’s government. The measure was evidently one of precaution, and very
little was done to give it the show of having originated in a wish to revive
the prosperity of Greece. The population of the new Corinth was allowed to
collect building materials, and search for wealth, in any way, how offensive
soever it might be to the feelings of the Greeks. The tombs, which had alone
escaped the fury of Mummius, were destroyed to
construct the new buildings, and excavated for the rich ornaments and valuable
sepulchral vases which they often contained. So systematically did the Romans
pursue this profession of violating the tombs, that it became a source of very
considerable wealth to the colony, and Rome was filled with works of archaic
art. The facilities which the position of Corinth afforded for maritime
communications, not only with every part of Greece, but also with Italy and
Asia Minor, rendered it the seat of the Roman provincial administration, and
the usual residence of the proconsul of Achaia.
The policy of Augustus towards Greece was openly one
of precaution. The Greeks still continued to occupy the attention of the ruling
class at Rome, more perhaps than their declining power warranted; they had not
yet sunk into the political insignificancy which they were destined to reach in
the days of Juvenal and Tacitus. Augustus reduced the power of all those Greek
states that retained any influence, whether they had joined his own party or favoured
Antony. Athens was deprived of its authority over Eretria and Aegina, and
forbidden to increase its local revenues by selling the right of citizenship.
Lacedaemon was also weakened by the establishment of the independent community
of the free Laconians, a confederation of twenty-four maritime cities, whose
population, consisting chiefly of perioikoi, had hitherto paid taxes to Sparta. Augustus, it
is true, assigned the island of Cythera, and a few places on the Messenian
frontier, to the Lacedaemonian state; but the gift was a very slight
compensation for the loss sustained in a political point of view, whatever it
might have been in a financial.
Augustus established a Roman colony at Patrae to extinguish the smouldering nationality of Achaia,
and to keep open a gate through which a Roman force might at any time pour into
Greece. Patrae then lay in ruins, and the proprietors
of its territory dwelt in the villages around. Augustus repaired the city, and
re-peopled it with Roman citizens, freedmen, and the veterans of the
twenty-second legion. To fill up the void in the numbers of the middle and
lower orders of the free population, necessary for the immediate formation of a
large city, the inhabitants of some neighbouring Greek towns were compelled to
abandon their dwellings and reside in Patrae. The
local government of the colony was endowed with municipal revenues taken from
several Achaean and Locrian cities which were deprived of their civic
existence. Patrae was often the residence of the
proconsul of Achaia, and it flourished for ages both as a Roman administrative
station and as a port possessing great commercial resources. Its colonial
coinage, though neither so abundant nor so elegant in its fabric as that of
Corinth, extends from the time of Augustus to that of Gordian III. As in all
Roman colonies, the political institutions of Rome were closely imitated at
Corinth and Patrae. Their highest magistrates were
duumviri, who represented the consulate, and who were annually elected; or,
perhaps, it would be more correct to say, were selected for a nominal election
by the imperial authorities. Other magistrates were elected, and some were
appointed to perform those duties in the colonies which were similar to the
functions of the great office-bearers in Rome. And as the model of the Roman
government was originally that of a single city, the resemblance was easily
maintained. Under the emperors, however, the colonies gradually sank into
ordinary corporations for the transaction of administrative and fiscal business,
under the immediate control of the Roman proconsuls and provincial governors.
Augustus also founded a new city called Nicopolis, to commemorate the victory of Actium, but it was
as much a triumphal monument as a political establishment. Its organization was
that of a Greek city, not of a Roman colony; and its quinquennial festival of
the Actia was instituted on the model of the great
games of Greece, and placed under the superintendence of the Lacedaemonians.
Its population consisted of Greeks who were compelled to desert their native
cities in Epirus, Acarnania, and Aetolia. Its territory was extensive, and it
was admitted into the Amphictyonic council as a Greek
state. The manner in which Augustus peopled Nicopolis
proves his indifference to the feelings of humanity, and the imperfection of
his knowledge in that political science which enables a statesman to convert a
small territory into a flourishing State.
The principles of his colonization contributed as
directly to the decline and depopulation of Italy and Greece, as the accidental
tyranny or folly of any of his successors. The inhabitants of a great part of
Aetolia were torn from their abodes, where they were residing on their own
property, surrounded by their cattle, their olive-trees and vineyards, and
compelled to construct such dwellings as they were able, and find such means of
livelihood as presented themselves, at Nicopolis. The
destruction of an immense amount of vested capital in provincial buildings was
the consequence; the agriculture of a whole province was ruined, and a
considerable agricultural population must have pined in poverty or perished
from want in the changed circumstances of a city life. Nicopolis
long continued to be the principal city in Epirus. Its local coinage extends
from Augustus down to the reign of Gallienus. The
legends are Greek, and the fabric rude. The peculiar privileges conferred on
the three colonies of Corinth, Patrae, and Nicopolis, and the close connection in which they were
placed with the imperial government, enabled them to flourish for centuries
amidst the general poverty which the despotic system of the Roman provincial
administration spread over the rest of Greece.
Sect. IX
Political Condition of Greece from the time of
Augustus to that of Caracalla.
Two descriptions of Greece have been preserved, which
afford vivid pictures of the impoverished condition of the country during two
centuries of the Roman government. Strabo has left us an account of the aspect
of Greece, shortly after the foundation of the colonies of Patrae
and Nicopolis. Pausanias has described, with
melancholy exactness, the desolate appearance of many celebrated cities, during
the time of the Antonines. Governors and proconsuls
were sent to administer the government who were ignorant of the Greek language.
The taxes imposed on the country, and the expenses of the provincial
administration, drained off all the wealth of the people; and those necessary
public works, which required a large expenditure for their maintenance and preservation,
were allowed to fall gradually into ruin. The emperors, at times, indeed,
attempted, by a few isolated acts of mercy, to alleviate the sufferings of the
Greeks. Tiberius, as we have already mentioned, united the provinces of Achaia
and Macedonia to the imperial government of Moesia, in order to deliver them
from the weight of the proconsular administration. His successor restored them
to the senate. When Nero visited Greece to receive a crown at the Olympic
Games, he recompensed the Greeks for their flatteries by declaring them free
from tribute. The immunities which he conferred produced some serious disputes
be- tween the various states, concerning the collection of their municipal
taxes; and Vespasian rendered these disputes a pretext for annulling the
freedom conferred by Nero. The free cities of Greece still possessed not only
the administration of considerable revenues, but also the power of raising
money, by local taxes, for the maintenance of their temples, schools,
universities, aqueducts, roads, ports, and public buildings. Trajan carefully
avoided destroying any of the municipal privileges of the Greeks, and he
endeavoured to improve their condition by his just and equitable
administration; yet his policy was adverse to the increase of local
institutions.
Hadrian opened a new line of policy to the sovereigns
of Rome, and avowed the determination of reforming the institutions of the
Romans, and adapting his government to the altered state of society in the
empire. He perceived that the central government was weakening its power, and
diminishing its resources, by acts of injustice, which rendered property
everywhere insecure. He remedied the evils which resulted from the irregular
dispensation of the laws by the provincial governors, and effected reforms
which certainly exercised a favourable influence on the condition of the
inhabitants of the provinces. His reign laid the foundation of that regular and
systematic administration of justice in the Roman empire, which gradually
absorbed all the local judicatures of the Greeks, and, by forming a numerous
and well-educated society of lawyers, guided by uniform rules, raised up a
partial barrier against arbitrary power. In order to lighten the weight of
taxation, Hadrian abandoned all the arrears of taxes accumulated in preceding
years. His general system of administrative reforms was pursued by the Antonines, and perfected by the edict of Caracalla, which
conferred the rank of Roman citizens on all the free inhabitants of the empire.
Hadrian certainly deserves the merit of having first seen the necessity of
securing the imperial government, by effacing all badges of servitude from the
provincials, and connecting the interests of the landed proprietors throughout
the Roman empire with the existence of the imperial administration. He secured
to the provincials that legal rank in the constitution of the empire which
placed their rights on a level with those of Roman citizens, and for this he
was hated by the senate.
Hadrian, from personal taste, cultivated Greek
literature, and admired Grecian art. He left traces of his love of improvement
in every portion of the empire, through which he kept constantly travelling;
but Greece, and especially Attica, received an extraordinary share of the
imperial favour. It is difficult to estimate how far his conduct immediately
affected the general well-being of the population, or to point out the precise
manner of its operation on society; but it is evident that the impulse given to
improvement by his example and his administration, produced some tendency to
ameliorate the condition of the Greeks. Greece had, perhaps, sunk to its lowest
state of poverty and depopulation under the financial administration of the
Flavian family, and it displayed many signs of reviving prosperity, while it
enjoyed the advantage of good government under Hadrian. The extraordinary
improvements which the Roman emperors might have effected, by a judicious
employment of the public revenues, may be estimated from the immense public
works executed by Hadrian. At Athens he completed the temple of Jupiter Olympius, which had been commenced by Pisistratus, and of
which sixteen columns still exist to astonish the spectator by their size and
beauty. He built temples to Juno and to Jupiter Panhellenius,
and ornamented the city with a magnificent pantheon, a library, and a
gymnasium. He commenced an aqueduct to convey an abundant stream of water from Cephisia, which was completed by Antoninus.
At Megara, he rebuilt the temple of Apollo. He constructed an aqueduct which
conveyed the waters of the lake Stymphalus to
Corinth, and he erected new baths in that city. But the surest proof that his
improvements were directed by a judicious spirit is to be found in his
attention to the roads. Nothing could tend more to advance the prosperity of
this, mountainous country than removing the difficulties of intercourse between
its various provinces; for there is no country where the expense of transport
presents a greater barrier to trade, or where the obstacles to internal
communication form a more serious impediment to improvement in the social
condition of the agricultural population. He rendered the road from Northern
Greece to the Peloponnesus, by the Scironian rocks,
easy and commodious for wheeled carriages. Great, however, as these
improvements were, he conferred one still greater on the Greeks, as a nation,
by commencing the task of moulding their various local customs and laws into
one general system, founded on the basis of Roman jurisprudence; and while he ingrafted
the law of the Romans on the stock of society in Greece, he did not seek to
destroy the municipal institutions of the people. The policy of Hadrian, in
raising the Greeks to an equality of civil rights with the Romans, sanctioned
whatever remained of the Macedonian institutions throughout the East; and as
soon as the edict of Caracalla had conferred on all the subjects of the empire
the rights of Roman citizenship, the Greeks became, in reality, the dominant
people in the Eastern portion of the empire, and Greek institutions ultimately
ruled society under the supremacy of Roman law.
It is curious that Antoninus,
who adopted all the views of Hadrian with regard to the annihilation of the
exclusive supremacy of the Roman citizens, should have thought it worth his
attention to point out the supposed ancient connection between Rome and Arcadia.
He was the first Roman who commemorated this fanciful relationship between
Greece and Rome by any public act. He conferred on Pallantium,
the Arcadian city from which Evander was supposed to have led a Greek colony to
the banks of the Tiber, all the privileges ever granted to the most favoured
municipalities in the Roman Empire. The habits and character of Marcus Aurelius
led him to regard the Greeks with the greatest favour; and had his reign been
more peaceful, and left his time more at his own disposal, the sophists and
philosophers of Greece would, in all probability, have profited by his leisure.
He rebuilt the temple of Eleusis, which had been burnt to the ground; he
improved the schools of Athens, and increased the salaries of the professors, who
then rendered that city the most celebrated university in the civilized world. Herodes Atticus, whose splendid public edifices in Greece
rivalled the works of Hadrian, gained great influence by his eminence in
literature and taste, as well as by his enormous wealth. It was the golden age
of rhetoricians, whose services were rewarded not only with liberal salaries
and donations in money, but even with such magisterial authority and honour as
the Greek cities could confer. Herodes Atticus had
been selected by Antoninus Pius to give lessons in
eloquence to Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus, and he
was treated with distinction by Marcus Aurelius, until it was necessary to
reprove his oppressive and tyrannical conduct to the Athenians. The friendship
of the emperor did not save him from disgrace, though his freedmen alone were
punished.
Little can be collected concerning the condition of
Greece under the successors of Marcus Aurelius. The Roman government was
occupied with wars, which seldom directly affected the provinces occupied by
the Greeks. Literature and science were little regarded by the soldiers of
fortune who mounted the imperial throne; and Greece, forgotten and neglected,
appears to have enjoyed a degree of tranquillity and repose, which enabled her
to profit by the improvements in the imperial government which Hadrian had introduced
and the decree of Caracalla had ratified.
The institutions of the Greeks, which were unconnected
with the exercise of the supreme executive power, were generally allowed to
exist, even by the most jealous of the emperors. When these institutions disappeared,
their destruction was effected by the progressive change which time gradually
introduced into Greek society, and not by any violence on the part of the Roman
government. It is difficult, indeed, to trace the limits of the state and city
administration in matters of taxation, or the exact extent of their control
over their local funds. Some cities possessed independence, and others were
free from tribute; and these privileges gave the Greek nation a political
position in the empire, which prevented their being confounded with the other
provincials in the East, until the reign of Justinian. As the Greek cities in
Thrace, Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt preserved these important privileges, it
is not wonderful that, in Greece, the whole frame of the ancient social
institutions was preserved.
Pausanias found the Amphictyonic
council still holding its meetings, three centuries after the Roman conquest.
The deputies of the Achaean, Boeotian, and Phocic
commonwealths continued to meet for the purpose of transacting the business of
their confederacies. The Athenians were allowed to maintain an armed guard in
the island of Delos. The Olympic, Pythic, and Isthmian games were regularly
celebrated. The Areopagus at Athens, and the Gerontia
at Sparta, still exercised their functions. The different cities and provinces
affected the use of their peculiar dialects, and the inhabitants of Sparta
continued to imitate the Laconism of antiquity in their public despatches,
though their altered manners rendered it ridiculous. The mountaineers of
Attica, in the time of Antoninus, spoke a purer
language than the populace of the city of Athens, which still bore evidence of
its heterogeneous origin after the massacre of Sulla. Had the financial burdens
of the Roman government not weighed too heavily on the population, the rivalry
of the Greeks, actively directed to local improvements and to commerce, instead
of being too exclusively and ostentatiously devoted to philosophy, literature,
and the arts, might have proved more useful and honourable to their country.
But the moral supports of the old framework of society were destroyed before
the edict of Caracalla had emancipated Greece; and when tranquillity arrived,
they were only capable of enjoying the felicity of having been forgotten by
their tyrants.
Sect. X.
The Greeks and Romans never showed any disposition to
unite and form one people.
The habits and tastes of the Greeks and Romans were so
different, that their familiar intercourse produced a feeling of antipathy in
the two nations. The Roman writers, from prejudice and jealousy, of which they
were themselves, perhaps, unconscious, have transmitted to us a very incorrect
picture of the state of the Greeks during the first centuries of the empire.
They did not observe, with attention, the marked distinction between the
Asiatic and Alexandrine Greeks and the natives of Hellas. The European
population, pursuing the quiet life of landed proprietors, or engaged in the
pursuits of commerce and agriculture, was considered, by Roman prejudice, as
unworthy of notice. Lucian, himself a Greek, indeed contrasts the tranquil and
respectable manner of life at Athens with the folly and luxury of Rome; but the
Romans looked on provincials as little better than serfs (coloni) and merchants were, in
their eyes, only tolerated cheats. The Greek character was estimated from the
conduct of the adventurers, who thronged from the wealthy and corrupted cities
of the East to seek their fortunes at Rome, and who, from motives of fashion
and taste, were unduly favoured by the wealthy aristocracy. The most
distinguished of these Greeks were literary men, professors of philosophy,
rhetoric, grammar, mathematics, and music. Great numbers were engaged as
private teachers; and this class was regarded with some respect by the Roman
nobility, from its intimate connection with their families. The great mass of
the Greeks residing at Rome were, however, employed in connection with the
public and private amusements of the capital, and were found engaged in every profession,
from the directors of the theatres and opera-houses, down to the swindlers who
frequented the haunts of vice. The testimony of the Latin authors may be
received as sufficiently accurate concerning the light in which the Greeks were
regarded at Rome, and as a not incorrect portraiture of the Greek population of
the capital.
The expressions of the Romans, when speaking of the
Greeks, often display nothing more than the manner in which the proud
aristocracy of the empire regarded all foreigners, those even whom they
admitted to their personal intimacy. The Greeks were confounded with the great
body of strangers from the Eastern nations, in one general sentence of
condemnation; and not unnaturally, for the Greek language served as the
ordinary means of communication with all foreigners from the East. The
magicians, conjurers, and astrologers of Syria, Egypt, and Chaldea, were
naturally mixed up, both in society and public opinion, with the adventurers of
Greece, and contributed to form the despicable type which was unjustly enough
transferred from the fortune-hunters at Rome to the whole Greek nation. It is
hardly necessary to observe that Greek literature, as cultivated at Rome during
this period, had no connection with the national feelings of the Greek people.
As far as the Greeks themselves were concerned, learning was an honourable and
lucrative occupation to its successful professors; but in the estimation of the
higher classes at Rome, Greek literature was merely an ornamental exercise of
the mind,— a fashion of the wealthy. This ignorance of Greece and the Greeks
induced Juvenal to draw his conclusive proof of the utter falsity of the Greek
character, and of the fabulous nature of all Greek history, from his own doubts
concerning a fact which is avouched by the testimony of Herodotus and
Thucydides; but as a retort to the Graecia
mendax of the Roman satirist, the observation of
Lucian may be cited — that the Romans spoke truth only once in their lives, and
that was when they made their wills.
The Greeks repaid the scorn of the Romans with greater
and not more reasonable contempt. When the two nations first came into
collision, the Romans were certainly far less polished than the Greeks, though
they were much superior to them in virtue and courage. They acknowledged their
inferiority, and readily derived lessons of instruction from a people unable to
resist their arms. The obligation was always recognised. And Roman gratitude
inflated Greek vanity to such a degree, that the conquered never perceived that
their masters became at last as much their superiors in literary genius as in
political and military science. The Greeks seem always to have remained
ignorant that there were Roman writers whose works would, by successive
generations and distant nations, be placed almost in the same rank as their own
classic authors. The rhetorical contemporaries of Tacitus and of Juvenal never
suspected that the original genius of those writers had extended the domain of
literature, nor could any critic have persuaded them that Horace had already
surpassed the popularity of their own poets by a graceful union of social
elegance with calm sagacity.
A single example of the supercilious egoism of the
Greeks will be sufficient to show the extent of their presumption during their
political degradation as Roman provincials. When Apollonius of Tyana, the pythagorean
philosopher, who excited the admiration of the Hellenic world during the first
century, visited Smyrna, he was invited to attend the Panionian
Assembly. On reading the decree of the council, he observed that it was signed
by men who had adopted Roman names, and he immediately addressed a letter to
the Panionians blaming their barbarism. He reproached
them for laying aside the names of their ancestors, for quitting the names of
heroes and legislators to assume such names as Lucullus and Fabricius.
Now, when we remember that this rebuke was gravely uttered by a native of the
Cappadocian city of Tyana, to a corporation of
degenerate Asiatic Greeks, it forms a curious monument of the delusions of
national vanity.
The Romans were never very deeply imbued with a
passionate admiration for Grecian art, with which every rank in Greece was
animated. The national pride and personal vanity of the conquerors, it is true,
often coveted the possession of the most celebrated works of art, which were
transported to Rome as much on account of their celebrity as their merit, for
the painting and sculpture which they could procure as articles of commercial
industry were sufficient to gratify Roman taste. This was peculiarly fortunate
for Greece, since there can be no doubt that, if the Romans had been as
enthusiastic lovers of art as they were indefatigable hunters after riches,
they would not have hesitated to regard all those works of art, which were the
public property of the Grecian states, as belonging to the Roman commonwealth
by the right of conquest. It was only because the avarice of the people would
have received little gratification from the seizure, that Greece was allowed to
retain her statues and paintings when she was plundered of her gold and silver.
The great dissimilarity of manners between the two nations appears in the
aversion with which many distinguished senators viewed the introduction of the
works of Grecian art by Marcellus and Mummius, after
the conquests of Syracuse and Corinth. This aversion unquestionably contributed
much to save Greece from the general confiscation of her treasures of art, to
which her people clung with the most passionate attachment. Cicero says that no
Greek city would consent to sell a painting, a statue, or a work of art, but
that, on the contrary, all were ready to become purchasers. The inhabitants of Pergamus resisted the attempt of Acratus,
a commissioner sent by Nero, to carry off the most celebrated works of art from
the cities of Asia. The feeling of art, in the two peoples, is not inaptly
illustrated, by comparing the conduct of the Rhodian republic with that of the
Emperor Augustus. When the Rhodians were besieged by Demetrius Poliorcetes, they refused to destroy his statues, and those
of his father, which had been erected in their agora. But when Augustus
conquered Egypt he ordered all the statues of Antony to be destroyed, and, with
a meanness somewhat at variance with patrician dignity, he accepted a bribe of
one thousand talents from the Alexandrines to spare the statues of Cleopatra.
The Greeks honoured art even more than the Romans loved vengeance. Works of art
were carried away by those Roman governors who spared nothing they could
pillage in their provinces; but these spoliations were always regarded in the
light of direct robberies; and Fulvius Nobilior, Verres, and Piso, who
distinguished themselves in this species of violence, were considered as the
most infamous of the Roman magistrates.
It is true that Sulla carried off the ivory statue of
Minerva from the temple of Alalcomenae, and that
Augustus removed that of the great temple of Tegea,
as a punishment because that city espoused the party of Antony. But these very exceptions
prove how sparingly the Romans availed themselves of their rights of conquest;
or history would have recorded the remarkable statues which they had allowed to
remain in Greece, rather than signalized as exceptions the few which they
transported to Rome. When Caligula and Nero were permitted to govern the world
according to the impulses of insanity, they ordered many celebrated works of
art to be conveyed to Rome — among these, the celebrated Cupid of Praxiteles
was twice removed. It was restored to Thespiae by
Claudius; but, on being again taken away by Nero, it perished in a
conflagration. After the great conflagration at Rome, in which innumerable
works of art perished, Nero transported five hundred brazen statues from
Delphi, to adorn the capital and replace the loss it had suffered, and he
ordered all the cities of Greece and Asia Minor to be systematically plundered.
Very little is subsequently recorded concerning this species of plunder, which
Hadrian and his two immediate successors would hardly have permitted. From the
great number of the most celebrated works of ancient art which Pausanias
enumerates in his tour through Greece, it is evident that no extensive injury
had then occurred, even to the oldest buildings. After the reign of Commodus,
the Roman emperors paid but little attention to art; and unless the value of
the materials caused the destruction of ancient works, they were allowed to
stand undisturbed until the buildings around them crumbled into dust. During
the period of nearly a century which elapsed from the time of Pausanias until
the first irruption of the Goths into Greece, it is certain that the temples
and public buildings of the inhabited cities were very little changed in their
general aspect, from the appearance which they had presented when the Roman
legions first entered Hellas.
Sect. XI
State of Society among the Greeks,
To give a complete account of the state of society
among the Greeks under the Roman Empire, it would be necessary to enter into
many details concerning the social and political institutions of the Romans,
for both exercised great influence in Greece. To avoid so extensive a field, it
will be necessary to give only a cursory sketch of those social peculiarities
whose influence, though apparent in the annals of the Roman Empire, did not
permanently affect the political history of the empire. The state of
civilization, the popular objects of pursuit, even the views of national
advancement, continued, under the imperial government, to be very different, and
often opposite, in different divisions of the Greek nation.
The inhabitants of Hellas had sunk into a quiet and
secluded population. The schools of Athens were still famous, and Greece was
visited by numbers of fashionable and learned travellers from other countries,
as Italy now is; but the citizens dwelt in their own little world, clinging to
antiquated forms and usages, and to old superstitions, — holding little
intercourse, and having little community of feeling, either with the rest of
the empire or with the other divisions of the Hellenic race.
The maritime cities of Europe, Asia Minor, and the
Archipelago contained a considerable population, chiefly occupied in commerce
and manufactures, and taking little interest in the politics of Rome, or in the
literature of Greece. Though the Greeks looked on trade with more favour than
the Romans, declining wealth and unjust laws were rapidly tending to depreciate
the mercantile character, and to render the occupation less respectable, even
in the commercial cities. It is not inappropriate to notice one instance of
Roman commercial legislation. Julius Caesar, among his projects of reform,
thought fit to revive an old Roman law, which prohibited any citizen from
having in his possession a larger sum than sixty thousand sesterces in the
precious metals. This law was, of course, neglected; but under Tiberius it was
made a pretext by informers to levy various fines and confiscations in Greece
and Syria. The commerce of the eastern part of the Mediterranean which had once
consisted of commodities of general consumption, declined, under the fiscal
avarice of the Romans, into an export trade of some articles of luxury to the
larger cities of the west of Europe. The wines of the Archipelago, the carpets
of Pergamus, the cambric of Cos, and the dyed
woollens of Laconia, are particularly mentioned. The decrease of trade is not
to be overlooked as one of the causes of the decline and depopulation of the
Roman Empire; for wealth depended even more on commerce in ancient times, than
it does in modern, on account of the imperfect means of transport, and the
impolitic laws relating to the exportation of grain from many provinces to
Rome, where its gratuitous distribution to a large part of the population, and
its frequent sale below the cost of production in Italy deranged all commercial
operations.
The division of the Greek nation which occupied the
most important social position in the empire, consisted of the remains of the
Macedonian and Greek colonies in Asia Minor, Egypt, and Syria. These countries
were filled with Greeks; and the cities of Alexandria and Antioch, the second
and third in the empire in size, population, and wealth, were chiefly peopled
by Greeks. The influence of Alexandria alone on the Roman Empire, and on European
civilization, would require a treatise, in order to do justice to the subject.
Its schools of philosophy produced modifications of Christianity in the East,
and attempted to infuse a new life into the torpid members of paganism by means
of gnosticism and neoplatonism.
The feuds between the Jews and Christians, which arose out of its local
quarrels, were bequeathed to following centuries; and in Western Europe, we
still debase Christianity by the admixture of those prejudices which had their
rise in the amphitheatre of Alexandria. Its wealth and population excited the
jealousy of Augustus, who deprived it of its municipal institutions, and
rendered it a prey to the factions of the amphitheatre, the curse of Roman
civic anarchy. The populace, unrestrained by any system of order founded on
corporate institutions, and without any social guidance derived from any
acknowledged municipal authority, was abandoned to the passions of the wildest
democracy, whenever they were crowded together. Hadrian was struck with the
activity and industry of the Alexandrines; and though he does not appear to
have admired their character, he saw that the increase of privileges to some
organized classes of the population was the true way to lessen the influence of
the mob.
Antioch and the other Greek cities of the East
preserved their municipal privileges; and the Greek population in Asia Minor,
Egypt, and Syria, remained everywhere completely separated from the original
inhabitants. Their corporate organization often afforded them an opportunity of
interfering with the details of the public administration, and their intriguing
and seditious spirit enabled them to defend their rights and interests. When
the free population of the provinces acquired the rights of Roman citizenship,
the Greeks of these countries, who formed the majority of the privileged
classes, and were already in possession of the principal share of the local
administration, became soon possessed of the whole authority of the Roman
government. They appeared as the real representatives of the State, excluded
the native population from power, and, consequently, rendered it more
dissatisfied than formerly. In the East, therefore, after the publication of
Caracalla’s edict, the Greeks became again the dominant people, as they had
been before the Roman conquest. In spite of the equality of all the provincials
in the eye of the law, a violent opposition was created between them and the
native population in Syria, Egypt, and a large part of Asia Minor, where
various nations still retained their own customs and languages. The Greeks, in
a large portion of the eastern half of the empire, occupied a position nearly
similar to that of the Romans in the western. The same causes produced similar
effects, and from the period when the Greeks became a privileged and dominant
class, administering the severe fiscal supremacy of the Roman government,
instead of ruling with the more tolerant habits of their Macedonian
predecessors, their numbers and influence began to decline. Like the Romans of
Italy, Gaul, and Spain, the Greeks of Egypt, Syria, and Mesopotamia destroyed
themselves, perishing from the corruption which they engendered by the abuse of
their power.
The secluded position of the inhabitants of ancient
Hellas almost conceals their social condition from the view of the political
historian. The principal causes of the decline of Greece have been already
explained; but the tone of society, and the manner of living adopted by the
upper and middle ranks, accelerated the progress of national decay. It has been
already remarked, that the increase of wealth consequent on the Macedonian
conquests had tended to augment the size of private properties, and to add to
the numbers of slaves in Greece. Under the Romans, the general riches of the
country were indeed very much diminished; but individuals were enabled to
acquire fortunes greater than had been possessed by the ancient monarchs, and
to possess estates larger than the territories of many celebrated republics.
Julius Eurycles owned a province, and Herodes Atticus could have purchased a kingdom. While a few
individuals could amass unbounded wealth, the bulk of the people were prevented
from acquiring even a moderate independency; and when Plutarch says that
Greece, in his time, could not arm more than three thousand hoplitae, though the small states
of Sicyon and Megara each furnished that number at the battle of Plataea, it is
necessary to remember the change which had taken place in the size of private
properties, as well as the altered state of society, for both tended to
diminish the numbers of the free population. The taxes of Greece were remitted
to Rome, and expended beyond the limits of the province. The most useful public
works were neglected, except when a benevolent emperor like Hadrian, or a
wealthy individual like Herodes Atticus, thought fit
to direct some portion of their expenditure to what was useful as well as
ornamental. Under a continuance of such circumstances, Greece was drained of
money and capital.
The poverty of Greece was farther increased by the
gradual rise in the value of the precious metals, — an evil which began to be
generally felt about the time of Nero, and which affected Greece with great
severity, from the altered distribution of wealth in the country, and the loss
of its foreign commerce, Greece had once been rich in mines, which had been a
source of wealth and prosperity to Siphnos and
Athens, and had laid the foundation of the power of Philip of Macedon. Gold and
silver mines, when their produce is regarded as articles of commerce, are a
surer basis of wealth than mines of lead and copper. The evils which have
arisen in countries where gold and silver have been produced, have proceeded
from the fiscal regulations of the government. The fiscal measures of the
Romans soon rendered it a ruinous speculation for private individuals to
attempt working mines of the precious metals, and, in the hands of the State,
they soon proved unprofitable. Many mines were exhausted; and even though the
value of the precious metals was enhanced, some, beyond the influence of the
Roman power, were abandoned from those causes which, after the second century
of the Christian era, produced a sensible diminution in the commercial
transactions of the old hemisphere.
Greece suffered in the general decay; her commerce and
manufactures, being confined to supplying the consumption of a diminished and
impoverished population, sank into insignificancy. In a declining state of
society, where political, financial, and commercial causes combine to diminish
the wealth of a nation, it is difficult for individuals to alter their manner
of life, and to restrict their expenditure, with the promptitude necessary to
escape impoverishment. It is indeed seldom in their power to estimate the progress
of the decay; and a reasonable jointure, or a necessary mortgage, may ruin a
family.
In this declining state of society, complaints of
excessive luxury are generally prevalent, and the Greek writers of the second
century are filled with lamentations on this subject. Such complaints alone do
not prove that the majority of the higher classes were living in a manner
injurious to society, either from their effeminacy or vicious expenditure. They
only show that the greater part of the incomes of private persons was consumed
by their personal expenditure; and that a due proportion was not set apart for
creating new productive property, in order to replace the deterioration, which
time is ever causing in that which already exists. People of property, when
their annual incomes proved insufficient for their personal expenditure, began
to borrow money, instead of trying to diminish their expenses. An accumulation
of debts became general throughout the country, and formed a great evil in the
time of Plutarch. These debts were partly caused by the oppression of the Roman
government, and by the chicanery of the fiscal officers, always pressing for
ready money, and were generally contracted to Roman money-lenders. It was in
this way that the Roman administration produced its most injurious effects in
the provinces, by affording to capitalists the means of accumulating enormous
wealth, and by forcing the proprietors of land into abject poverty. The
property of Greek debtors was at last transferred, to a very great extent, to
their Roman creditors. This transference, which, in a homogeneous society,
might have invigorated the upper classes, by substituting an industrious
timocracy for an idle aristocracy, had a very different effect. It introduced
new feelings of rivalry and extravagance, by filling the country with foreign
landlords. The Greeks could not long' maintain the struggle, and they sank
gradually lower and lower in wealth, until their poverty introduced an altered
state of society, and taught them the prudential and industrious habits of
farmers, in which tranquil position they escape, not only from the eye of
history, but even from antiquarian research.
It is difficult to convey a correct notion of the
evils and demoralization produced by private debts in the ancient world, though
they often appear as one of the most powerful agents in political revolutions,
and were a constant subject of attention to the statesman, the lawgiver, and
the political philosopher. Modern society has completely annihilated their
political effects. The greater facilities afforded to the transference of
landed property, and the ease with which capital now circulates, have given an
extension to the operations of banking which has remedied this peculiar defect
in society. It must be noticed, too, that the ancients regarded landed property
as the accessory of the citizen, even when its amount determined his rank in
the commonwealth: but the moderns view the proprietor as the accessory of the
landed property; and the political franchise, being inherent in the estate, is
lost by the citizen who alienates his property.
In closing this view of the state of the Greek people
under the imperial government, if is impossible not
to feel that Greece cannot be included in the general assertion of Gibbon, that
if a man were called to fix the period in the history of the world during which
the condition of the human race was most happy and prosperous, he would,
without hesitation, name that which elapsed from the death of Domitian to the
accession of Commodus. It may be doubted whether the Roman government ever
relaxed the systematic oppression under which the agricultural and commercial
population of its provinces groaned; and even Hadrian himself can hardly claim
greater merit than that of having humanely administered a system radically bad,
and endeavoured to correct its most prominent features of injustice. Greece,
indeed, reached its lowest degree of misery and depopulation about the time of
Vespasian; but still there is ample testimony in the pages of contemporary
writers, to prove that the desolate state of the country was not materially
improved for a long period, and that only partial signs of amelioration were
apparent in the period so much vaunted by Gibbon. The liberality of Hadrian,
and the munificence of Herodes Atticus, were isolated
examples, and could not change the constitution of Rome. Many splendid edifices
of antiquity were repaired by these two benefactors of Greece, but many works
of public utility remained neglected on account of the poverty of the
diminished population of the country ; and most of the works of Hadrian and Herodes Atticus contributed little more to the well-being
of the people than the wages of the labour expended on their construction. The
roads and aqueducts of Hadrian are wise exceptions, —as they diminished the
expenses of transport, and afforded increased facilities for production. Still
the sumptuous edifices, of which remains still exist, indicate that the object
of building was the erection of magnificent monuments of art— to commemorate
the taste and splendour of the founder, not to increase the resources of the
land or improve the condition of the industrious classes.
The condition of a declining population by no means
implies that any portion of the people is actually suffering from want of the
necessaries of life. A sudden change in the direction of commerce, and a
considerable decrease in the demand for the productions of manufacturing
industry, must indeed, at the time when such events occur, deprive numbers of
their usual means of subsistence, and create great misery, before the
population suffers the ultimate diminution which these causes necessitate. Such
events may occur in an improving as well as in a declining society. But, when
the bulk of a country’s productions is drawn from its own soil, and consumed by
its own inhabitants, the population may be in a declining condition, without
the circumstance being suspected for some time, either at home or abroad. The
chief cause of the deterioration of the national resources will then arise from
the members of society consuming too great a proportion of their annual income,
without dedicating a due portion of their revenues to reproduction; in short,
from expending their incomes, without creating new sources of wealth, or taking
any measures to prevent the diminution of the old. Greece suffered from all the
causes alluded to; her commerce and manufactures were transferred to other
lands; and, when the change was completed, her inhabitants resolved to enjoy
life, instead of labouring to replace the wealth which their country had lost.
This diminution in the wealth of the people ultimately produced changes in
society, which laid the foundation for a great step in the improvement of the
human species. Poverty rendered slavery less frequent, and destroyed many of
the channels by which the slave trade had flourished. The condition of the
slaves also underwent several modifications, as the barrier between the slave
and the citizen was broken down by the necessity in which the poor classes of
freemen were placed of working at the same employments as slaves in order to
obtain the means of subsistence. At this favourable conjuncture Christianity
stepped in, to prevent avarice from ever recovering the ground which humanity
had gained.
Under oppressive governments, the person sometimes
becomes more insecure than property. This appears to have been the case under
the Roman, as it has since been under the Turkish government; and the
population, in such case, decreases much more rapidly than property is
destroyed. The inhabitants of Greece under the Roman Empire found themselves
possessed of buildings, gardens, vineyards, olive plantations, and all the
agricultural produce which the accumulated capital of former ages had created,
to an extent capable of maintaining a far more numerous population. The want of
commerce, neglected roads, the rarity of the precious metals in circulation,
and the difficulties thrown in the way of petty traffic by injudicious
legislation, rendered the surplus produce of each separate district of little
value. The inhabitants enjoyed the mere necessaries of life, and some of the
luxuries of their climate, in great abundance; but when they sought to purchase
the productions of art and foreign commerce, they felt themselves to be poor.
Such a state of society inevitably introduces a system of wasting what is
superfluous, and of neglecting to prepare new means of future production. In
this condition of indifference and ease the population of Greece remained,
until the weakness of the Roman government, the disorders of the army, and the
diminution and disarming of the free population, opened a way for the northern
nations into the heart of the empire.
Sect. XII
Influence of Religion and Philosophy on Society
The earliest records of the Greeks represent them as
living completely free from the despotic authority of a priestly class. The
natural consequence of this freedom was an indefinite latitude in the dogmas of
the national faith: and the priesthood, as it existed, became a very incorrect
interpreter of public opinion in religious questions. The belief in the gods of
Olympus had been shaken as early as the age of Pericles, and underwent many
modifications after the Macedonian conquests. From the time the Romans became
masters of Greece, the majority of the educated were votaries of the different
philosophical sects, —every one of which viewed the established religion as a
mere popular delusion. But the Roman government, and the municipal authorities,
continued to support the various religions of the different provinces in their
legal rights, though the priesthood generally enjoyed this support rather in
their character of constituted corporations than because they were regarded as
spiritual guides. The amount of their revenues, and the extent of their civic
rights and privileges, were the chief objects which engaged the attention of
the magistrate.
The wealth and number of the religious establishments
in Greece, and the large funds possessed by corporations, which were
appropriated to public festivals, contributed in no small degree to encourage
idleness among the people, and perpetuate a taste for extravagance. The great
festivals of the Olympic, Pythic, and Isthmian games, in so far as they served
to unite the whole Greek nation in a common place of assembly for national
objects, were, indeed, productive of many advantages. They contributed to
maintain a general standard of public opinion throughout the Hellenic race, and
they kept up a feeling of nationality. But the dissipation occasioned by the
multitude of local religious feasts and public amusements, produced the most
injurious effects on society.
The privilege called the right of asylum, by which
some ancient temples became sanctuaries where fugitive slaves were protected
against the vengeance of their masters, where debtors could escape the pursuit
of their creditors, and where the worst criminals defied the justice of the
law, tended to encourage the open violation of every principle of justice. The
fear of punishment, the strength of moral obligations, and the respect due to
religion, were destroyed by the impunity thus openly granted to the most
heinous crimes. This abuse had extended to such a degree under the Roman
government, that the senate found it necessary, in the reign of Tiberius, to
mitigate the evil; but superstition was too powerful to allow a complete
reform, and many shrines were allowed to retain the right of asylum to a much
later period.
Though ancient superstitions were still practised, old
religious feelings were extinct. The oracles, which had once formed the most
remarkable of the sacred institutions of the Greeks, had fallen into decay. It
is, however, incorrect to suppose that the Pythoness ceased to deliver her
responses from the time of our Saviour’s birth, for she was consulted by the
emperors long after. Many oracles continued to be in considerable repute, even
after the introduction of Christianity into Greece. Pausanias mentions the
oracle of Mallos, in Cilicia, as the most veracious
in his time. Claros and Didymi were famous, and much
consulted in the time of Lucian; and even new oracles were commenced as a
profitable speculation. The oracles continued to give their responses to
fervent votaries, long after they had fallen into general neglect Julian
endeavoured to revive their influence, and he consulted those of Delphi, Delos,
and Dodona, concerning the result of his Persian expedition. He vainly
attempted to restore Delphi, and Daphne, near Antioch, to their ancient splendour.
Even so late as the reign of Theodosius the Great, those of Delphi, Didymi, and Jupiter Ammon, were in existence, but from that
period they became utterly silent. The reverence which had formerly been paid
to them was transferred to astrologers, who were consulted by all ranks and on
all occasions. Tiberius, Otho, Hadrian, and Severus, are all mentioned as
votaries of this mode of searching into the secrets of futurity. Yet hidden
divination, to which astrology belonged, had been prohibited by the laws of the
twelve tables, and was condemned both by express law and by the spirit of the
Roman state religion. It was regarded, even by the Greeks, as an illicit and
disgraceful practice.
During the first century of the Christian era, the
worship of Serapis made great progress in every part of the Roman Empire. This
worship inculcated the existence of another world, and of a future judgment.
The fact deserves notice, as it indicates the annihilation of all reverence for
the old system of paganism, and marks a desire in the public mind to search
after those truths which the Christian dispensation soon after revealed. A
moral rule of life with a religious sanction was a want which society began to
feel when Christianity appeared to supply it.
The religion of the Greeks was so worthless as a guide
in morals, that the destruction of priestly influence by the speculations of
the philosophers produced no worse effect than completing a separation in the
intellectual education of the higher and lower classes, which other causes had
already produced. The systems of the priests and the philosophers were in
direct opposition to one another, and philosophical enquiry undoubtedly did
more for intellectual improvement than could have been effected by the
authority of a religion so utterly destitute of intellectual power, and so
compliant in its form, as that of Greece. The attention which the Greeks always
paid to philosophy and metaphysical speculation, is a curious feature in their
mental character, and owes its origin, in part, to the happy logical analogies
of their native language; but, in the days of Grecian independence, this was
only a distinctive characteristic of a small portion of the cultivated minds in
the nation. From that peculiar condition of society which resulted from the
existence of a number of small independent states, a larger portion of the
nation was occupied with the higher branches of political business than has
ever been the case in any other equally numerous body of mankind. Every city in
Greece held the rank of a capital, and possessed its own statesmen and lawyers.
The sense of this importance, and the weight of this responsibility, stimulated
the Greeks to the extraordinary exertions of intellect with which their history
is filled; for the strongest spur to exertion among men is the existence of a
duty imposed as a voluntary obligation.
The habits of social intercourse, and the simple
manner of life, which prevailed in the Greek republics, rendered the private
conduct of every distinguished citizen as well known, and as constantly a
subject of scrutiny to his fellow-citizens, as his public career. This powerful
agency of public opinion served to enforce a conventional morality which,
though lax in its ethics, was at least imperative in its demands. But when the
international system of the Hellenic states was destroyed, when an altered
condition of society had introduced greater privacy into the habits of social
life, and put a stop to public intercourse among the citizens of the same
region, by giving a marked prominence to the distinctions of rank and wealth,
the private conduct of those who were engaged in public life was, in a great
degree, withdrawn from the examination of the people; and the effect of public
opinion was gradually weakened, as the grounds on which it was formed became
less personal and characteristic.
Political circumstances began, about the same time, to
weaken the efficacy of public opinion in affairs of government and
administration. The want of some substitute, to replace its powerful influence
on the everyday conduct of man, was so imperiously felt that one was eagerly
sought for. Religion had long ceased to be a guide in morality; and men strove
to find some feeling which would replace the forgotten fear of the gods, and
that public opinion which could once inspire self-respect. It was hoped that
philosophy could supply the want; and it was cultivated not only by the
studious and the learned, but by the world at large, in the belief that the
self-respect of the philosopher would prove a sure guide to pure morality, and
inspire a deep sense of justice. The necessity of obtaining some permanent
power over the moral conduct of mankind was naturally suggested to the Greeks
by the political injustice under which they suffered; and the hope that
philosophical studies would temper the minds of their masters to equity, and
awaken feelings of humanity in their hearts, could not fail to exert
considerable influence. When the Romans themselves had fallen into a state of
moral and political degradation, lower even than that of the Greeks, it is not
surprising that the educated classes should have cultivated philosophy with
great eagerness, and with nearly similar views. The universal craving after
justice and truth affords a key to the profound respect with which teachers of
philosophy were regarded. Their authority and their character were so high that
they mixed with all ranks, and preserved their power, in spite of all the
ridicule of the satirists. The general purity of their lives, and the justice
of their conduct, were acknowledged, though a few may have been corrupted by
court favour; and pretenders may often have assumed a long beard and dirty
garments, to act the ascetic or the jester with greater effect in the houses of
the wealthy Romans. The inadequacy of any philosophical opinions to produce the
results required of them was, at last, apparent in the changes and
modifications which the various sects were constantly making in the tenets of
their founders, and the vain attempts that were undertaken to graft the
paganism of the past on the modern systems of philosophy. The great principle
of truth, which all were eagerly searching after, seemed to elude their grasp;
yet these investigations were not without great use in improving the intellectual
and moral condition of the higher orders, and rendering life tolerable, when
the tyranny and anarchy of the imperial government threatened the destruction
of society. They prepared the minds of men for listening candidly to a purer
religion, and rendered many of the votaries of philosophy ready converts to the
doctrines of Christianity.
Philosophy lent a splendour to the Greek name; yet,
with the exception of Athens, learning and philosophy were but little
cultivated in European Greece. The poverty of the inhabitants, and the secluded
position of the country, permitted few to dedicate their time to literary
pursuits; and after the time of the Antonines, the
wealthy cities of Asia, Syria, and Egypt, contained the real representatives of
the intellectual supremacy of the Hellenic race. The Greeks of Europe,
unnoticed by history, were carefully cherishing their national institutions;
while, in the eyes of foreigners the Greek character and fame depended on the
civilization of an expatriated population, already declining in number, and
hastening to extinction. The social institutions of the Greeks have, therefore,
been even more useful to them in a national point of view than their
literature.
Sect. XIII
The Social Condition of the Greeks affected by the
want of Colonies of Emigration
The want of foreign colonies, which admitted of a
constant influx of new emigrants, must have exercised a powerful influence in
arresting the progress of society in the Roman world. Rome never, like
Phoenicia and Greece, permitted numerous bands of her citizens to depart from
poverty in their own country, in order to better their fortunes and enjoy the
benefits of self-government as independent communities in other lands. Her
oligarchical constitution regarded the people as the property of the State.
Roman civilization moved only in the train of the armies of Rome, and its
progress was arrested when the career of conquest stopped. For several ages war
operated as a stimulant to population at Rome, as colonization has served in
modem times. It increased the general wealth by an influx of slave labour, and
excited the active energies of the people, by opening a career of advancement.
But the gains derived from an evil source cannot be productive of permanent good.
Even before the policy of Augustus had established universal peace, and reduced
the Roman army into a corps of gendarmerie or armed police for guarding the
internal tranquillity of the provinces, or watching the frontiers, a
combination of inherent defects in the constitution of the Roman state had
begun to destroy the lower order of Roman citizens. The people required a new
field of action when the old career of conquest was closed for ever, in order
to engage their energies in active pursuits, and prevent them from pining away
in poverty and idleness. The want of colonies of emigration, at this
conjuncture, kept all the evil elements of the population fermenting within the
State. The want of some distant spot connected with the past history of their
race, but freed from the existing social restrictions which weighed heavily on
the industrious, the ambitious, and the proud, was required by the Romans to
relieve society and render political reforms possible. Various attempts were
made to counteract the poverty and the want of occupation among the free
labourers which was produced at Rome by every long cessation of war. C.
Gracchus introduced the annual distributions of grain, which became one of the
principal causes of the ruin of the republic; and Augustus established his
colonies of legionaries over Italy in a manner that accelerated its
depopulation.
Military colonies, colonial municipalities, and the
practice adopted by the Roman citizens of seeking their fortunes in Spain,
Gaul, and Britain, were an imperfect substitute for modern emigration, though
they long tended to preserve an impulse towards improvement in the western
portion of the Roman Empire. The policy of the emperors was directed to render
society stationary; and it escaped the observation of profound statesmen, like
Augustus and Tiberius, that the most efficient means of securing it from
decline consisted in the formation of a regular demand on the population, by
means of emigration. Foreign colonization was, however, adverse to all the
prejudices of a Roman. The policy and religion of the State were equally
opposed to the residence of any citizen beyond the bounds of the empire; and
the constant diminution of the inhabitants of Italy, which accompanied the
extended conquests of the republic, seemed to indicate that the first duty of
the masters of Italy was to encourage an influx of population.
The decline in the population of Italy proceeded from
evils inherent in the political system of the Roman government. They exercised
their influence in the Grecian provinces of the empire, but they can only be
traced with historical accuracy, in their details, close to the centre of the
executive power. The system of administration in the republic had always tended
to aggrandize the aristocracy, who talked much of glory, but thought constantly
of wealth. When the conquests of Rome were extended over all the richest
countries of the ancient world, the leading families accumulated incredible
riches, — riches, indeed, far exceeding the wealth of modern sovereigns. Villas
and parks were formed over all Italy on a scale of the most sumptuous grandeur,
and land became more valuable as hunting-grounds than as productive farms. The
same habits were introduced into the provinces. In the neighbourhood of Rome,
agriculture was ruined by the public distributions of grain which was received
as tribute from the provinces, and by the bounty granted to importing merchants
in order to secure a low maximum price of bread. The public distributions at
Alexandria and Antioch must have proved equally injurious. Another cause of the
decline in the population of the empire was the great increase of the slaves
which took place on the rapid conquests of the Romans, and the diffusion of the
immense treasures suddenly acquired by their victories. There is always a
considerable waste of productive industry among a slave population; and free
labourers cease to exist, rather than perpetuate their race, if their labour be
degraded to the same level in society as that of slaves. When the insecurity of
property and person under the Roman government after the reign of Marcus
Aurelius, and the corrupt state of society, are added to these various causes
of decay, the decline and depopulation of the empire does not require farther
explanation.
Yet society would not, probably, have declined as it
did, under the weight of the Roman power, had the active, intelligent, and
virtuous members of the middle classes possessed the means of escaping from a
social position so calculated to excite feelings of despair. It is in vain to
offer conjectures on the subject; for the vice in the Roman constitution which
rendered all their military and state colonies merely sources of aggrandizement
to the aristocracy, may have proceeded from some inherent defect in the social
organization of the people, and, consequently, might have entailed ruin on any
Roman society established beyond the authority of the senate or the emperors.
The social organization of nations affects their vitality as much as their
political constitution affects their power and fortunes.
The exclusively Roman feeling, which was adverse to
all foreign colonization, was first attacked when Christianity spread itself
beyond the limits of the empire. The fact that Christianity was not identical
with citizenship, or, at least, with subjection to Rome, was a powerful cause
of creating that adverse feeling towards the Christians which branded them as
enemies of the human race; for, in the mouth of a Roman, the human race was a
phrase for the empire of Rome, and the Christians were really persecuted by
emperors like Trajan and Marcus Aurelius, because they were regarded as having
no attachment to the Roman government, because their humanity was stronger than
their citizenship.
Sect. XIV
Effects produced in Greece by the Inroads of the Goths
After the reign of Alexander Severus, the whole
attention of the Roman government was absorbed by the necessity of defending
the empire against the invasions of the northern nations. Two centuries of
communication with the Roman world had extended the effects of incipient
civilization throughout all the north of Europe. Trade had created new wants,
and given a new impulse to society. This state of improvement always causes a
rapid increase of population, and awakens a spirit of enterprise, which makes
the apparent increase even greater than the real. The history of every people
which has attained any eminence in the annals of mankind, has been marked by a
similar period of activity. The Greeks, the Romans, and the Arabs, poured out a
succession of armies, which must have astonished the nations which they
attacked, quite as much as the apparently inexhaustible armies of the Goths
amazed the degenerate Romans. Yet few events, in the whole course of history,
seem more extraordinary than the success of the uncivilized Goths against the
well-disciplined legions of imperial Rome, and their successful inroads into
the thickly-peopled provinces of the Roman Empire. The causes of this success
are evidently to be sought within the empire: the defenceless state of the
population, which was everywhere carefully disarmed, the oppression of the
provincials, the disorder in the finances, and the relaxation in the discipline
of the troops, contributed more to the victories of the Goths than their own
strength or military skill. If any national feeling, or common political
interest, had connected the people, the army, and the sovereign, the Roman
empire would have easily repulsed the attacks of all its enemies; nay, had the
government not placed itself in direct opposition to the interests of its
subjects, and arrested their natural progress by vicious legislation and
corrupt administration, the barbarous inhabitants of Germany, Poland, and
Russia, could have offered no more effective resistance to the advance of Roman
colonization than those of Spain, Gaul, and Britain. But the task of extending
the domain of civilization required to be supported by the energy of national
feelings; it was far beyond the strength of the imperial or any other central
government. The ablest of the despots who styled themselves the world’s
masters, did not dare, though nourished in camps, to attempt a career of
foreign conquest; these imperial soldiers were satisfied with the inglorious
task of preserving the limits of the empire without diminution. Even Severus,
after he had consolidated a systematic despotism, based on military power, did
not succeed in extending the empire. This avowed inability of the Roman armies
to make any further progress, invited the barbarians to attack the provinces.
If a body of assailants proved successful in breaking through the Roman lines,
they were sure of considerable plunder. If they were repulsed, they could
generally evade pursuit. These incursions were at first the enterprises of
armed bands and small tribes, but they became afterwards the employment of
armies and nations. To the timid eye of the unwarlike and unarmed citizens of
the empire, the whole population of the north appeared to be constantly on its
march, to plunder and enslave the wealthy and peaceable inhabitants of the
south.
Various means of defence were employed by the reigning
sovereigns. Alexander Severus secured the tranquillity of the frontiers by
paying subsidies to the barbarians: Decius fell, defending the provinces
against an immense army of Goths which had penetrated into the heart of Moesia;
and Trebonianus Gallus purchased the retreat of the
victors by engaging to pay them an annual tribute. The disorder in the Roman
government increased, the succession of emperors became more rapid, and the
numbers of the invaders augmented. Various tribes and nations, called, by the
Greeks and Romans, Scythians and Goths, and belonging to the great families of
the Sclavonic and Germanic stock, under the names of
East and West Goths, Vandals, Heruls, Borans, Karps, Peuks, and Urugunds, crossed the
Danube. Their incursions were pushed through Moesia into Thrace and Macedonia;
an immense booty was carried away, and a still greater amount of property was
destroyed; thousands of the industrious inhabitants were reduced to slavery,
and a far greater number massacred by the cruelty of the invaders.
The Greeks were awakened by these invasions from the
state of lethargy in which they had reposed for three centuries. They began to
repair the long neglected fortifications of their towns, and muster their city
guards and rural police, for a conflict in defence of their property. Cowardice
had long been supposed, by the Romans, to be an incurable vice of the Greeks,
who had been compelled to appear before the Romans with an obsequious and
humble mien, and every worthless Roman had thence arrogated to himself a
fancied superiority. But the truth is, that all the middle classes in the Roman
world had, from the time of Augustus, become averse to sacrificing their ease
for the doubtful glory to be gained in the imperial service. No patriotic
feeling drew men to the camp; and the allurements of ambition were stifled by
obscurity of station and hopelessness of promotion. The young nobility of Rome,
when called upon to serve in the legions, after the defeat of Varus, displayed
signs of cowardice unparalleled in the history of Greece. Like the Fellahs of modern Egypt, they cut off their thumbs in order
to escape military serviced Greece could contribute but little to the defence
of the empire; but Caracalla had drawn from Sparta some recruits whom he formed
into a Lacedaemonian phalanx. Decius, before his defeat, intrusted the defence
of Thermopylae to Claudius, who was afterwards emperor, but who had only
fifteen hundred regular troops, in addition to the ordinary Greek militia of
the cities. The smallness of the number is curious; it indicates the tranquil
condition of the Hellenic population before the northern nations penetrated
into the heart of the empire.
The preparations for defending the country were
actively carried on, both in northern Greece and at the Isthmus of Corinth. In
the reign of Valerian the walls of Athens, which had not been put in a proper
state of defence from the time of Sulla, were repaired, and the fortifications
across the isthmus were restored and garrisoned by Peloponnesian troops. It was
not long before the Greeks were called upon to prove the efficiency of their
warlike arrangements. A body of Goths, having established themselves along the
northern shores of the Black Sea, commenced a series of naval expeditions. They
soon penetrated through the Thracian Bosphorus, and, aided by additional bands
who had proceeded from the banks of the Danube by land, they marched into Asia
Minor, and plundered Chalcedon, Nicomedia, Nicaea, and Prusa,
A.D. 259. This successful enterprise was soon followed by still more daring
expeditions.
In the year 267, another fleet, consisting of five
hundred vessels, manned chiefly by the Goths and Heruls,
passed the Bosphorus and the Hellespont They seized Byzantium and Chrysopolis, and advanced, plundering the islands and
coasts of the Aegean Sea, and laying waste many of the principal cities of the
Peloponnesus. Cyzicus, Lemnos, Skyros, Corinth, Sparta, and Argos, are named as
having suffered by their ravages. From the time of Sulla's conquest of Athens,
a period of nearly three hundred and fifty years had elapsed, during which
Attica had escaped the evils of war; yet when the Athenians were called upon to
defend their homes, they displayed a spirit worthy of their ancient fame. An
officer, named Cleodemus, had been sent by the
government from Byzantium to Athens, in order to repair the fortifications, but
a division of these Goths landed at the Piraeus, and succeeded in carrying
Athens by storm, before any means were taken for its defence. Dexippus, an Athenian of rank in the Roman service, soon
contrived to reassemble the garrison of the Acropolis; and by joining to it
such of the citizens as possessed some knowledge of military discipline, or
some spirit for warlike enterprise, he formed a little army of two thousand
men. Choosing a strong position in the Olive Grove, he circumscribed the
movements of the Goths, and so harassed them by a close blockade that they were
compelled to abandon Athens. Cleodemus, who was not
at Athens when it was surprised, had in the meantime assembled a fleet and
gained a naval victory over a division of the barbarian fleet. These reverses
were a prelude to the ruin of the Goths. A Roman fleet entered the Archipelago,
and a Roman army, under the emperor Gallienus,
marched into Illyricum; the separate divisions of the Gothic expedition were
everywhere overtaken by these forces, and destroyed in detail. During this
invasion of the empire, one of the divisions of the Gothic army crossed the
Hellespont into Asia, and succeeded in plundering the cities of the Troad, and in destroying the celebrated temple of Diana of
Ephesus.
Dexippus was himself the historian of the Gothic invasion of Attica, but,
unfortunately, little information on the subject can be collected from the
fragments of his works which now exist. There is a celebrated anecdote
connected with this incursion which throws some light on the state of the
Athenian population, and on the conduct of the Gothic invaders of the empire.
The fact of its currency is a proof of the easy circumstances in which the
Athenians lived, of the literary idleness in which they indulged, and the
general mildness of the assailants, whose sole object was plunder. It is said
that the Goths, when they had captured Athens, were preparing to burn the
splendid libraries which adorned the city; but that a Gothic soldier dissuaded
them, by telling his countrymen that it was better that the Athenians should
continue to waste their time in their halls and porticos over their books, than
that they should begin to occupy themselves with warlike exercises. Gibbon,
indeed, thinks the anecdote may be suspected as the fanciful conceit of a
recent sophist; and he adds, that the sagacious counsellor reasoned like an
ignorant barbarian. But the national degradation of the Greeks has co-existed
with their pre-eminence in learning during many centuries, so that it appears
that this ignorant barbarian reasoned like an able politician. Even the Greeks,
who repeated the anecdote, seem to have thought that there was more sound sense
in the arguments of the Goth than the great historian is willing to admit.
Something more than mere reading and study is required to form the judgment.
The cultivation of learning does not always bring with it the development of
good sense. It does not always render men wiser, and it generally proves
injurious to their bodily activity. When literary pursuits, therefore, become
the exclusive object of national ambition, and distinction in the cultivation
of literature and abstract science is more esteemed than sagacity and prudence
in the everyday duties of life, effeminacy is undoubtedly more likely to
prevail, than when literature is used as an instrument for advancing practical
acquirements and embellishing active occupations. The rude Goths themselves
would probably have admired the poetry of Homer and of Pindar, though they
despised the metaphysical learning of the schools of Athens.
The celebrity of Athens, and the presence of the
historian Dexippus, have given to this incursion of
the barbarians a prominent place in history; but many expeditions are casually
mentioned, which must have inflicted greater losses on the Greeks, and spread
devastation more widely over the country. These inroads must have produced
important changes in the condition of the Greek population, and given a new
impulse to society. The passions of men were called into action, and the
protection of their property often depended on their own exertions. Public
spirit was again awakened, and many cities of Greece successfully defended
their walls against the armies of barbarians who broke into the empire in the
reign of Claudius. Thessalonica and Cassandra were attacked by land and sea.
Thessaly and Greece were invaded; but the walls of the towns were generally
found in a state of repair, and the inhabitants ready to defend them. The great
victory obtained by the emperor Claudius II, at Naissus, broke the power of the
Goths: and a Roman fleet in the Archipelago destroyed the remains of their
naval forces. The extermination of these invaders was completed by a great
plague which ravaged the East for fifteen years.
During the repeated invasions of the barbarians, an
immense number of slaves were either destroyed or carried away beyond the
Danube. Great facilities were likewise afforded for the escape of dissatisfied
slaves. The numbers of the slave population in Greece must, therefore, have
undergone a reduction, which could not prove otherwise than beneficial to those
who remained, and which must also have produced a very considerable change on
the condition of the poorer freemen, the value of whose labour must have been considerably
increased. The danger in which men of wealth lived, necessitated an alteration
in their mode of life; every one was compelled to
think of defending his person, as well as his property; new activity was
infused into society; and thus it seems that the losses caused by the ravages
of the Goths, and the mortality produced by the plague, caused a general
improvement in the circumstances of the inhabitants of Greece.
It must here be observed, that the first great inroads
of the northern nations, who succeeded in penetrating into the heart of the
Roman empire, were directed against the eastern provinces, and that Greece
suffered severely by the earliest invasions; yet the eastern portion of the
empire alone succeeded in driving back the barbarians, and preserving its
population free from any admixture of the Gothic race. This successful
resistance was chiefly owing to the national feelings and political
organization of the Greek people. The institutions which the Greeks retained
prevented them from remaining utterly helpless in the moment of danger; the
magistrates possessed a legitimate authority to take measures for any
extraordinary crisis, and citizens of wealth and talent could render their
services useful, without any violent departure from the usual forms of the
local administration. The evil of anarchy was not, in Greece, added to the
misfortune of invasion. Fortunately for the Greeks, the insignificancy of their
military forces prevented the national feelings, which these measures aroused,
from giving umbrage either to the Roman emperors or to their military officers
in the provinces.
From the various accounts of the Gothic wars of this
period which exist, it is evident that the expeditions of the barbarians were,
as yet, only undertaken for the purpose of plundering the provinces. The
invaders entertained no idea of being able to establish themselves permanently
within the bounds of the empire. The celerity of their movements generally made
their numbers appear greater than they really were; while the inferiority of
their arms and discipline rendered them an unequal match for a much smaller
body of the heavy-armed Romans. When the invaders met with a steady and
well-combined resistance, they were defeated without much difficulty; but
whenever a moment of neglect presented itself, their attacks were repeated with
undiminished courage. The victorious reigns of Claudius II, Aurelian, and
Probus, prove the immense superiority of the Roman armies when properly
commanded; but the custom, which was constantly gaining ground, of recruiting
the legions from among the barbarians, reveals the deplorable state of
depopulation and weakness to which three centuries of despotism and bad
administration had reduced the empire. On the one hand, the government feared the
spirit of its subjects, if intrusted with arms, far more than it dreaded the
ravages of the barbarians; and on the other, it was unwilling to reduce the
number of the citizens paying taxes, by draughting too large a proportion of
the industrious classes into the army. The imperial fiscal system rendered it
necessary to keep all the provincial landed proprietors carefully disarmed,
lest they should revolt, and perhaps make an attempt to revive republican
institutions; and the defence of the empire seemed, to the Roman emperors, to
demand the maintenance of a larger army than the population of their own
dominions, from which recruits were drawn, could supply.
Sect. XV
Changes which preceded the Establishment of
Constantinople as the Capital of the Roman Empire
The Romans had long been sensible that their social
vices threatened their empire with ruin, though they never contemplated the
possibility of their cowardice delivering it up a prey to barbarous conquerors.
Augustus made a vain attempt to stem the torrent of corruption, by punishing
immorality in the higher orders. But a privileged class is generally
sufficiently powerful to be able to form its own social code of morality, and
protect its own vices as long as it can maintain its existence. The immorality
of the Romans at last undermined the political fabric of the empire. Two
centuries and a half after the failure of Augustus, the emperor Decius
endeavoured with as little effect to reform society. Neither of these
sovereigns understood how to cure the malady which was destroying the State.
They attempted to improve society by punishing individual nobles for general
vices. They ought to have annihilated the privileges which raised senators and
nobles above the influence of law and public opinion, and subjected them to
nothing but the despotic power of the emperor. St. Paul, however, informs us
that the whole frame of society was so utterly corrupted that even this measure
would have proved ineffectual. The people were as vicious as the senate; all
ranks were suffering from a moral gangrene, which no human art could heal. The
dangerous abyss to which society was hastening did not escape observation. The
alarm gradually spread through every class in the wide extent of the Roman
world. A secret terror was felt by the emperors, the senators, and even by the
armies. Men’s minds were changed, and a divine influence produced a reform of
which man’s wisdom and strength had proved incapable. From the death of
Alexander Severus to the accession of Diocletian, a great social alteration is
visible in paganism; the aspect of the human mind seemed to have undergone a
complete metamorphosis. The spirit of Christianity was floating in the
atmosphere, and to its influence we must attribute that moral change in the
pagan world, during the latter half of the third century, which tended to
prolong the existence of the Western Roman Empire.
Foreign invasions, the disorderly state of the army,
the weight of the taxes, and the irregular constitution of the imperial
government, produced at this time a general feeling that the army and the State
required a new organization, in order to adapt both to the exigencies of
altered circumstances, and save the empire from impending ruin. Aurelian,
Probus, Diocletian, and Constantine, appeared as reformers of the Roman Empire.
The history of their reforms belongs to the records of the Roman constitution,
as they were conceived with very little reference to the institutions of the
provinces; and only some portion of the modifications then made in the form of
the imperial administration will fall within the scope of this work. But though
the administrative reforms produced little change in the condition of the Greek
population, the Greeks themselves actively contributed to effect a mighty revolution
in the whole frame of social life, by the organization which they gave to the
church from the moment they began to embrace the Christian religion. It must
not be overlooked, that the Greeks organized a Christian church before
Christianity became the established religion of the empire.
Diocletian found that the Roman Empire had lost much
of its internal cohesion, and that it could no longer be conveniently governed
from one administrative centre. He attempted to remedy the increasing weakness
of the coercive principle, by creating four centres of executive authority,
controlled by a single imperial legislative emperor. But no human skill could
long preserve harmony between four executive despots. Constantine restored the
unity of the Roman Empire. His reign marks the period in which old Roman
political feelings lost their power, and the superstitious veneration for Rome
herself ceased. The liberty afforded for new political ideas by the new social
organization was not overlooked by the Greeks. The transference of the seat of
government to Byzantium weakened the Roman spirit in the public administration.
The Romans, indeed, from the establishment of the imperial government, had
ceased to form a homogeneous people, or to be connected by feelings of attachment
and interest to one common country; and as soon as the rights of Roman
citizenship had been conferred on the provincials, Rome became a mere ideal
country to the majority of Romans. The Roman citizens, however, in many
provinces, formed a civilized caste of society, dwelling among a number of
ruder natives and slaves; they were not melted into the mass of the population.
In the Grecian provinces, no such distinction prevailed. The Greeks, who had
taken on themselves the name and the position of Roman citizens, retained their
own language, manners, and institutions; and as soon as Constantinople was
founded and became the capital of the empire, a struggle arose whether it was
to become a Greek or a Latin city.
Constantine himself does not appear to have perceived
this tendency of the Greek population to acquire a predominant influence in the
East by supplanting the language and manners of Rome, and he modelled his new
capital entirely after Roman ideas and prejudices. Constantinople was, at its
foundation, a Roman city, and Latin was the language of the higher ranks of its
inhabitants. This fact must not be lost sight of; for it affords an explanation
of the opposition which is for ages apparent in the feelings, as well as the
interests, of the capital and of the Greek nation. Constantinople was a
creation of imperial favour; a regard to its own advantage rendered it
subservient to despotism, and, for a long period, impervious to any national
feeling. The inhabitants enjoyed exemptions from taxation, and received
distributions of grain and provisions, so that the misery of the empire, and
the desolation of the provinces, hardly affected them. Left at leisure to enjoy
the games of the circus, they were bribed by government to pay little attention
to the affairs of the empire. Such was the position of the people of
Constantinople at the time of its foundation, and such it continued for many
centuries.
CHAPTER II
From the Establishment of Constantinople as Capital of
the Roman Empire, to the Accession of Justinian, A. D. 330-527
Sect. I
Constantine, in reforming the Government of the Roman
Empire, placed the administration in direct hostility to the people.
The warlike frenzy of the Romans rendered the
emperors, from commanders of the army, masters of the State. But the soldiers,
as soon as they fully comprehended the extent of their power in conferring the
imperial dignity, strove to make the emperors their agents in the management of
the empire, of which they considered themselves the real proprietors. The army
was consequently the branch of the government to which all the others were
considered subordinate. The disorders committed, and the defeats experienced,
by the troops, at last weakened their influence, and enabled the emperors to
reduce the army into a mere instrument of the imperial authority. Two great
measures of reform had been contemplated by several of the predecessors of
Constantine. Severus had sought to put an end to the civil authority of the
senate in the administration of the empire, and to efface the remains of the
ancient political constitution. Diocletian had endeavoured to deprive the army
of the power of choosing and of dethroning the sovereign; but until the reign
of Constantine, the empire was entirely a military State, and the chief
characteristic of the imperial dignity was the military command. Constantine
first moulded the measures of reform of preceding emperors into a new system of
government. He completed the political edifice on the foundations which
Diocletian had laid, by remodelling the army, reconstituting the executive
power, creating a new capital, and adopting a new religion. Unfortunately for
the bulk of mankind, Constantine, when he commenced his plan of reform, was,
from his situation, unconnected with the popular or national sympathies of any
class of his subjects, and he considered this state of isolation to be the
surest basis of the imperial power, and the best guarantee for the impartial
administration of justice. The emperors
had long ceased to regard themselves as belonging to any particular country,
and the imperial government was no longer influenced by any attachment to the
feelings or institutions of ancient Rome. The glories of the republic were
forgotten in the constant and laborious duty of administering and defending the
empire. New maxims of policy had been formed, and, in cases where the earlier
emperors would have felt as Romans, the wisest counsellors of Constantine would
have calmly appealed to the dictates of general expediency. In the eyes of the
later emperors, that which their subjects considered as national was only
provincial; the history, language, and religion of Greece, Rome, Egypt, and
Syria, were merely distinctive characteristics of these different portions of
the empire. The emperor, the government, and the army, stood apart, completely
separated from the hopes, fears, and interests of the body of the people.
Constantine centralized every branch of the executive power in the person of
the emperor, and, at the same time, framed a bureaucracy in the administration
of each department of public business, in order to guard against the effects of
the incapacity or folly of any future sovereign. No more perfect machine of
government appears ever to have been established; and, had it combined some
principle of reviviscence, to counteract the
deteriorating influence of time, with some political combinations capable of
enforcing responsibility without revolution, it might have proved perpetual. It
is true that, according to the moral laws of the universe, a government ought
to be so constituted as to conform to the principles of truth and justice; but,
practically, it is sufficient for the internal security of a State that the
government da not act in such a manner as to make the people believe that it is
perversely unjust. No foreign enemy ever assailed the Roman Empire that could
not have been repulsed with ease, had the government and the people formed a
united body acting for the general interest. Constantine, unfortunately,
organized the government of the Roman Empire as if it were the household of the
emperor, and constituted the imperial officials as a caste separate from the
people; thus placing it, from its very nature, in opposition to the mass of his
subjects. In his desire to save the world from anarchy, he created that
struggle between the administration and the governed which has ever since
existed, either actively or passively, in every country which has inherited the
monarchical principle and the laws of imperial Rome. The problem of combining
efficient administration with constant responsibility seems, in these states,
still unsolved.
A series of changes in the Roman government had been
commenced before the time of Constantine; yet the extent and durability of his
reforms, and the distinctness of purpose with which they were conceived,
entitle him to rank as one of the greatest legislators of mankind. His defects
during his declining years, when his mind and body no longer possessed the
activity necessary to inspect and control every detail of a despotic
administration which centred in the sovereign’s person, ought not to alter our
judgment of his numerous wise laws and judicious reforms. Few legislators have
effected greater revolutions than Constantine. He transferred the despotic
power of the emperor as commander- in-chief of the army, to the emperor as
political head of the government; thus rendering the military power subservient
to the civil, in the whole range of the administration. He consolidated the dispensation
of justice over the whole empire, by universal and systematic laws, which he
deemed strong enough to form a bulwark for the people against oppression on the
part of the government. Feeble as this theoretic bulwark of law was found to be
on great emergencies, it must be owned that, in the ordinary course of public
affairs, it was not ineffectual, and that it mainly contributed to prevent the
decline of the Roman Empire from proceeding with that rapidity which has marked
the decay of most other despotic monarchies. Constantine gave the empire a new
capital; and he adopted a new religion, which, with unrivalled prudence, he
rendered predominant under circumstances of great difficulty. His reforms have
been supposed to have hastened the decline of the empire which they were
intended to save; but the contrary was really the case. He found the empire on
the eve of being broken up into a number of smaller states, in consequence of
the measures which Diocletian had adopted in order to secure it against anarchy
and civil wan He reunited its provinces by a succession of brilliant military
achievements; and the object of his legislation appeared to be the maintenance
of perfect uniformity in the civil administration by the strictest
centralization in what he termed the divine hierarchy of the imperial
government. But his conduct was at variance with his policy, for he divided the
executive power among his three sons and two nephews; and the empire was only
saved from dismemberment or civil war by the murder of the greatest part of his
family. Perhaps the empire was really too extensive, and the dissimilarity of
its provinces too great, for executive unity, considering the imperfect means
of communication which then existed, in a society which neither admitted the
principle of hereditary succession nor of primogeniture, in the transmission of
the imperial dignity.
The permanent success of Constantine’s reforms
depended on his financial arrangements supplying ample funds for all the
demands of the administration. This fact indicates some similarity between the
political condition of his government and the present state of most European
monarchies, and may render a close study of the errors of his financial
arrangements not without profit to modem statesmen. The sums required for the
annual service of the imperial government were immense; and in order to levy as
great an amount of revenue from his subjects as possible, Constantine revised
the census of all the taxes, and carried their amount as high as he possibly could.
Every measure was adopted to transfer the whole circulating medium of the
empire annually into the coffers of the State. No economy or industry could
enable his subjects to accumulate wealth; while any accident, a fire, an
inundation, an earthquake, or a hostile incursion of the barbarians, might
leave a whole province incapable of paying its taxes, and plunge it in hopeless
debt and ruin.
In general the outward forms of taxation were very
little altered by Constantine, but he rendered the whole fiscal system more
regular and more stringent; and during no period was the maxim of the Roman
government, that the cultivators of the soil were nothing but the instruments
for feeding and clothing the imperial court and the army, more steadily kept in
view. All privileges were abolished; the tribute, or land-tax, was levied on
the estates of all Roman subjects; and in the concessions made to the church,
measures were usually adopted to preserve the rights of the fisc.
A partial exemption of the property of the clergy was conceded by Constantine,
in order to confer on the Christian priesthood a rank equal to that of the
ancient senators; but this was so contrary to the principles of his legislation
that it was withdrawn in the reign of Constantius. A great change in the
revision of the general register of taxation must have taken place in the year
312, throughout the whole Roman Empire; and as Constantine was not then sole
emperor, it is evident that the financial policy of his reign, with which it
appears to be closely connected, was the continuation of a system already
completely organized. The absorbing interest of taxation to the subjects of the
Roman Empire rendered the revision of the census from this time the ordinary
method of chronological notation. Time was reckoned from the first year, or Indictio, of the new assessment, and when the cycle of
fifteen years was completed, a new revision took place, and a new cycle was
commenced; the people thus taking no heed of the lapse of time except by noting
the years of similar taxation. Constantine, it is true, passed many laws to
protect his subjects from the oppression of the tax-gatherers; but the number
and nature of these laws afford the strongest proof that the officers of the
court, and the administration, were vested with powers too extensive to be used
with moderation, and that all the vigilance of the emperor was required to
prevent their destroying the source of the public revenues by utterly ruining
the tax-payers. Instead of reducing the numbers of the imperial household, and
reforming the expenses of the court, in order to increase the fund available
for the civil and military service of the State, Constantine added to the
burden of an establishment which already included a large and useless
population, by indulging in the most lavish ornament and sumptuous ceremonial.
It is evident that he regarded the well-paid offices of his court as baits to
allure and attach the civil and military leaders to his service. His measures
were successful; and from this time rebellions became less frequent, for the
majority of public officials considered it more advantageous to intrigue for
advancement than to risk their lives and fortunes in civil war. Nothing reveals
more fully the state of barbarism and ignorance to which the Roman world had
fallen; the sovereign sought to secure the admiration of his people by outward
show; he held them incapable of judging of his conduct, which was guided by the
emergencies of his position. The people, no longer connected with the government,
and knowing only what passed in their own province, were terrified by the
magnificence and wealth which the court displayed; and, hopeless of any change
for the better, they regarded the emperor as an instrument of divine power.
The reforms of Constantine required additional
revenues. Two new taxes were imposed, which were regarded as the greatest
grievances of his reign, and frequently selected for invective, as
characteristic of his internal policy. These taxes were termed the Senatorial
tax, and the Chrysargyron. The first alienated the aristocracy, and the second
excited the complaints of every class of society, for it was a tax levied in
the severest manner on every species of receipts. All the existing
constitutions, ordinary and extraordinary, and all the monopolies and
restrictions affecting the sale of grain, were retained. The exactions of prior
governments were rigorously enforced. The presents and gifts which had usually
been made to former sovereigns were exacted by Constantine as a matter of
right, and regarded as ordinary sources of revenue.
The subjection of Greece to the Roman municipal system
forms an epoch in Hellenic history of great social importance; but it was
effected so silently that the facts and dates which mark the progress of this
political revolution cannot be traced with accuracy. The law of Caracalla,
which conferred the rights of citizenship on all the provincials, annihilated
the distinctive privileges of the Roman colonies, the old municipia, and the
Greek free cities. A new municipal organization, more conformable to a central
despotism, was gradually introduced over the whole empire, by which the
national ideas and character of the Greeks were ultimately much modified. The
legislation of Constantine stamped the municipal institutions of the empire
with the fiscal character, which they retained as long as the empire existed;
and his laws inform the historian that the influence of the city republic of
ancient Hellas had already ceased. Popular opinion had disappeared from Greek
society as completely as political liberty from Greece. The change which
transformed the ancient language into its Romaic representative had commenced,
and a modern Greek nation was consolidating its existence; disciplined to
despotism, and boasting that it was composed of Romans and not of Greeks. The
inhabitants of Athens and Sparta, the Achaians,
Aetolians, Dorians, and Ionians, lost their distinctive characteristics, and
were blended into one dull mass of uniformity as citizens of the fiscal municipalities
of the empire, and as Romaic Greeks.
It is only necessary in this work to describe the
general type of the municipal organization which existed in the provinces of
the Roman Empire after the time of Constantine, without entering on the many doubtful
questions that arise in examining the subject in detail. The proprietors of
land in the Roman provinces generally dwelt in towns and cities. Every town had
an agricultural district which formed its territory, and the landed proprietors
who possessed twenty-five jugera constituted the body
from which the municipal magistrates were selected and by which they were in
some cases elected. The whole administrative authority was vested in an
oligarchical senate called the Curia,
consisting probably of one hundred of the wealthiest landed proprietors in the
city or township. This body elected the municipal officers, and filled up
vacancies in its own body. It was therefore independent of the proprietors from
among whom it was taken, and whose interests it ought to have represented. The
curia — not the body of landed proprietors — formed therefore the real Roman
municipality, and it was used by the imperial government as an instrument of
fiscal extortion, and a means of preventing a concentrated opposition against
the central administration in the collection of taxes. The curia was intrusted
with the collection of the land-tax, and its members were rendered responsible
for the amount. As they were the wealthiest men of the place, their guarantee
for the regular payment of the public revenue was of so much importance, that
no curial was allowed to change his condition or quit the place of his
residence. Even for a temporary absence from Greece it was necessary for a
curial to obtain a permission from the proconsul.
The other free inhabitants of the municipal district,
who were not liable to the land-tax, but only paid the capitation — merchants,
tradesmen, artists, and labourers — formed a separate and inferior class, and
were called tributaries, as distinguished from proprietors. They had no
connection with the curia, but were formed into corporations and trade-guilds.
As the wealth and population of the Roman Empire
declined, the operation of the municipal system became more oppressive. The
chief attention of the imperial governors in the provinces was directed to
preventing any diminution in the revenue, and the Roman legislation attempted
to enforce the payment of the ancient amount of land-tax and capitation from a
declining and impoverished population. Laws were enacted to fix every class of
society in its condition with regard to the revenue. The son of a member of the
curia was bound to take his father’s place; the son of a landed proprietor
could neither become a tradesman nor a soldier, unless he had a brother who
could replace his father as a payer of the land-tax.
The son of an artisan was bound to follow his father's profession, that the
amount of the capitation might not be diminished. Every corporation or guild
had the power of compelling the children of its members to complete its
numbers. Fiscal conservatism became the spirit of Roman legislation. To prevent
the land beyond the limits of a municipality from falling out of cultivation,
by the free inhabitants of the rural districts quitting their lands in order to
better their condition in the towns, the laws gradually attached them to the
soil, and converted them into agricultural serfs.
In this state of society the emperors were well aware
that the people were generally discontented, and to prevent rebellion both the
tributaries and the landed proprietors were carefully disarmed. The military
class was separated from the landed proprietors by an inseparable barrier. No
landed proprietor could become a soldier, and no soldier could become a member
of a curia. When the free population of the empire was so much diminished that
it became difficult to find recruits, the son of a soldier was bound to follow
the profession of arms, but the Roman armies were generally recruited from
among the barbarians who lived beyond the bounds of the empire.
In order to defend the tax-payers against the
exactions of the imperial governors, fiscal agents and military officers, it
became necessary that every municipality should have an official protector,
whose duty it was to watch the conduct of the civil and judicial authorities
and of the fiscal officers. He was called a defensor, and was elected by the
free citizens of the township, both tributaries and proprietors. No municipal
senator or curial could hold the office of defensor, as it might be his duty
to appeal to the emperor against the exactions of the curia, as well as against the oppressive conduct of a provincial
governor or judge.
Such was the municipal organization which supplanted
the city communities of ancient Greece, and extinguished the spirit of Hellenic
life. The free action, both of the physical and intellectual powers, of the
Greeks was fettered by these new social bonds. We can read many curious details
relating to the system in the Theodosian code, and in the legislation of
Justinian; and we can trace its effects in the ruin of the Western Empire, and
in the torpidity of society in the Eastern.
Municipalities henceforward began to be regarded as a
burden rather than a privilege. Their magistrates formed an aristocratic class
in accordance with the whole fabric of the Roman constitution. These
magistrates had willingly borne all the burdens imposed on them by the State as
long as they could throw the heaviest portion of the load on the people over
whom they presided. But the people at last became too poor to lighten the
burden of the rich, and the government found it necessary to force every wealthy
citizen to enter the curia, and make good any deficiency in the taxes of the
district from his own private revenues. As the Roman Empire declined, the
members of one curia after another sank to the same level of general poverty.
It required little more than a century from the reign of Constantine to effect
the ruin of the western provinces; but the social condition of the eastern, and
the natural energy of the Greek character, saved them from the same fate.
The principle adopted by the Roman government in all
its relations with the people and with the municipalities, was in every
contested case to assume that the citizens were endeavouring to evade burdens
which they were well able to bear. This feeling sowed the seeds of hatred to
the imperial administration in the hearts of its subjects, who, seeing that
they were excluded from every hope of justice in fiscal questions, became often
eager to welcome the barbarians.
In Greece the old system of local governments was not
entirely eradicated, though it was modified on the imperial model; but every
fiscal burden was rigorously enforced by the imperial government, whenever it
tended to relieve the treasury from any expense. At the same time, all those
privileges which had once alleviated the pressure of the revenue law, in
particular districts, were abolished. The destruction of the great oligarchs,
who had rendered themselves proprietors of whole provinces in the earlier days
of the Roman domination, was effected. A number of small properties were created
at the same time that a moral improvement took place in Greek society by the
influence of Christianity. The higher classes became less corrupt, and the
lower more industrious. This change enabled the eastern provinces to bear their
fiscal burdens with mare ease than the western.
The military organization of the Roman armies was
greatly changed by Constantine; and the change is remarkable, as the barbarians
were adopting the very principles of tactics which the emperors found it
necessary to abandon. The system of the Roman armies, in ancient times, was
devised to make them efficient on the field of battle. As the Romans were
always invaders, they knew well that they could at last force their enemies to
decide their differences in a pitched battle. The frontiers of the empire
required a very different method for their defence. The chief duty of the army
was to occupy an extended line against an active enemy, far inferior in the
field. The necessity of effecting rapid movements of the troops, in bodies varying
continually in number, became a primary object in the new tactics. Constantine
remodelled the legions, by reducing the number of men to fifteen hundred; and
he separated the cavalry entirely from the infantry, and placed them under a
different command. He increased the number of the light troops, instituted new
divisions in the forces, and made considerable modifications in the armour and
weapons of the Romans. This change in the army was in some degree rendered
necessary by the difficulty which the government experienced, in raising a
sufficient number of men of the class and strength necessary to fill the ranks
of the legions, according to the old system. It became necessary to choose
between diminishing the number of the troops, or admitting an inferior class of
soldiers into the army. Motives of economy, and the fear of the seditious
spirit of the legions, also dictated several changes in the constitution of the
forces. From this time the Roman armies were composed of inferior materials,
and the northern nations began to prepare themselves for meeting them in the
field of battle.
The opposition which always existed between the fiscal
interest of the Roman government and of the provincials, rendered any intimate
connection or community of feeling between the soldiers and the people a thing
to be cautiously guarded against by the emperor. The interests of the army
required to be kept carefully separated from those of the citizens; and when
Constantine, from motives of economy, withdrew a large number of the troops
from the camps on the frontiers, and placed them in garrison in the towns,
their discipline was relaxed, and their license overlooked, in order to prevent
them from acquiring the feelings of citizens. As the barbarians were beyond the
influence of any provincial or political sympathies, and were sure to be
regarded as enemies by every class in the empire, they became the chosen troops
of the emperors. These favourites soon discovered their own importance, and
behaved with as great insolence as the praetorian bands had ever displayed.
The necessity of preventing the possibility of a
falling off in the revenue, was, in the eyes of the imperial court, of as much
consequence as the maintenance of the efficiency of the army. Proprietors of
land, and citizens of wealth, were not allowed to enrol themselves as soldiers,
lest they should escape from paying their taxes; and only those plebeians and
peasants who were not liable to the land-tax were taken as recruits. When Rome
conquered the Greeks the armies of the republic consisted of Romans, and the
conquered provinces supplied the republic with tribute to maintain these
armies; but when the rights of citizenship were extended to the provincials, it
became the duty of the poor to serve in person, and of the rich to supply the
revenues of the State. The effect of this was, that the Roman forces were often
recruited with slaves, in spite of the laws frequently passed to prohibit this
abuse; and, not long after the time of Constantine, slaves were often admitted
to enter the army on receiving their freedom. The subjects of the emperors had
therefore little to attach them to their government, which was supported by
mercenary troops composed of barbarians and slaves, but in all the provinces
the inhabitants could do nothing to defend their rights, for they were
carefully disarmed.
Sect. II
The condition of the Greeks was not improved by
Constantine’s reforms.
The general system of Constantine’s government was by
no means favourable to the advancement of the Greeks as a nation. His new
division of the empire into four prefectures neutralized, by administrative
arrangements, any influence that the Greeks might have acquired from the
prevalence of their language in the countries on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean.
The four prefectures of the empire were the Orient, Illyricum, Italy, and Gaul,
and a praetorian prefect directed the civil administration of each of these
great divisions of the empire. The prefectures were divided into governments,
and these governments were again subdivided into provinces. The prefecture of
the Orient embraced five governments: the first was called by the name of the
prefecture, the Orient; the others were Egypt, Asia, Pontus, and Thrace, In all
these, the Greeks formed only a section of the population, and their influence
was controlled by the adverse prejudices and interests of the natives. The
prefecture of Illyricum consisted of three governments, Achaia, Macedonia, and
Dacia. Achaia retained the honour of being governed by a proconsul. This
distinction was only shared with the government called Asia, for there were now
only two proconsular provinces; but Achaia was poor, and it was not of
sufficient extent and importance to be subdivided. It embraced the Peloponnesus
and the continent south of Thessaly and Epirus, occupying nearly the limits of
the present kingdom of Greece. Macedonia included six provinces, — two Macedonias, Crete, Thessaly, Old Epirus, and New Epirus. In
these two governments of Achaia and Macedonia, the population was almost
entirely Greek. In Dacia or the provinces between the Danube and Mount Haemus,
the Adriatic and the Black Sea, the civilized portion of the inhabitants was
more imbued with the language and prejudices of Rome than of Greece. The proconsular
government of Asia was separated from the praetorian prefectures, and placed
under the immediate authority of the emperor. It included two provinces, the
Hellespont and the islands between Greece and Asia Minor. Its native population
was entirely Greek.
The Greek population had been losing ground in the
east since the reign of Hadrian. Pescennius Niger had
shown that national feelings might be roused against the oppression of Rome,
without adopting Hellenic prejudices. The establishment of the kingdom of
Palmyra by Odenathus, and the conquest of Syria and
Egypt, gave a severe blow to the influence of the Greeks in these countries.
Zenobia, it is true, cultivated Greek literature, but she spoke Syriac and
Coptic with equal fluency; and when her power was overthrown, she appears to
have regretted that the advice of Longinus and her other Greek councillors had
induced her to adopt ambitious projects unconnected with the immediate
interests of her native subjects, and she abandoned them to the vengeance of the
Romans. Her armies were composed of Syrians and Saracens; and in the civil ad-
ministration, the natives of each province claimed an equal rank with the
Greeks. The cause of the Greek population, especially in Syria and Egypt,
became from this time more closely connected with the declining power of Rome;
and even as early as the reign of Aurelian, the antagonism of the native
population displayed itself in an Egyptian rebellion which was an effort to
throw off Greek domination as well as to escape from the yoke of Rome. The
rebellion of Firmus is almost neglected in the history of the numerous rival
emperors who were subdued by Aurelian; but the very fact that he was styled by
his conqueror a robber, and not a rival, shows that his cause made him a more deadly
enemy than the usurpers who were merely military chiefs.
These signs of nationality could not be overlooked by
Constantine, and he rendered the political organization of the empire more
efficient than it had formerly been to crush the smallest manifestations of
national feeling among any body of its subjects. On
the other hand, nothing was done by Constantine with the direct view of
improving the condition of the Greeks. Two of his laws have been much praised
for their humanity; but they really afford the strongest proofs of the
miserable condition to which the inhumanity of the government had reduced the
people; and though these laws, doubtless, granted some relief to Greece, they
originated in views of general policy. By the one, the collectors of the
revenue were prohibited, under pain of death, from seizing the slaves, cattle,
and instruments of agriculture of the farmer, for the payment of taxes; and, by
the other, all forced labour at public works was ordered to be suspended during
seed-time and harvest. Agriculture derived some advantage from the tranquillity
which Greece enjoyed during the widespread civil wars that preceded the reigns
of Diocletian and Constantine. But as far as the imperial government was
concerned, commerce still suffered from the old spirit of neglect, and was
circumscribed by monopoly. The officers of the palace, and even the Christian
clergy, were allowed to carry merchandise from one province to another, free
from the duties which fell heavily on the regular trader. It was not until the
reign of Valentinian III that the clergy were finally prohibited from engaging
in commerce. The emperor was himself both a merchant and manufacturer; and his
commercial operations contributed materially to impoverish his subjects, and to
diminish the internal trade of his dominions. The imperial household formed a
numerous population, separated from the other subjects of the empire; and the
imperial officers endeavoured to maintain this host, and the immense military
establishment, with the smallest possible outlay of public money. The public
posts furnished the means of transporting merchandise free of expense, and the
officers charged with its conveyance availed themselves of this opportunity to
enrich themselves, by importing whatever they could sell with profit. Imperial
manufactories supplied those goods which could be produced in the empire; and
private manufacturers would seldom venture to furnish the same articles, lest
their trade should interfere with the secret sources of profit of some powerful
officer. These facts sufficiently explain the rapid decline in the trade,
manufactures, and general wealth of the population of the Roman Empire which
followed the transference of the capital to Constantinople. Yet, while commerce
was thus ruined, the humble and honest occupation of the shopkeeper was treated
as a dishonourable profession, and his condition was rendered doubly
contemptible. He was made the serf of the corporation in which he was
inscribed, and his industry was fettered by restrictions which compelled him to
remain in poverty. The merchant was not allowed to travel with more than a
limited sum of money, under pain of exile. This singular law must have been
adopted, partly to secure the monopolies of the importing merchants, and partly
to serve some interest of the officers of government, without any reference to
the general good of the empire.
Though the change of the capital from Rome to
Constantinople produced many modifications in the government, its influence on
the Greek population was much less than one might have expected. The new city
was an exact copy of old Rome. Its institutions, manners, interests, and
language, were Roman; and it inherited all the isolation of the old capital,
and stood in direct opposition to the Greeks, and all the provincials. It was
inhabited by senators from Rome. Wealthy individuals from the provinces were
likewise compelled to keep up houses at Constantinople, pensions were conferred
upon them, and a right to a certain amount of provisions from the public stores
was annexed to these dwellings. The tribute of grain from Egypt was
appropriated to supply Constantinople with bread; the wheat of Africa was left
for the consumption of Rome. Eighty thousand loaves were distributed daily to
the inhabitants of the new capital. The claim to a share in this distribution,
though granted as a reward for merit, in some cases was rendered hereditary,
but at the same time made alienable by the receiver, and was always strictly
attached to the possession of property in the city. This distribution
consequently differed in its nature from the distributions bestowed at Rome on
poor citizens who had no other means of livelihood. We here discover the tie
which bound the new capital to the cause of the emperors, and an explanation of
the toleration shown by the emperors to the factions of the circus and the
disorders of the populace. The emperor and the inhabitants of the capital felt
that they had a common interest in supporting the despotic power by which the
provinces were drained of money to supply the luxurious expenditure of the
court, and to furnish provisions and amusements for the people; and,
consequently, the tumults of the populace never induced the emperors to weaken
the influence of the capital; nor did the tyranny of the emperors ever induce
the citizens of the capital to demand the systematic circumscription of the
imperial authority.
Even the change of religion produced very little
improvement in the imperial government. The old evils of Roman tyranny were
perpetrated under a more regular and legal despotism and a purer religion, but
they were not less generally oppressive. The government grew daily weaker as
the people grew poorer; the population rapidly diminished, and the framework of
society became gradually disorganized. The regularity of the details of the
administration rendered it more burdensome; the obedience enforced in the army
had only been obtained by the deterioration of its discipline. The barrier
which the empire opposed to the ravages of the barbarians became, consequently,
weaker under each succeeding emperor.
Sect. III
Changes produced in the Social Condition of the Greeks
by the Alliance of Christianity with their National Manners.
The decline of Roman influence, and of the power of
the Roman government, afforded the Greeks some favourable conjunctures for
improving their condition. Christianity connected itself with the social
organization of the people, without directly attempting to change their
political condition; and by awakening sentiments of philanthropy which created
a new social impulse, it soon produced a marked improvement in the social as
well as in the moral and religious position of the Greeks. Though Christianity
failed to arrest the decline of the Roman Empire, it reinvigorated the popular
mind, and reorganized the people, by giving them a powerful and permanent
object on which to concentrate their attention, and an invariable guide for
their conduct in every relation of life. As it was long confined chiefly to the
middle and lower classes of society, it was compelled, in every different
province of the empire, to assume the language and usages of the locality, and
thus it combined individual attachments with universal power. But it must be
observed that a great change took place in the feelings and conduct of the
Christians from the period that Constantine formed a political alliance with
the church, and constituted the clergy into a corporate body. The great
benefits which the inhabitants of the Roman Empire had previously derived from
the connection of their bishops and presbyters with local national feelings,
was then neutralized. The church became a political institution, dependent,
like every other department of the public administration, on the emperor’s
authority; and henceforward, whenever the ministers and teachers of the
Christian religion became closely connected with national feelings, they were
accused of heresy.
Paganism had undergone a great change about the time
of the establishment of the Roman Empire. A belief in the resurrection of the
body began to spread, both among the Romans and the Greeks; and it is to the
prevalence of this belief that the great success of the worship of Serapis, and
the general adoption of the practice of burying the dead instead of burning it
on a funeral pile, are to be attributed. The decline of paganism had proceeded
far before Christianity was preached to the Greeks. The ignorance of the people
on the one hand, and the speculations of the philosophers on the other, had
already almost succeeded in destroying all reverence for the ancient gods of
Greece, which rested more oil mythological and historical recollections, and on
associations derived from and connected with art, than on moral principles or
mental conviction. The paganism of the Greeks was a worship identified with
particular tribes, and with precise localities; and the want of this local and
material union had been constantly felt by the Greeks of Asia and Alexandria,
and had tended much to introduce those modifications by which the Alexandrine
philosophers attempted to unite Hellenic superstitions with their metaphysical
views. Many Greeks and Romans had learned just ideas of religion from the Jews.
They had acquired true notions of the divine nature, and of the duties which
God requires of man. While, on the other hand, a religion which could deify
Commodus and some of the worst emperors, must have fallen into contempt with
all reflecting men; and even those who believed in its claims to superhuman
authority must have regarded it with some aversion, as having formed an unjust
alliance with their tyrants. It is not, therefore, surprising that a disbelief
in the gods of the empire was general among the people throughout the East. But
it is impossible for man to exist in society without some religious feeling.
The worship of the gods was therefore immediately replaced by a number of superstitious
practices, borrowed from foreign nations, or by the revival of the traditions
of a ruder period, relating to an inferior class of spirits.
The wealth of the temples in Greece, and the large
funds appropriated to public feasts and religious ceremonies, kept up an
appearance of devotion; but a considerable portion of these funds began to be
enjoyed as the private fortunes of the hereditary priests, or was diverted, by
the corporations charged with their administration, to other purposes than the
service of the temples, without these changes exciting any complaints. The
progressive decline of the ancient religion is marked by the numerous laws
which the emperors enacted against secret divination, and the rites of
magicians, diviners, and astrologers. Though these modes of prying into
futurity had always been regarded by the Romans and the Greeks as impious, and
hostile to the religion of the State, and been strictly forbidden by public
laws, they continued to gain ground under the empire. The contempt of the
people for the ancient religion as early as the time of Trajan was shown by
their general indifference to the rites of sacrifice, and to the ceremonials of
their festivals. While the great struggle with Christianity was openly carried
on, this was peculiarly remarkable. The emperor Julian often complains, in his
works, of this indifference, and gives rather a ludicrous instance of its
extent in an anecdote which happened to himself. As emperor and Pontifex
Maximus, he repaired to the temple of Apollo at Daphne, near Antioch, on the
day of the great feast. He declares that he expected to see the temple filled
with sacrifices, but he found not even a cake, nor a grain of incense; and the
god would have been without an offering had the priest himself not brought a
goose, the only victim which Apollo received on the day of his festival. Julian
proves, by this anecdote, that all the population of Antioch was Christian,
otherwise curiosity would have induced a few to visit the temple.
The laws of the moral world prevent any great
reformation in society from being effected, without the production of some
positive evil. The best feelings of humanity are often awakened in support of
very questionable institutions; and all opinions hallowed by the lapse of time become
so endeared by old recollections, that the most self-evident truths are
frequently overlooked, and the greatest benefits to the mass of mankind are
peremptorily rejected, when their first announcement attacks an existing
prejudice. No principles of political wisdom, and no regulations of human
prudence, could therefore have averted the many evils which attended the change
of religion in the Roman Empire, even though that change was from fable to
truth, from paganism to Christianity.
The steady progress which Christianity made against
paganism, and the deep impression it produced on the middle classes of society,
and on the votaries of philosophy, are certainly wonderful, when the weight of
prejudice, the wealth of the temples, the pride of the schoolmen, and the
influence of college endowments, are taken into consideration. Throughout the
East, the educated Greeks, from the peculiar disposition of their minds, were
easily led to grant an attentive hearing to the promulgators of new doctrines
and systems. Even at Athens, Paul was listened to with great respect by many of
the philosophers; and after his public oration to the Athenians at the
Areopagus, some said, “We will hear thee again of this matter”. A belief that
the principle of unity, both in politics and religion, must, from its
simplicity and truth, lead to perfection, was an error of the human mind
extremely prevalent at the time that Christianity was first preached. That one
according spirit might be traced in the universe, and that there was one God,
the Father of all, was a very prevalent doctrine. This tendency towards
despotism in politics, and deism in religion, is a feature of the human mind
which continually reappears in certain conditions of society and corruptions of
civilization. At the same time a very general dissatisfaction was felt at these
conclusions; and the desire of establishing the principle of man’s
responsibility, and his connection with another state of existence, seemed
hardly compatible with the unity of the divine essence adored by the
philosophers. Deism was indeed the prevailing opinion in religion, yet it was
generally felt that it did not supply the void created by the absence of belief
in the power of the ancient pagan divinities, who had been supposed to pervade
all nature, to be ever present on the earth or in the air, that they might
watch the actions of men with sympathies almost human. The influence of deism
was cold and inanimate, while an affectation of superior wisdom almost
invariably induced the philosophers to introduce some maxim into their tenets
adverse to the plain common-sense of mankind, which abhors paradox. The people
felt that the moral corruption of which the pagan Juvenal, in his intense
indignation, has given us so many vivid descriptions, must eventually destroy
all social order. A reformation was anxiously desired, but no power existed
capable of undertaking the work. At this crisis Christianity presented itself,
and offered men the precise picture of the attributes of God of which they were
in search; it imposed on them obligations of which they acknowledged the
necessity, and it required from them a faith, of which they gradually
recognised the power.
Under these circumstances, Christianity could not fail
of making numerous converts. It boldly announced the full bearing of truths, of
which the Greek philosophers had only afforded a dim glimpse; and it distinctly
contradicted many of the favourite dreams of the national but falling faith of
Greece. It required either to be rejected or adopted. Among the Greeks,
therefore, Christianity met everywhere with a curious and attentive audience.
The feelings of the public mind were dormant; Christianity opened the sources
of eloquence, and revived the influence of popular opinion. From the moment a
people, in the state of intellectual civilization in which the Greeks were,
could listen to the preachers, it was certain they would adopt the religion.
They might alter, modify, or corrupt it, but it was impossible that they should
reject it. The existence of an assembly, in which the dearest interests of all
human beings were expounded and discussed in the language of truth, and with
the most earnest expressions of persuasion, must have lent an irresistible
charm to the investigation of the new doctrine among a people possessing the
institutions and feelings of the Greeks. Sincerity, truth, and a desire to
persuade others, will soon create eloquence where numbers are gathered
together. Christianity revived oratory, and with oratory it awakened many of
the national characteristics which had slept for ages. The discussions of
Christianity gave also new vigour to the communal and municipal institutions,
as it improved the intellectual qualities of the people.
The injurious effect of the demoralization of society
prevalent throughout the world on the position of the females, must have been
seriously felt by every Grecian mother. The educated females in Greece,
therefore, naturally welcomed the pure morality of the Gospel with the warmest
feelings of gratitude and enthusiasm; and to their exertions the rapid
conversion of the middle orders must in some degree be attributed. Female
influence must not be overlooked, if we would form a just estimate of the
change produced in society by the conversion of the Greeks to Christianity.
The effect of Christianity extended to political
society, by the manner in which it enforced the observance of the moral duties
on every rank of men without distinction, and the way in which it called in the
aid of public opinion to enforce that self-respect which a sense of
responsibility is sure to nourish. This political influence of Christianity
soon displayed itself among the Greeks. They had always been deeply imbued with
a feeling of equality, and their condition, after their conquest by the Romans,
had impressed on them the necessity of a moral code, to which superiors and
inferiors, rulers and subjects, were equally amenable. The very circumstances,
however, which gave Christianity peculiar attractions for the Greeks, excited a
feeling of suspicion among the Roman official authorities. Considering, indeed,
the manner in which the Christians formed themselves into separate
congregations in all the cities and towns of the East, the constituted form
which they gave to their own society, entirely independent of the civil
authority in the State, the high moral character and the popular talents of
many of their leaders, it is not wonderful that the Roman emperors should have
conceived some alarm at the increase of the new sect, and deemed it necessary
to exterminate it by persecution. Until the government of the empire was
prepared to adopt the tenets of Christianity, and identify itself with the
Christian population, it was not unnatural that the Christians should be
regarded as a separate, and consequently inimical class; for it must be
confessed that the bonds of their political society were too powerful to allow
any government to remain at ease. Let us, for a moment, form a picture of the
events which must have been of daily occurrence in the cities of Greece. A
Christian merchant arriving at Argos or Sparta would soon excite attention in
the agora and the lesche. His opinions would be
examined and controverted. Eloquence and knowledge were by no means rare gifts
among the traders of Greece, from the time of Solon the oil-merchant. The
discussions which had been commenced in the markets would penetrate into the
municipal councils. Cities which enjoyed local privileges and which like Athens
and Sparta called themselves free cities would be roused to an unwonted energy,
and the Roman governors might well be astonished and feel alarmed.
It was, undoubtedly, the power of the Christians as a
political body which excited several of the persecutions against them; and the
accusation to which they were subjected, of being the enemies of the human
race, was caused by their enforcing general principles of humanity at variance
with the despotic maxims of the Roman government. The emperor Decius, the first
great persecutor of Christianity, is reported to have declared that he would
rather divide his throne with another emperor than have it shared by the bishop
of Rome. When the cry of popular hatred was once excited, accusations of
promiscuous profligacy, and of devouring human sacrifices, were the calumnious
additions, in accordance with the credulity of the age. The first act of legal
toleration which the Christians met with from the Roman government was conceded
to their power as a political party by Maxentius. They were persecuted and
tolerated by Maximin, according to what he conceived to be the dictates of his
interest for the time. Constantine, who had long acted as the leader of their
political party, at last seated Christianity on the throne, and, by his
prudence, the world for many years enjoyed the happiness of religious
toleration.
From the moment Christianity was adopted by the
Hellenic race, it was so identified with the habits of the people as to become
essentially incorporated with the subsequent history of the nation. The
earliest corporations of Greek Christians were united in distinct bodies by
civil as well as by religious ties. The members of each congregation assembled
not only for divine worship, but also when any subject of general interest
required their opinion or decision; and the everyday business of the community
was intrusted to their spiritual teachers, and to the most influential
individuals in the society. It is impossible to determine exactly the limits of
the authority of the clergy and the elders in the various Christian communities
during the first century. As there was usually a perfect concord on every
subject, precise regulations, either to settle the bounds of clerical
authority, or the form of administering the business of the society, could not
be considered necessary. It cannot, indeed, be supposed that one uniform course
of proceeding was adopted for the internal government of all the Christian
communities throughout the world. Such a thing would have been too much at
variance with the habits of the Greeks and the nature of the Roman Empire.
Circumstances must have rendered the government of the Christian churches, in
some parts of the East, strictly monarchical; while, in the municipalities of
Greece, it would certainly appear more for the spiritual interests of religion,
that even the doctrines of the society should be discussed according to the
forms used in transacting the public business of these little autonomous
cities. Such differences would excite no attention among the cotemporary
members of the respective churches, for both would be regarded as equally
conformable to the spirit of Christianity. Precise laws and regulations usually
originate in the necessity of preventing definite evils, so that principles of
action operate as guides to conduct, and exert a practical influence on the
lives of thousands, for years before they become embodied in public enactments.
The most distant communities of Christian Greeks in
the East were connected by the closest bonds of union, not only for spiritual
purposes, but also on account of the mutual protection and assistance which
they were called upon to afford one another in the days of persecution. The
progress of Christianity among the Greeks was so rapid, that they soon
surpassed in numbers, wealth, and influence any other body separated by
peculiar usages from the mass of the population of the Roman Empire. The Greek
language became the ordinary medium of communication on ecclesiastical affairs
in the East; and the Christian communities of Greeks were gradually melted into
one nation, having a common legislation and a common civil administration in
many things, as well as a common religion. Their ecclesiastical government thus
acquired a moral force which rendered it superior to the local authorities, and
which at last rivalled the influence of the political administration of the
empire. The Greek Church had grown up to be almost equal in power to the Roman
state before Constantine determined to unite the two in strict alliance.
The Christian hierarchy received a regular organization
as early as the second century. Christianity then formed a confederation of
communities in the heart of the empire, which the imperial government very
naturally regarded with jealousy, for the principles of Christianity were a
direct negation of, if not a decided opposition to, many of the most cherished
maxims of the Roman State. Deputies from the different congregations in Greece
met together at stated intervals and places, and formed provincial synods,
which replaced the Achaean, Phocic, Boeotic, and Amphictyonic
assemblies of former days. How these assemblies were composed, what part the
people took in the election of the clerical deputies, and what rights the laity
possessed in the provincial councils, are points which have been much disputed,
and do not seem to be very accurately determined. The people, the lay elders,
and the clergy or spiritual teachers, were the component parts of each separate
community in the earliest periods. The numbers of the Christians soon required
that several congregations should be formed in a single city; these
congregations sought to maintain a constant communication in order to secure
perfect unanimity. Deputies were appointed to meet for this purpose; and the
most distinguished and ablest member of the clergy naturally became the
president of this assembly. He was the bishop, and soon became charged with the
conduct of public business during the intervals between the meetings of the
deputies. The superior education and character of the bishops placed the
direction of the greater part of the civil affairs of the community in their
hands; ecclesiastical business was their peculiar province by right; they
possessed the fullest confidence of their flocks; and, as no fear was then
entertained that the power intrusted to these disinterested and pious men could
ever be abused, their authority was never called in question. The charity of
the Christians was a virtue which separated them in a striking manner from the
rest of society, bound them closely together, and increased their social
influence by creating a strong feeling in their favour. The emperor Julian
complains that it rendered them independent of the emperor’s power, for they
were never forced to solicit the imperial bounty. And he owns that they not
only maintained all the poor of their own community, but also gave liberally to
poor pagans.
When Christianity became the religion of the emperor,
the political organization and influence of the Christian communities could not
fail to arrest the attention of the Roman authorities. The provincial synods
replaced, in the popular mind, the older national institutions; and, in a short
time, the power of the Patriarchs of Antioch and Alexandria excited the
jealousy of the emperors themselves. The monarchical ideas of the eastern
Greeks vested extensive authority in the hands of their bishops and patriarchs;
and their power excited more alarm in the Roman government than the municipal
forms of conducting ecclesiastical business which were adopted by the natives
of Greece, in accordance with the civil constitutions of the Greek cities and
states. This fact is evident from an examination of the list of the martyrs who
perished in the persecutions of the third century, when political alarm, rather
than religious zeal, moved the government to acts of cruelty. While numbers
were murdered in Antioch, Alexandria, Caesarea, Smyrna, and Thessalonica, very
few were sacrificed at Corinth, Athens, Patrae, and Nicopolis.
The power which Christianity had acquired, evidently
exercised some influence in determining Constantine to transfer his capital
into that part of his dominions where so numerous and powerful a body of his
subjects were attached to his person and his cause. Both Constantine and the
Christians had their own grounds of hostility to Rome and the Romans. The
senate and the Roman nobility remained firmly attached to paganism, which was
converted into the bond of union of the conservative party in the western
portion of the empire, and thus the Greeks were enabled to secure a predominancy
in the Christian church. The imperial prejudices of Constantine appear to have
concealed from him this fact; and he seems never to have perceived that the
cause of the Christian church and the Greek nation were already closely
interwoven, unless his inclination to Arianism, in his latter days, is to be
attributed to a wish to suppress the national spirit, which began to display
itself in the Eastern Church. The policy of circumscribing the power of
orthodoxy, as too closely connected with national feelings, was more openly
followed by Constantius.
A knowledge of the numbers of the Christians in the
Roman empire at the time of the first general council
of the Christian church at Nice, is of great importance towards affording a
just estimation of many historical facts. If the conjecture be correct, that
the Christians, at the time of Constantine’s conversion, hardly amounted to a
twelfth, and perhaps did not exceed a twentieth part of the population of the
empire, this would certainly afford the strongest proof of the admirable civil
organization by which they were united. But this can hardly be considered
possible, when applied to the eastern provinces of the empire, and is certainly
incorrect with regard to the Greek cities. It seems established by the rescript
of Maximin, and by the testimony of the martyr Lucianus
— supported as these are by a mass of collateral evidence — that the Christians
formed, throughout the East, the majority of the middle classes of Greek
society. Still history affords few facts which supply a fair criterion to
estimate the numbers or strength of either the Christian or pagan population
generally throughout the empire. The imperial authority, supported by the army,
which was equally destitute of religion and nationality, was powerful enough to
oppress or persecute either party, according to the personal disposition of the
emperor. There were Christians who endeavoured to excite Constantius to
persecute the pagans, and to seize the wealth which their temples contained.
Constantine had found himself strong enough to carry off the gold and silver
statues and ornaments from many temples; but, as this was done with the
sanction and assistance of the Christian population where it occurred, it seems
probable that it only happened in those places where the whole community, or at
least the corporation possessing the legal control over the temporal concerns
of these, had embraced Christianity. An arbitrary exercise of the emperor’s
authority as Pontifex Maximus, for the purpose of plundering the temples he was
bound to protect, cannot be suspected; it would be too strongly at variance
with the systematic toleration of Constantine’s reign.
The pagan Julian was strongly incited to persecute the
Christians by the more fanatical of the pagans; nor did he himself ever appear
to doubt that his power was sufficient to have commenced a persecution; and,
consequently, he takes credit to himself, in his writings, for the principles
of toleration which he adopted. The attempt of Julian to re-establish paganism
was, however, a very unstatesmanlike proceeding, and exhibited the strongest
proof that the rapidly decreasing numbers of the pagans proclaimed the
approaching dissolution of the old religion. Julian was an enthusiast; and he
was so far carried away by his ardour as to desire the restoration of ceremonies
and usages long consigned to oblivion, and ridiculous in the eyes of his pagan
contemporaries. In the East he accelerated the ruin of the cause which he
espoused. His own acquaintance with paganism had been gained chiefly from
books, and from the lessons of philosophers; for he had long been compelled to
conform to Christianity, and to acquire his knowledge of paganism only by
stealth. When he acted the Pontifex Maximus, according to the written
instructions of the old ceremonial, he was looked upon as the pedantic reviver
of an antiquated ceremony. The religion, too, which he had studied, was that of
the ancient Greeks, — a system of belief which had irrevocably passed away.
With the conservative pagan party of Rome he never formed any alliance. The
fancy of Julian to restore Hellenism, and to call himself a Greek, was
therefore regarded by all parties in the empire as an imperial folly. Nothing
but princely ignorance of the state of opinion in his age could have induced
Julian to endeavour to awaken the national feelings of the Greeks in favour of
paganism, in order to oppose them to Christianity, for their nationality was
already engaged in the Christian cause. This mistaken notion of the emperor was
seen by the Romans, and made a strong impression on the historians of Julian’s
reign. They have all condemned his superstition; for such, in their eyes, his
fanatic imitation of antiquated Hellenic usages appeared to be.
We must not overlook the important fact that the
Christian religion was long viewed with general aversion, from being regarded
by all classes as a dangerous as well as secret political association. The best
informed heathens appear to have believed that hostility to the established
order of society, odium humani generis, as this was called by the Romans, was a
characteristic of the new religion. The Roman aristocracy and populace, with
all those who identified themselves with Roman prejudices, adopted the opinion
that Christianity was one of the causes of the decline of the Roman empire.
Rome was a military state, Christianity was a religion of peace. The opposition
of their principles was felt by the Christians themselves, who seem to have
considered that the success of Christianity implied the fall of the empire; and
as the duration of the empire and the existence of civilized society appeared
inseparable, they inferred that the end of the world was near at hand. Nor is
this surprising. The invasion of the barbarians threatened society with ruin;
no political regeneracy seemed practicable by means
of any internal reforms; the empire of Christ was surely approaching, and that
empire was not of this world.
But these opinions and reasonings were not so
prevalent in the East as in the West, for the Greeks especially were not under
the influence of the same political feelings as the Romans. They were farther
removed from the scenes of war, and they suffered less from the invasions of
the barbarians. They were occupied with the daily business of life, and their
attention was not so frequently diverted to the crimes of the emperors and the
misfortunes of the State. They felt no sympathy, and little regret, when they
perceived that the power of Rome was on the decline, for they deemed it
probable that they should prove gainers by the change.
One feature of Christian society which excited general
disapprobation about the time of the accession of Julian, was the great number
of men who became monks and hermits. These enemies of social life proclaimed
that it was better to prepare for heaven in seclusion, than to perform man’s
active duties, and to defend the cause of civilization against the barbarians.
Millions of Christians who did not imitate their example openly approved of
their conduct; so that it is not wonderful that all who were not Christians
regarded Christianity with aversion, as a political institution hostile to the
existing government of the Roman Empire. The corruptions of Christianity, and
the dissensions of the Christians, had also caused a reaction against the
religion towards the latter part of the reign of Constantius II. Julian
profited by this feeling, but he had not the talent to render it subservient to
his views. The circumstance which rendered Christianity most hateful to him, as
an emperor and a philosopher, was the liberty of private judgment assumed as
one of the rights of man by monks and theologians. To combat Christianity with
any chance of success, Julian must have connected the theoretic paganism of the
schools with moral principles and strong faith. To succeed in such a task, he
must have preached a new religion, and assumed the character of a prophet. He
was unequal to the enterprise, for he was destitute of the popular sympathies,
firm convictions, fiery enthusiasm, and profound genius of Mahomet.
Sect. IV
The Orthodox Church became identified with the Greek
Nation,
When Constantine embraced Christianity, he allowed
paganism to remain the established religion of the State, and left the pagans
in the possession of all their privileges. The principle of toleration was
received as a political maxim of the Roman government; and it continued, with
little interruption, to be so, until the reign of Theodosius the Great, who
undertook to abolish paganism by legislative enactments. The Christian emperors
continued, until the reign of Gratian, to bear the title of Pontifex Maximus,
and to act as the political head of the pagan religion. This political
supremacy of the emperor over the pagan priesthood was applied also to the
Christian church; and, in the reign of Constantine, the imperial power over the
external and civil affairs of the church was fully admitted by the whole
Christian clergy. The respect which Constantine showed to the ministers of
Christianity, never induced him to overlook this supremacy. Even in the general
council of Nice, the assembled clergy would not transact any business until the
emperor had taken his seat, and authorized them to proceed. All Constantine’s
grants to the church were regarded as marks of imperial favour; and he
considered himself entitled to resume them, and transfer them to the Arians.
During the Arian reigns of Constantius and Valens, the power of the State over
the church was still more manifest.
From the death of Constantine until the accession of
Theodosius the Great, a period of thirty years elapsed, during which
Christianity, though the religion of the emperors and of a numerous body of
their subjects, was not the religion of the State. In the western provinces,
paganism was still predominant; and even in the eastern provinces, which had
embraced Christianity, the Christian party was weakened by rival sects. The
Arians and orthodox regarded one another with as much hostility as they did the
pagans. During this period, the orthodox clergy were placed in a state of
probation, which powerfully contributed towards connecting their interests and
feelings with those of the Greek population. Constantine had determined to
organize the Christian church precisely in the same manner as the civil
government. The object of this arrangement was to render the church completely
subservient to the imperial administration, and to break, as much as possible,
its connection with the people. For this purpose, the higher ecclesiastical
charges were rendered independent of public opinion. The wealth and temporal
power which the clergy suddenly attained by the favour of Constantine, soon
produced the usual effects of sudden riches and irresponsible authority in
corrupting the minds of men. The disputes relating to the Arian heresy were
embittered by the eagerness of the clergy to possess the richest episcopal
sees, and their conflicts became so scandalous, that they were rendered a
subject of popular satire in places of public amusement. The favour shown by
the Arian emperors to their own party, proved ultimately beneficial to the
orthodox clergy. The Roman empire was still nominally pagan, the Roman emperors
were avowedly Arian, and the Greeks felt little disposed to sympathize with the
traditional superstitions of their conquerors, or the personal opinions of
their masters. During this period, therefore, they listened with redoubled
attention to the doctrines of the orthodox clergy, and from this time the Greek
nation and the Orthodox Church became closely identified.
The orthodox teachers of the Gospel, driven from the
ecclesiastical preferments which depended on court favour, and deserted by the
ambitious and worldly-minded clergy, cultivated those virtues, and pursued that
line of conduct, which had endeared the earlier preachers of Christianity to
their flocks. The old popular organization of the church was preserved, and
more completely amalgamated with the social institutions of the Greek nation.
The people took part in the election of their spiritual pastors, and influenced
the choice of their bishops. The national as well as the religious sentiments
of the Greeks were called into action, and provincial synods were held for the
purpose of defending the orthodox priesthood against the imperial and Arian
administration. The majority of the orthodox congregations were Greek, and
Greek was the language of the orthodox clergy. Latin was the language of the
court and of the heretics. Many circumstances, therefore, combined to
consolidate the connection formed at this time between the Orthodox Church and
the Greek population throughout the eastern provinces of the empire; while some
of these circumstances tended more particularly to connect the clergy with the
educated Greeks, and to lay the foundation of the Orthodox Church becoming a
national institution.
In ancient Hellas and the Peloponnesus, paganism was
still far from being extinct, or, at least, as was not unfrequently the case,
the people, without caring much about the ancient religion, persisted in
celebrating the rites and festivals consecrated by antiquity. Valentinian and
Valens renewed the laws which had been often passed against various pagan
rites; and both these emperors encouraged the persecution of those who were
accused of this imaginary crime. It must be observed, however, that these
accusations were generally directed against wealthy individuals; and, on the
whole, they appear to have been dictated by the old imperial maxim of filling
the treasury by confiscations in order to avoid the dangers likely to arise
from the imposition of new taxes. In Greece the ordinary ceremonies of paganism
often bore a close resemblance to the prohibited rites; and the new laws could
not have been enforced without causing a general persecution of paganism, which
does not appear to have been the object of the emperors. The proconsul of
Greece, himself a pagan, solicited the emperor Valens to exempt his province
from the operation of the law; and so tolerant was the Roman administration to
districts which were too poor to offer a rich harvest for the fisc, that Greece was allowed to continue to celebrate its
pagan festivals.
Until this period, the temples had generally preserved
that portion of their property and revenues which was administered by private
individuals, or drawn from sources unconnected with the public treasury. The
rapid destruction of the temples, which took place after the reign of Valens,
must have been caused, in a great measure, by the conversion of those intrusted
with their care to Christianity. When the hereditary priests seized the
revenues of the heathen god as a private estate, they would rejoice in seeing
the temple fall rapidly to ruin, if they did not dare to destroy it openly.
Towards the end of his reign the Emperor Gratian laid aside the title of
Pontifex Maximus, and removed the altar of Victory from the senate-house of
Rome. These acts were equivalent to a declaration that paganism was no longer
the acknowledged religion of the senate and the Roman people. It was Theodosius
the Great, however, who finally established Christianity as the religion of the
empire; and in the East he succeeded completely in uniting the Orthodox Church
with the imperial administration; but in the West, the power and prejudices of
the Roman aristocracy prevented his measures from attaining full success.
Theodosius, in rendering orthodox Christianity the
established religion of the empire, increased the administrative and judicial
authority of the bishops; and the Greeks, being in possession of a predominant
influence in the Orthodox Church, were thus raised to the highest social
position which subjects were capable of attaining. The Greek bishop, who
preserved his national language and customs, was now the equal of the governor
of a province, who assumed the name and language of a Roman. The court, as well
as the civil administration of Theodosius the Great, continued Roman; and the
Latin clergy, aided by the great power and high character of St. Ambrose,
prevented the Greek clergy from appropriating to themselves an undue share of
ecclesiastical authority and preferment in the West. The power conferred on the
clergy, supported as it was by the popular origin of the priesthood, by the
feelings of brotherhood which pervaded the Greek Church, and by the strong
attachment of their flocks, was generally employed to serve and protect the
people, and often succeeded in tempering the despotism of the imperial
authority. The clergy began to form a part of the State. A popular bishop could
hardly be removed from his diocese, without the government’s incurring as much danger
as it formerly encountered in separating a successful general from his army.
The difficulties which the emperor Constantine met with, in removing St.
Athanasius from the See of Alexandria, and the necessity he was under of
obtaining his condemnation in a general council, show that the church, even at
that early period, already possessed the power of defending its members: and
that a new power had arisen which imposed legal restraints on the arbitrary
will of the emperor. Still, it must not be supposed that bishops had yet
acquired the privilege of being tried only by their peers. The emperor was
considered the supreme judge in ecclesiastical as well as in civil matters, and
the council of Sardica was satisfied with petitioning for liberty of conscience,
and freedom from the oppression of the civil magistrate.
Though the good effects of Christianity on the moral
and political condition of the ancient world have never been called in
question, historians have, nevertheless, more than once reproached the Christian
religion with accelerating the decline of the Roman empire. A careful
comparison of the progress of society in the eastern and western provinces must
lead to a different conclusion. It appears certain that the Latin provinces
were ruined by the strong conservative attachment of the aristocracy of Rome to
the forgotten forms and forsaken superstitions of paganism after they had lost
all practical influence on the minds of the people; while there can be very
little doubt that the eastern provinces were saved by the unity with which all
ranks embraced Christianity. In the Western Empire, the people, the Roman
aristocracy, and the imperial administration, formed three separate sections of
society, unconnected either by religious opinion or national feelings; and each
was ready to enter into alliances with armed bands of foreigners in the empire,
in order to serve their respective interests, or gratify their prejudices or
passions. The consequence of this state of things was, that Rome and the
Western Empire, in spite of their wealth and population, were easily conquered
by comparatively feeble enemies; while Constantinople, with all its original
weakness, beat back both the Goths and the Huns, in the plenitude of their
power, in consequence of the union which Christianity inspired. Rome fell
because the senate and the Roman people clung too long to ancient institutions,
forsaken by the great body of the population; while Greece escaped destruction
because she modified her political and religious institutions in conformity
with the opinions of her inhabitants, and with the policy of her government.
The popular element in the social organization of the Greek people, by its
alliance with Christianity, infused into society the energy which saved the
Eastern Empire; the disunion of the pagans and Christians, and the disorder in
the administration flowing from this disunion, ruined the Western.
Sect. V
Condition of the Greek Population of the Empire from
the reign of Constantine to that of Theodosius the Great
The establishment of a second capital at
Constantinople has generally been considered a severe blow to the Roman Empire;
but, from the time of Diocletian, Rome had ceased to be the residence of the
emperors. Various motives induced the emperors to avoid Rome; the wealth and
influence of the Roman senators circumscribed their authority; the turbulence
and numbers of the people rendered even their government insecure; while the
immense revenues required for donatives, for distributions of provisions, for pompous
ceremonies, and for public games, formed a heavy burden on the imperial
treasury, and the insubordination of the praetorian guards continually
threatened their persons. When the emperor, therefore, by becoming a Christian,
was placed in personal opposition to the Roman senate, there could be no longer
any doubt that Rome became a very unsuitable residence for the Christian court.
Constantine was compelled to choose a new capital; and in doing so he chose
wisely. His selection of Byzantium was, it is true, determined by reasons
connected with the imperial administration, without any reference to the
influence which his choice might have on the prosperity of his subjects. Its
first effect was to preserve the unity of the Eastern Empire. The Roman Empire had,
for some time previous to the reign of Constantine, given strong proofs of a
tendency to separate into a number of small states. The necessity of the
personal control of the sovereign over the executive power in the provinces was
so great, that Constantine himself, who had done all he could to complete the
concentration of the general government, thought it necessary to divide the
executive administration of the empire among his family before his death. The
union effected by centralizing the management of the army and the civil and
judicial authority, prevented the division of the executive power from
immediately partitioning the empire. It was not until the increased
difficulties of intercommunication had created two distinct centres of
administration that the separation of the Eastern and Western empires was
completed.
The foundation of Constantinople was the particular
act which secured the integrity of the eastern provinces, and prevented their
separating into a number of independent states. It is true, that by
transferring the administration of the East more completely into the hands of
the Greeks, it roused the nationality of the Syrians and Egyptians into
activity, — an activity, however, which seemed to present no danger to the
empire, as both these provinces were peopled almost exclusively by a tax-paying
population, and contributed proportionally few recruits to the army. The
establishment of the seat of government at Constantinople enabled the emperors
to destroy many abuses, and effect numerous reforms, which recruited the
resources and revived the strength of the eastern portion of the empire. The
energy thus developed gave to the empire of the East the strength which enabled
it ultimately to repulse all those hordes of barbarians who subdued the West.
Both the imperial power and the condition of society
assumed more settled forms after the change of the capital. Before the reign of
Constantine, ambition had been the leading feature of the Roman state.
Everybody was striving for official rank; and the facilities of ascending the
throne, or arriving at the highest dignities, were indefinitely multiplied by
the rapid succession of emperors, by the repeated proscriptions of senators,
and by the incessant confiscations of the property of the wealthiest Romans.
Constantine, in giving to the government the form of a regular monarchy,
introduced greater stability into society; and as ambition could no longer be
gratified with the same ease as formerly, avarice, or rather rapacity, became
the characteristic feature of the ruling classes. This love of riches soon
caused the venality of justice. The middle classes, already sinking under the
general anarchy and fiscal oppression of the empire, were now exposed to the
extortions of the aristocracy, and property became almost as insecure among the
smaller proprietors as it had formerly been among those who held great estates.
The condition of Greece, nevertheless, improved
considerably in the interval which elapsed between the invasion of the Goths in
the reign of Gallienus and the time of Constantine.
History, it is true, supplies only a few scattered incidents from which the
fact of this improvement can be inferred; but the gradual progress of the
amelioration is satisfactorily established. When Constantine and Licinius prepared to dispute the sole possession of the
empire, they assembled two powerful fleets, both of which were composed chiefly
of Greek vessels. The armament of Constantine consisted of two hundred light
galleys of war, and two thousand transports, and these immense naval forces
were assembled at the Piraeus. This selection of the Piraeus as a naval station
indicates that it was no longer in the desolate condition in which it had been
seen by Pausanias in the second century, and it shows that Athens itself had
recovered from whatever injury it had sustained during the Gothic expedition.
To these frequent reconstructions of the buildings and walls of Greek cities,
caused by the vicissitudes which frequently occurred in the numbers and wealth
of their inhabitants during the period of eight centuries and a half which is
reviewed in this volume, we are to attribute the disappearance of the immense
remains of ancient constructions which once covered the soil, and of which no
traces now exist, as they have been broken up on these occasions to serve as
materials for new structures.
The fleet of Constantine was collected among the
Europeans; that of Licinius, which consisted of
triremes, was furnished chiefly by the Asiatic and Libyan Greeks. The number of
the Syrian and Egyptian vessels was comparatively smaller than would have been
the case two centuries earlier. It appears, therefore, that the commerce of the
Mediterranean had returned into the hands of the Greeks. The trade of central
Asia, which took the route of the Black Sea, increased in consequence of the
insecure state of the Red Sea, Egypt, and Syria, and gave a new impulse to
Greek industry.
The carrying trade of Western Europe was again falling
into Greek hands. Athens, as the capital of the old Hellenic population, from
its municipal liberty and flourishing schools of learning, was rising into
importance. Constantine honoured this city with marks of peculiar favour, which
were conferred certainly from a regard to its political importance, and not
from any admiration of the studies of its pagan philosophers. He not only
ordered an annual distribution of grain to be made to the citizens of Athens,
from the imperial revenues, but he accepted the title of Strategos when offered
by its inhabitants.
As soon as Julian had assumed the purple in Gaul, and
marched against Constantius, he endeavoured to gain the Greek population to his
party, by flattering their national feelings; and he strove to induce them to
connect their cause with his own, in opposition to the Roman government of
Constantius. He seems, in general, to have been received with favour by the
Greeks, though his aversion to Christianity must have excited some distrust.
Unless the Greek population in Europe had greatly increased in wealth and
influence, during the preceding century, or Roman influence had suffered a
considerable diminution in the East, it could hardly have entered into the
plans of Julian to take the prominent measures which he adopted to secure their
support. He addressed letters to the municipalities of Athens, Corinth, and
Lacedaemon, in order to persuade these cities to join his cause. The letter to
the Athenians is a carefully prepared political manifesto, explaining the
reasons which compelled him to assume the purple. Athens, Corinth, and
Lacedaemon, must have possessed some acknowledged political and social
influence in the empire, otherwise Julian would only have rendered his cause
ridiculous by addressing them at such a critical moment; and, though he was
possibly ignorant of the state of religious feeling in the popular mind, he
must have been too well acquainted with the statistics of the empire to commit
any error of this kind in public business. It may also be observed, that the
care with which history has recorded the ravages caused in Greece by
earthquakes, during the reigns of Valentinian and Valens, affords conclusive
testimony of the importance then attached to the well-being of the Greek
population.
The ravages committed by the Goths in the provinces
immediately to the south of the Danube must have turned for a time to the
profit of Greece. Though some bands of the barbarians pushed their incursions
into Macedonia and Thessaly, still Greece generally served as a place of
retreat for the wealthy inhabitants of the invaded districts. When Theodosius,
therefore, subdued the Goths, the Greek provinces, both in Europe and Asia,
were among the most flourishing portions of the empire; and the Greek
population, as a body, was, without question, the most numerous and best
organized part of the emperor’s subjects; property, in short, was nowhere more
secure than among the Greeks.
The rapacity of the imperial government had, however,
undergone no diminution; and the weight of taxation was still compelling the
people everywhere to encroach on the capital accumulated by former ages, and to
abstain from all investments which only promised a distant remuneration. The
influx of wealth from the ruined provinces of the North, and the profits of a
change in the direction of trade, were temporary causes of prosperity, and
could only render the burden of the public taxes lighter for one or two
generations. The imperial treasury was sure ultimately to absorb the whole of
these accidental supplies. It was, indeed, only in the ancient seats of the
Hellenic race that any signs of returning prosperity were visible; for in
Syria, Egypt, and Cyrene, the Greek population displayed evident proofs that
they were suffering in the general decline of the empire. Their number was
gradually diminishing in comparison with that of the native inhabitants of
these countries. Civilization was sinking to the level of the lower grades of
society. In the year A. D. 363, the Asiatic Greeks received a blow from which
they never recovered. Jovian, by his treaty with Sapor II, ceded to Persia the
five provinces of Arzanene, Moxoene,
Zabdicene, Rehimene, and Corduene, and the Roman colonies of Nisibis and Singara in Mesopotamia. As Sapor was a fierce persecutor of
the Christians, the whole Greek population of these districts was obliged to
emigrate. The bigoted attachment of the Persians to the Magian worship never
allowed the Greeks to regain a footing in these countries, or to obtain again
any considerable share in their trade. From this time the natives acquired the
complete ascendancy in all the country beyond the Euphrates. The bigotry of the
Persian government is not to be overlooked in estimating the various causes
which drove the trade of India through the northern regions of Asia to the
shores of the Black Sea,
Sect. VI
Communications
of the Greeks with countries beyond the bounds of the Roman Empire
It would be a depressing idea were it to be admitted
that the general degradation of mankind after the time of the Antonines was the effect of some inherent principle of
decay, proceeding from an inevitable state of exhaustion in the condition of a
highly civilized society; that a moral deficiency produced incurable
corruption, and rendered good government impracticable; that these evils were
irremediable, even by the influence of Christianity; and, in short, that the
destruction of all the elements of civilization was necessary for the
regeneration of the social as well as the political system. But there is
happily no ground for any such opinion. The evils of society were produced by
the injustice and oppression of the Roman government, and that government was
so powerful that the nations it ruled were unable to force it to reform its
conduct. The middle classes were almost excluded from all influence in their
own municipal affairs by the oligarchical constitution of the curia, so that
public opinion was powerless. After the Roman central authority was destroyed,
similar causes produced the same effects in the barbarian monarchies of the
West; and the revival of civilization commenced only when the people acquired
power sufficient to enforce some respect for their feelings and rights. History
has fortunately preserved some scanty memorials of a Greek population living
beyond the bounds of the Roman Empire, which afford the means of estimating the
effects of political causes in modifying the character and destroying the
activity of the Greek nation. The flourishing condition of the independent
Greek city of Cherson, in Tauris, furnishes ample testimony that the state of
society among the Greeks admitted of the existence of those virtues, and of the
exercise of that energy, which are necessary to support independence; but
without institutions which confer on the people some control over their
government, and some direct interest in public affairs, nations soon sink into
lethargy, from which they can only be roused by war.
The Greek city of Chersonesos,
a colony of Heraclea in Pontus, was situated on a small bay to the south-west
of the entrance into the great harbour of Sebastopol, a name now memorable in
European history. The defeat of Mithridates, to whom it had been subject, did
not re-establish its independence. But in the time of Augustus it possessed the
privileges of freedom and self-government under the protection of Rome. Its
distant and isolated situation protected it from the arbitrary exactions of Roman
magistrates, and rendered its municipal rights equivalent to political
independence. In the reign of Hadrian, this independence was officially
recognised, and Chersonesos received the rank of an
allied city. In the third century we find the name abbreviated into Cherson,
and the city removed somewhat to the eastward of the old site. Its extent was
diminished, and the fortifications of Cherson only embraced a circumference of
about two miles, on the promontory to the west of the present quarantine
harbour of Sebastopol. It preserved the republican form of government, and
contrived to defend its freedom for centuries against the ambition of the kings
of Bosporus, and the attacks of the neighbouring Goths, who had rendered
themselves masters of the open country. The wealth and power of Cherson
depended on its commerce, and this commerce flourished under institutions which
guaranteed the rights of property. The Emperor Constantine, in his Gothic wars,
did not disdain to demand the aid of this little State; and he acknowledged
with gratitude the great assistance which the Roman Empire had derived from the
military forces of the Chersonites. No history could present more instructive
lessons to centralized despotisms than the records of the administration and
taxation of these Greeks, in the Tauric Chersonesus, during the decline of the empire, and it is
deeply to be regretted that none exist. About three hundred and fifty years
before the Christian era, the kingdom of the Cimmerian Bosporus, one of these
Greek colonies, was in a flourishing agricultural condition; and its monarch
had been able to prevent a famine at Athens, by supplying that city with two
million bushels of wheat in a single season. Three hundred and fifty years
after the birth of Christ all was changed in ancient Greece, and Cherson alone
of all the cities inhabited by Greeks enjoyed the blessing of freedom. The
fertile fields which had fed the Athenians were converted into pasturage for
the cattle of the Goths; but the commerce of the Chersonites enabled them to
import com, oil, and wine from the richest provinces of the Roman Empire.
The commercial Greeks of the empire began to feel that
there were countries in which men could live and prosper beyond the power of
the Roman administration. Christianity had penetrated far into the East, and
Christians were every- where united by the closest ties. The speculations of
trade occupied an important place in society. Trade carried many Greeks of
education among foreign nations little inferior to the Romans in civilization,
and surpassing them in wealth. It was impossible for these travellers to avoid
examining the conduct of the imperial administration with the critical eye of
men who viewed various countries and weighed the merits of different systems of
fiscal government. For them, therefore, oppression had certain limits from
which, when transgressed, they would have escaped by transporting themselves
and their fortunes beyond the reach of the imperial tax-gatherers. The
inhabitants of the Western Empire could entertain no similar hope of avoiding
oppression.
About the time of Constantine, the Greeks carried on
an extensive commerce with the northern shores of the Black Sea, Armenia,
India, Arabia, and Ethiopia, and some merchants carried their adventures as far
as Ceylon. A Greek colony had been established in the island of Socotra (Dioscorides), in the time of the Ptolemies, as a station
for the Indian trade; and this colony, mixed with a number of Syrians, still
continued to exist, in spite of the troubles raised by the Saracens on the
northern shores of the Red Sea, and their wars with the emperors, particularly
with Valens. The travels of the philosopher Metrodorus,
and the missionary labours of the Indian bishop Theophilus, prove the existence
of a regular intercourse between the empire, India, and Ethiopia, by the waters
of the Red Sea. The curiosity of the philosopher, and the enthusiasm of the
missionary, were excited by the reports of the ordinary traders; while their
enterprises were everywhere facilitated by the mercantile speculations of a
regular traffic. Feelings of religion at this time extended the efforts of the
Christians, and opened up new channels for commerce. The kingdom of Ethiopia
was converted to Christianity by two Greek slaves, who rose to the highest
dignities in the State, whose influence must have originated in their
connection with the Roman Empire, and whose power must have opened new means of
communication with the heathens in the south of Africa, and assisted Greek
traders, as well as Christian missionaries, in penetrating into countries
whither no Roman had ever ventured.
Sect. VII
Effect of the
separation of the Eastern andWestern Empires on the
Greek nation
A.D. 395.
The separation of the eastern and western portions of
the Roman Empire into two independent states, under Arcadius and Honorius, was
the last step, in a long series of events, which seemed tending to restore the
independence of the Greek nation. The interest of the sovereigns of the Eastern
Empire became intimately connected with the fortunes of their Greek subjects.
The Greek language began to be generally spoken at the court of the eastern
emperors, and Greek feelings of nationality gradually made their way, not only
into the administration and the army, but even into the family of the emperors.
The numbers of the Greek population in the Eastern Empire gave a unity of
feeling to the inhabitants, a nationality of character to the government, and a
degree of power to the Christian church, which were completely wanting in the
ill-cemented structure of the West. New vigour seemed on the point of being
infused into the imperial government, as circumstances strongly impelled the
emperors to participate in the feelings and national interests of their
subjects. Nor were these hopes entirely delusive. The slow and majestic decline
of the Roman Empire was arrested under a singular combination of events, as if
expressly to teach the historical lesson that the Roman government had fallen
through its own faults, by consuming the capital from which its resources were
derived, by fettering the industry of the people, and thus causing a decline in
the numbers of the population; for even in the West the strength of the barbarians
was only sufficient to occupy provinces already depopulated by the policy of
the government.
As soon as the Eastern Empire was definitely separated
from the Western, the spirit of the Greek municipalities, and the direct
connection of the body of the people with the clergy, began to exercise a
marked influence on the general government. The increasing authority of the defensor in the
municipalities modified, in some degree, the oligarchy of the Roman curia.
Though the imperial administration continued, in fiscal matters, to maintain
the old axiom that the people were the serfs of the State, yet the emperors,
from the want of an aristocracy whom they could plunder, were thrown back on
the immediate support of the people, whose goodwill could no longer be
neglected. It is not to be supposed that, in the general decline of the empire,
any disorganization of the frame of civil society was manifest in the various
nations which lived under the Roman government. The numbers of the population
had, indeed, everywhere diminished, but no convulsions had yet shaken the frame
of society. Property was as secure as it had ever been, and the courts of law
were gaining additional authority and a better organization. Domestic virtue
was by no means rarer than it had been in brighter periods of history. The even
tenor of life flowed calmly on, in a great portion of the Eastern Empire, from
generation to generation. Philosophical and metaphysical speculations had, in
the absence of the more active pursuits of political life, been the chief
occupation of the higher orders; and when the Christian religion became
universal, it gradually directed the whole attention of the educated to
theological questions. These studies certainly exercised a favourable influence
on the general morality, if not on the temper of mankind, and the tone of
society was characterised by a purity of manners, and a degree of charitable
feeling to inferiors, which have probably never been surpassed. Nothing can
more remarkably display the extent to which the principles of humanity had
penetrated, than the writings of the Emperor Julian. In the fervour of his
pagan enthusiasm, he continually borrows Christian sentiments and inculcates
Christian philanthropy.
Public opinion, which in the preceding century had
attributed the decline of the empire to the progress of Christianity, now, with
more justice, fixed on the fiscal system as the principal cause of its decay.
The complaints of the oppression of the public administration were, by the
common consent of the prince and people, directed against the abuses of the
revenue-officers. The historians of this period, and the decrees of the emperors
themselves, charge these officers with producing the general misery by the
peculations which they committed; but no emperor yet thought of devoting his
attention to a careful reformation of the system which allowed such disorders.
The venality of the Roman officials excited the indignation of Constantine, who
publicly threatened them with death if they continued their extortions, and the
existence of a law inveighing against corruption speaks indirectly in favour of
the state of society in which the vices of the administration were so severely
reprehended.
An anecdote often illustrates the condition of society
more correctly than a dissertation, though there is always some danger that an
anecdote has found its place in history from the singularity of the picture
which it presents. There is nevertheless one anecdote which is interesting, as
affording a faithful picture of general manners, and as giving an accurate view
of the most prominent defects in the Roman administration. Acindynus,
the prefect of the Orient, enjoyed the reputation of an able, just, and severe
governor. He collected the public revenues with inflexible justice. In the
course of his ordinary administration, he threatened one of the inhabitants of
Antioch, already in prison, with death, in case he should fail to discharge,
within a fixed term, a debt due to the imperial treasury. His power was
admitted, and his habitual attention to the claims of the fisc
gave public defaulters at Antioch no hope of escaping with any punishment short
of slavery, which was civil death. The prisoner was married to a beautiful
woman, and the parties were united by the warmest affection. The circumstances
of their case, and their situation in life, excited some attention. A man of
great wealth offered to pay the husband’s debt, on condition that he should
obtain the favours of his beautiful wife. The proposal excited the indignation
of the lady, but when it was communicated to her imprisoned husband, he thought
life too valuable not to be preserved by such a sacrifice; and his prayers had
more effect with his wife than the wealth or the solicitations of her admirer.
The libertine, though wealthy, proved to be mean and avaricious, and contrived
to cheat the lady with a bag filled with sand instead of gold. The unfortunate
wife, baffled in her hopes of saving her husband, threw herself at the feet of
the prefect Acindynus, to whom she revealed the whole
of the disgraceful transaction. The prefect was deeply moved by the evil
effects of his severity. Astonished at the variety of crimes which he had
caused, he attempted to render justice, by apportioning a punishment to each of
the culprits, suitable to the nature of his offence. As the penalty of his own
severity, he condemned himself to pay the debt due to the imperial treasury. He
sentenced the fraudulent seducer to transfer to the injured lady the estate
which had supplied him with the wealth which he had so infamously employed. The
debtor was immediately released— he appeared to be sufficiently punished by his
imprisonment and shame.
The severity of the revenue laws, and the arbitrary
power of the prefects in matters of finance, are well represented in this
anecdote. The injury inflicted on society by a provincial administration so
constituted must have been incalculable. Even the justice and disinterestedness
of such a prefect as Acindynus required to be called
into action by extraordinary crimes, and, after all, virtues such as his could
afford no very sure guarantee against oppression.
In spite of the great progress which Christianity had
made, there still existed a numerous body of pagans among the higher ranks of
the old aristocracy, who maintained schools of philosophy, in which a species
of allegorical pantheism was taught. The pure morality inculcated, and the
honourable lives of the teachers in these schools, enabled these philosophers
to find votaries long after paganism might be considered virtually extinct as a
national religion. While the pagans still possessed a succession of
distinguished literary characters, a considerable body of the Christians were
beginning to proclaim an open contempt of all learning which was not contained
in the Scriptures. This fact is connected with the increased power of national
feelings in the provinces, and with the aversion of the natives to the
oppression of the Roman government and the insolence of Greek officials.
Literature was identified with Roman supremacy and Greek arrogance. The Greeks,
having long been in possession of the privileges of Roman citizens, and calling
themselves Romans, now filled the greater part of the civil employments in the
East.
From the time of Constantine, the two great principles
of law and religion began to exert a favourable influence on Greek society, by
their effect in moderating the despotic power of the imperial administration in
its ordinary communications with the people. They created new institutions in
the State, having a sphere of action independent of the arbitrary power of the
emperor. The lawyers and the clergy acquired a fixed position as political
bodies; and thus the branches of government with which they were connected
were, in some degree, emancipated from arbitrary changes, and obtained a
systematic or constitutional form. The dispensation of justice, though it
remained dependent on the executive government, was placed in the hands of a
distinct class; and as the law required a long and laborious study, its
administration followed a steady and invariable course, which it was difficult
for any other branch of the executive to interrupt. The lawyers and judges,
formed in the same school and guided by the same written rules, were placed
under the influence of a limited public opinion, which at least insured a
certain degree of self-respect, supported by professional interests, but
founded on general principles of equity. The body of lawyers not only obtained
a complete control over the judicial proceedings of the tribunals, and
restrained the injustice of proconsuls and prefects, but they even assigned
limits to the wild despotism exercised by the earlier emperors. The department
of general legislation was likewise intrusted to lawyers; and the good effects
of this arrangement are apparent, from the conformity of the decrees of the
worst emperors, after this period, with the principles of justice.
The power of the clergy, originally resting on a more
popular and purer basis than that of the law, became at last so great, that it
suffered the inevitable corruption of all irresponsible authority intrusted to
humanity. The power of the bishops almost equalled that of the provincial
governors, and was not under the constant control of the imperial
administration. To gain such a position, intrigue, simony, and popular sedition
were often employed. Supported by the people, a bishop ventured to resist the
emperor himself; supported by the emperor and the people, he ventured even to
neglect the principles of Christianity. Theophilus, the patriarch of
Alexandria, ordained the Platonic philosopher Synesius, bishop of Ptolemais, in
Cyrenaica, when he was a recent and not an orthodox Christian; for, as a
bishop, he refused to put away his wife, and he declared that he neither
believed in the resurrection of the body nor in the eternity of punishments.
In estimating the relative extent of the influence
exercised by law and religion on the social condition of the Greeks, it must be
remarked that Greek was the language of the Eastern Church from the time of its
connection with the imperial administration; while, unfortunately for the law,
Latin continued to be the language of legal business in the East, until after
the time of Justinian. This fact explains the comparatively trifling influence
exercised by the legal class, in establishing the supremacy of the Greek nation
in the Eastern Empire, and accounts also for the undue influence which the
clergy were enabled to acquire in civil affairs. Had the language of the law
been that of the people, the Eastern lawyers, supported by the municipal
institutions and democratic feelings of the Greeks, could hardly have failed,
by combining with the church, to form a systematic and constitutional barrier
against the arbitrary exercise of the imperial authority. The want of national
institutions forming a portion of their system of law, was a defect in the social
condition of the Greeks which they never supplied.
Slavery continued to exist in the same manner as in
earlier times; and the slave-trade formed the most important branch of the
commerce of the Roman Empire. It is true that the humanity of a philosophical
age, and the precepts of the Gospel, introduced some restraints on the most
barbarous features of the power possessed by the Romans over the lives and
persons of their slaves; still, freemen were sold as slaves if they failed to
pay their taxes, and parents were allowed to sell their own children. A new and
more systematic slavery than the old personal service grew up in the rural
districts, in consequence of the fiscal arrangements of the empire. The public
registers showed the number of slaves employed in the cultivation of every
farm; and the proprietor was bound to pay a certain tax for these slaves
according to their employment. Even when the land was cultivated by free
peasants, the proprietor was responsible to the fisc
for their capitation-tax. As the interest of the government and of the
proprietor, therefore, coincided to restrain the free labourer employed in
agriculture from abandoning the cultivation of the land, he was attached to the
soil, and gradually sank into the condition of a serf; while, on the other
hand, in the case of slaves employed in farming, the government had an interest
in preventing the proprietor from withdrawing their labour from the cultivation
of the soil : these slaves, therefore, rose to the rank of serfs. The cultivators
of the soil became, for this reason, attached to it, and their slavery ceased
to be personal; they acquired rights, and possessed a definite station in
society. This was the first step made by mankind towards the abolition of
slavery.
The double origin of serfs must be carefully observed,
in order to explain some apparently contradictory expressions of the Roman law.
There is a law of Constantius preserved in Justinian’s code, which shows that
slaves were then attached to the soil, and could not be separated from it.
There is a law, also, of the Emperor Anastasius, which proves that a freeman,
who had cultivated the property of another for thirty years, was prohibited
from quitting that property; but he remained in other respects a freeman. The
cultivator was called by the Romans colonus, and might, consequently, be either a slave or a
freeman. His condition, however, was soon so completely determined by special
laws, that its original constitution was lost.
Sect. VIII
Attempts of the Goths to establish themselves in
Greece
The first great immigration of the Goths to the south
of the Danube took place with the permission of the Emperor Valens; but as the
Roman government adopted no measures for insuring their tranquil settlement in
the country, these troublesome colonists were soon converted into dangerous
enemies. Being ill supplied with provisions, finding the country unprotected,
and having been allowed to retain possession of their arms, they began to
plunder Moesia, Thrace, and Macedonia, for subsistence. At last, emboldened by
success, they extended their incursions over the whole country, from the walls
of Constantinople to the borders of Illyricum. The Roman troops were defeated.
The emperor Valens, advancing inconsiderately in the confidence of victory, was
vanquished in the battle of Adrianople, and perished A.D. 378. The massacre of
a considerable number of Goths, retained in Asia as hostages and mercenaries,
roused the fury of their victorious countrymen, and gave an unusual degree of cruelty
to the war of devastation which they carried on for three years. Theodosius the
Great put an end to these disorders. The Goths were still unable to resist the
Roman troops when properly conducted. Theodosius induced their finest bodies of
warriors to enter the imperial service, and either destroyed the remaining
bands, or compelled them to escape beyond the Danube.
The depopulated state of the empire induced Theodosius
to establish colonies of Goths, whom he had forced to submit, in Phrygia and
Lydia. Thus the Roman government began to replace the ancient population of its
provinces, by introducing new races of inhabitants into its dominions.
Theodosius granted many privileges to these dangerous colonists, who were
allowed to remain in possession of much of the wild liberty secured to them by
their national institutions, merely on condition that they should furnish a
certain number of recruits for the military service of the State. When the
native population of the empire was gradually diminishing, some suspicion must
surely have been entertained that this diminution was principally caused by the
conduct of the government; yet so deeply rooted was the opposition of interests
between the government and the governed, and so distrustful were the emperors
of their subjects, that they preferred confiding in foreign mercenaries, to
reducing the amount, and changing the nature, of the fiscal contributions,
though by doing this they might have secured the support, and awakened the
energy of their native subjects.
The Roman despotism had left the people almost without
any political rights to defend, and with but few public duties to perform;
while the free inhabitants deplored the decline of the agricultural population,
and lamented their own degeneracy, which induced them to crowd into the towns.
They either did not perceive, or did not dare to proclaim, that these evils
were caused by the imperial administration, and could only be remedied by a
milder and more equitable system of government. In order to possess the
combination of moral and physical courage necessary to defend their property
and rights against foreign invasion, civilized nations must feel convinced that
they have the power of securing that property and those rights against all
domestic injustice and arbitrary oppression on the part of the sovereign.
The Goths commenced their relations with the Roman
Empire before the middle of the third century; and during the period they dwelt
in the countries adjoining the Roman provinces, they made great progress in
civilization, and in military and political knowledge. From the time Aurelian
abandoned to them the province of Dacia, they became the lords of a fertile,
cultivated, and well-peopled country. As the great body of the agricultural
population was left behind by the Romans when they vacated the province, the
Goths found themselves the proprietors of lands, from which they appear to have
drawn a fixed revenue, leaving the old inhabitants in the enjoyment of their
estates. To warriors of their simple habits of life, these revenues were amply
sufficient to enable them to spend their time in hunting, to purchase arms and
horses, and to maintain a band of retainers trained to war. The personal
independence enjoyed by every Gothic warrior who possessed a landed revenue,
created a degree of anarchy in the territories they subdued which was
everywhere more ruinous than the systematic oppression of Rome. Still in Dacia
the Goths were enabled to improve their arms and discipline, and to assume the
ideas and manners of a military and territorial aristocracy. Though they
remained always inferior to the Romans in military science and civil arts, they
were their equals in bravery, and their superiors in honesty and truth; so that
the Goths were always received with favour in the imperial service. It must not
be forgotten, that no comparison ought to be established between the Gothic
contingents and the provincial conscripts. The Gothic warriors were selected
from a race of landed gentry devoted exclusively to arms, and which looked with
contempt on all industrious occupations; while the native troops of the empire
were taken from the poorest peasantry, torn from their cottages, and mingled
with slaves and the dissolute classes of the cities, who were induced to enlist
from hunger or a love of idleness. The number and importance of the Gothic
forces in the Roman armies during the reign of Theodosius, enabled several of
their commanders to attain the highest rank ; and among these officers, Alaric
was the most distinguished by his future greatness.
The death of Theodosius threw the administration of
the Eastern Empire into the hands of Rufinus, the minister of Arcadius; and
that of the Western, into those of Stilicho, the guardian of Honorius. The
discordant elements which composed the Roman Empire began to reveal all their
incongruities under these two ministers. Rufinus was a civilian from Gaul; and
from his Roman habits and feelings, and western prejudices, disagreeable to the
Greeks. Stilicho was of barbarian descent, and consequently equally unacceptable
to the aristocracy of Rome; but he was an able and popular soldier, and had
served with distinction both in the East and in the West. As Stilicho was the
husband of Serena, the niece and adopted daughter of Theodosius the Great, his
alliance with the imperial family gave him an unusual influence in the
administration. The two ministers hated one another with all the violence of
aspiring ambition; and, unrestrained by any feeling of patriotism, each was
more intent on ruining his rival than on serving the State. The greater number
of the officers in the Roman service, both civil and military, were equally
inclined to sacrifice every public duty for the gratification of their avarice
or ambition.
At this time Alaric, partly from disgust at not receiving
all the preferment which he expected, and partly in the hope of compelling the
government of the Eastern Empire to agree to his terms, quitted the imperial
service and retired towards the frontiers, where he assembled a force
sufficiently large to enable him to act independently of all authority.
Availing himself of the disputes between the ministers of the two emperors, and
perhaps instigated by Rufinus or Stilicho to aid their intrigues, he
established himself in the provinces to the south of the Danube. In the year
395 he advanced to the walls of Constantinople; but the movement was evidently
a feint, as he must have known his inability to attack a large and populous
city defended by a powerful garrison, and which even in ordinary times received
the greater part of its supplies by sea. After this demonstration, Alaric
marched into Thrace and Macedonia, and extended his ravages into Thessaly.
Rufinus has been accused of assisting Alaric’s invasion, and his negotiations
with him while in the vicinity of Constantinople countenance the suspicion.
When the Goth found the northern provinces exhausted, he resolved to invade
Greece and Peloponnesus, which had long enjoyed profound tranquillity. The
cowardly behaviour of Antiochus the proconsul of Achaia, and of Gerontius the
commander of the Roman troops, both friends of Rufinus, was considered a
confirmation of his treachery. Thermopylae was left unguarded, and Alaric
entered Greece without encountering any resistance.
The ravages committed by Alaric’s army have been
described in fearful terms; villages and towns were burnt, the men were
murdered, and the women and children carried away to be sold as slaves by the
Goths. But even this invasion affords proofs that Greece had recovered from the
desolate condition in which it had been seen by Pausanias. The walls of Thebes
had been rebuilt, and it was in such a state of defence that Alaric could not
venture to besiege it, but hurried forward to Athens, where he concluded a
treaty with the civil and military authorities, which enabled him to enter the
city without opposition. His success may have been assisted by treacherous
arrangements with Rufinus, for he appears to have really occupied Athens rather
as a federate leader than as a foreign conqueror. The tale recorded by Zosimus
of the Christian Alaric having been induced by the apparition of the goddess
Minerva to spare Athens, is refuted by the direct testimony of other writers,
who mention the capitulation of the city. The fact that the depredations of
Alaric hardly exceeded the ordinary license of a rebellious general is, at the
same time, perfectly established. The public buildings and monuments of ancient
splendour suffered no wanton destruction from his visit; but there can be no
doubt that Alaric and his troops levied heavy contributions on the city and its
inhabitants. Athens evidently owed its good treatment to the condition of its
population, and perhaps to the strength of its walls, which imposed some
respect on the Goths; for the rest of Attica did not escape the usual fate of
the districts through which the barbarians marched. The town of Eleusis, and
the great temple of Ceres, were plundered and then destroyed. Whether this work
of devastation was caused by the Christian monks who attended the Gothic host,
and excited their bigoted Arian votaries to avenge the cause of religion on the
temples of the pagans at Eleusis, because they had been compelled to spare the
shrines at Athens, or whether it was the accidental effect of the eager desire
of plunder, or of the wanton love of destruction, among a disorderly body of
troops, is not very material. Bigoted monks, avaricious officers, and
disorderly soldiers, were probably all numerous in Alaric’s band.
Gerontius, who had abandoned the pass of Thermopylae,
took no measures to defend the Isthmus of Corinth and the difficult passes of
Mount Geranea, so that Alaric marched unopposed into
the Peloponnesus, and, in a short time, captured almost every city in it
without meeting with any resistance. Corinth, Argos, and Sparta, were all
plundered. The security in which Greece had long remained, and the policy of
the government, which discouraged their independent institutions, had conspired
to leave the province without protection, and the people without arms. The facility
which Alaric met with in effecting his conquest, and his views, which were
directed to obtain an establishment in the empire as an imperial officer or
feudatory governor, rendered the conduct of his army not that of avowed
enemies. Yet it often happened that they laid waste everything in the line of
their march, burnt villages, and massacred the inhabitants.
Alaric passed the winter in the Peloponnesus without
encountering any opposition from the people; yet many of the Greek cities still
kept a body of municipal police, which might surely have taken the field, had
the imperial officers endeavoured to organize a regular resistance in the
country districts. The moderation of the Goth, and the treason of the Roman
governor, seem both attested by this circumstance. The government of the
Eastern Empire had fallen into such disorder at the commencement of the reign
of Arcadius, that even after Rufinus had been assassinated by the army, the new
ministers of the empire gave themselves very little concern about the fate of
Greece. Honorius had a more able, active, and ambitious minister in Stilicho,
and he determined to punish the Goths for their audacity in daring to establish
themselves in the empire without the imperial authority. Stilicho had attempted
to save Thessaly in the preceding year, but had been compelled to return to
Italy, after he had reached Thessalonica, by an express order of the emperor
Arcadius, or rather of his minister Rufinus. In the spring of the year 396, he
assembled a fleet at Ravenna, and transported his army directly to Corinth,
which the Goths do not appear to have garrisoned, and where, probably, the
Roman governor still resided. Stilicho’s army, aided by the inhabitants, soon
cleared the open country of the Gothic bands; and Alaric drew together the
remains of his diminished army in the elevated plain of Mount Pholoe, which has
since served as a point of retreat for other northern invaders of Greece.
Stilicho contented himself with occupying the passes; but his carelessness, or
the relaxed discipline of his troops, afforded the watchful Alaric an
opportunity of escaping with his army, of carrying off all the plunder which he
had collected, and of gaining the Isthmus of Corinth.
Alaric succeeded in conducting his army into Epirus,
which he treated, as he had expected to treat the Peloponnesus. Stilicho was
supposed to have winked at his proceedings, in order to render his own services
indispensable by leaving a dangerous enemy in the heart of the Eastern Empire;
but the truth appears to be, that Alaric availed himself so ably of the
jealousy with which the court of Constantinople viewed the proceedings of
Stilicho, as to negotiate a treaty, by which he was received into the Roman
service, and that he really entered Epirus as a general of Arcadius. Stilicho
was again ordered to retire from the Eastern Empire, and he obeyed rather than
commence a civil war by pursuing Alaric. The conduct of the Gothic troops in
Epirus was, perhaps, quite as orderly as that of the Roman legionaries; so that
Alaric was probably welcomed as a protector when he obtained the appointment of
Commander-in-chief of the imperial forces in Eastern Illyricum, which he held
for four years. During this time he prepared his troops to seek his fortune in
the Western Empire. The military commanders, whether Roman or barbarian, were
equally indifferent to the fate of the people whom they were employed to
defend; and the Greeks appear to have suffered equal oppression from the armies
of Stilicho and Alaric.
The condition of the European Greeks underwent a great
change for the worse, in consequence of this unfortunate plundering expedition
of the Goths. The destruction of their property, and the loss of their slaves,
were so great, that the evil could only have been slowly repaired under the
best government, and with perfect security of their possessions. In the
miserable condition to which the Eastern Empire was reduced, this was hopeless;
and a long period elapsed before the mass of the population of Greece again
attained the prosperous condition in which Alaric had found it; nor were some
of the cities which he destroyed ever rebuilt. The ruin of roads, aqueducts,
cisterns, and public buildings, erected by the accumulation of capital in
prosperous and enterprising ages, was a loss which could never be repaired by a
diminished and impoverished population. History generally preserves but few
traces of the devastations which affect only the people; but the sudden misery
inflicted on Greece was so great, when contrasted with her previous
tranquillity, that testimonies of her sufferings are to be found in the laws of
the empire. Her condition excited the compassion of the government during the
reign of Theodosius II. There exists a law which exempts the cities of
Illyricum from the charge of contributing towards the expenses of the public
spectacles at Constantinople, in consequence of the sufferings which the
ravages of the Goths, and the oppressive administration of Alaric, had
inflicted on the inhabitants. There is another law which proves that many
estates were without owners, in consequence of the depopulation caused by the
Gothic invasions; and a third law relieves Greece from two-thirds of the
ordinary contributions to government, in consequence of the poverty to which
the inhabitants were reduced.
This unfortunate period is as remarkable for the
devastations committed by the Huns in Asia, as for those of the Goths in
Europe, and marks the commencement of the rapid decrease of the Greek race, and
of the decline of Greek civilization throughout the empire. While Alaric was
laying waste the provinces of European Greece, an army of Huns from the banks
of the Tanais penetrated through Armenia into
Cappadocia, and extended their ravages over Syria, Cilicia, and Mesopotamia. Antioch,
at last, resisted their assaults, and arrested their progress; but they took
many Greek cities of importance, and inflicted an incalculable injury on the
population of the provinces which they entered. In a few months they retreated
to their seats on the Palus Maeotis,
having contributed much to accelerate the ruin of the richest and most populous
portion of the civilized world.
Sect. IX.
The Greeks
arrested the conquests of the Northern barbarians.
From the time of Alaric’s ravages in the Grecian
provinces, until the accession of Justinian, the government of the Eastern
Empire assumed more and more that administrative character which it retained
until the united forces of the Crusaders and Venetians destroyed it in the year
1204. A feeling that the interests of the emperor and his subjects were
identical, began to become prevalent throughout the Greek population. This
feeling was greatly strengthened by the attention which the government paid to
improving the civil condition of its subjects. The judicial and financial
administration received, during this period, a greater degree of power, as well
as a more bureaucratic organization; and the whole strength of the government
no longer reposed on the military establishments. Rebellions of the army became
of rarer occurrence, and usually originated in civil intrigues, or the
discontent of unrewarded mercenaries. A slight glance at the history of the
Eastern Empire is sufficient to show that the court of Constantinople possessed
a degree of authority over its most powerful officers, and a direct connection
with its distant provinces, which had not previously existed in the Roman
Empire.
Still the successful resistance which the Eastern
Empire offered to the establishment of the northern nations within its limits,
must be attributed to the density of the native population, to the number of
the walled towns, and to its geographical configuration, rather than to the
spirit of the Greeks, to the military force of the legions, or to any general
measures of improvement adopted by the imperial government. Even where most
successful, it was a passive rather than an active resistance. The sea which
separated the European and Asiatic provinces opposed physical difficulties to
invaders, while it afforded great facilities for defence, retreat, and renewed
attack to the Roman forces, as long as they could maintain a naval superiority.
These circumstances unfortunately increased the power of the central
administration to oppress the people, as well as to defend them against foreign
invaders, and allowed the emperors to persist in the system of fiscal rapacity
which constantly threatened to annihilate a large portion of the wealth from
which a considerable mass of the citizens derived their subsistence. At the
very moment when the evils of the system became so apparent as to hold out some
hope of reform, the fiscal exigencies of the government were increased by money
becoming an important element in war, since it was necessary to hire armies as
well as to provide facilities of transport, and means of concentration, in
cases of danger, defeat, or victory; so that it began to be a financial
calculation in many cases, whether it was more prudent to defend or to ransom a
province. The great distance of the various frontiers, though it increased the
difficulty of preventing every hostile incursion, hindered any rebellious
general from uniting under his command the whole forces of the empire. The
control which the government was thus enabled to exercise over all its military
officers, secured a regular system of discipline, by centralizing the services
of equipping, provisioning, and paying the soldiers; and the direct connection
between the troops and the government could no longer be counteracted by the
personal influence which a general might acquire, in consequence of a
victorious campaign. The power of the emperors over the army, and the complete
separation which existed in the social condition of the citizen and the
soldier, rendered any popular movement in favour of reform hopeless. A
successful rebellion could only have created a new military power; it could not
have united the interests of the military with those of the people, unless
changes had been effected which were too great to be attempted by any
individual legislator, and too extensive to be accomplished during one
generation. The subjects of the empire were also composed of so many nations,
differing in language, usages, and civilization, that unity of measures on the
part of the people was impossible, while no single province could expect to
obtain redress of its own grievances by an appeal to arms.
The age was one of war and conquest; yet, with all the
aspirations and passions of a despotic and military State, the Eastern Empire
was, by its financial position, compelled to act on the defensive, and to
devote all its attention to rendering the military subordinate to the civil
power, in order to save the empire from being eaten up by its own defenders.
Its measures were at last successful; the northern invaders were repulsed, the
army was rendered obedient, and the Greek nation was saved from the fate of the
Romans. The army became gradually attached to the source of pay and honour; and
it was rather from a general feature of all despotic governments, than from any
peculiarity in the Eastern Empire, that the soldiery frequently appear devoted
to the imperial power, but perfectly indifferent to the person of the emperor.
The condition of the Western Empire requires to be contrasted with that of the
Eastern, in order to appreciate the danger of the crisis through which
favourable circumstances, and some prudence, carried the government of
Constantinople. Yet, even in the West, in spite of all the disorganization of
the government, the empire suffered more from the misconduct of the Roman
officers than from the strength of its assailants. Even Genseric could hardly
have penetrated into Africa unless he had been invited by Boniface, and
assisted by his rebellion; while the imperial officers in Britain, Gaul, and
Spain, who, towards the end of the reign of Honorius, assumed the imperial
title, laid those provinces open to the incursions of the barbarians. The
government of the Western Empire was really destroyed, the frame of political
society was broken in pieces, and the provinces depopulated, some time before
its final conquest had been achieved by foreigners. The Roman principle of
aristocratic rule was unable to supply that bond of union which the national
organization of the Greeks, aided by the influence of the established church,
furnished in the East.
It has been already observed that the geographical
features of the Eastern Empire exercised an important influence on its fate.
Both in Europe and Asia extensive provinces are bounded or divided by chains of
mountains which terminate on the shores of the Adriatic, the Black Sea, or the
Mediterranean. These mountain-ranges compel all invaders to advance by certain
well-known roads and passes, along which the means of subsistence for large
armies can only be collected by foresight and prudent arrangements. The
ordinary communication by land between neighbouring provinces is frequently
tedious and difficult; and the inhabitants of many mountain districts retained
their national character, institutions, and language, almost unaltered during
the whole period of the Roman sway. In these provinces the population was
active in resisting every foreign invader; and the conviction that their
mountains afforded them an impregnable fortress insured the success of their
efforts. Thus the feelings and prejudices of the portion of the inhabitants of
the empire which had been long opposed to the Roman government, now operated
powerfully to support the imperial administration. These circumstances and some
others which acquired strength as the general civilization of the empire
declined, concurred to augment the importance of the native population existing
in the different provinces of the Eastern Empire, and prevented the Greeks from
acquiring a moral, as well as a political, ascendancy in the distant provinces.
In Europe, the Thracians distinguished themselves by their hardihood and
military propensities. In Asia, the Pamphylians,
having obtained arms to defend themselves against the brigands who began to
infest the provinces in large bands, employed them with success in opposing the
Goths. The Isaurians, who had always retained possession of their arms, began
to occupy a place in the history of the empire, which they acquired by their
independent spirit and warlike character. The Armenians, the Syrians, and the
Egyptians, all engaged in a rivalry with the Greeks, and even contested their
superiority in literary and ecclesiastical knowledge. These circumstances
exercised considerable influence in preventing the court of Constantinople from
identifying itself completely with the Greek people, and enabled the Eastern
emperors to cling to the maxims and pride of ancient Rome as the ground of
their sovereignty over so many various races of mankind.
The wealth of the Eastern Empire was a principal means
of its defence against the barbarians. While it invited their invasions, it
furnished the means of repulsing their attacks or of bribing their forbearance.
It was usefully employed in securing the retreat of those bodies who, after
having broken through the Roman lines of defence, found themselves unable to
seize any fortified post, or to extend the circle of their ravages. Rather than
run the risk of engaging with the Roman troops, by delaying their march for the
purpose of plundering the open country, they were often content to retire
without ravaging the district, on receiving a sum of money and a supply of
provisions. These sums were generally so inconsiderable, that it would have
been the height of folly in the government to refuse to pay them, and thus
expose its subjects to ruin and slavery; but as it was evident that the success
of the barbarians would invite new invasions, it is surprising that the
imperial administration should not have taken better measures to place the
inhabitants of the exposed districts in a condition to defend themselves, and
thus secure the treasury against a repetition of this ignominious expenditure.
But the jealousy with which the Roman government regarded its own subjects was
the natural consequence of the oppression with which it ruled them. No danger
seemed so great as that of intrusting the population with arms.
The commerce of the Eastern Empire, and the gold and
silver mines of Thrace and Pontus, still furnished abundant supplies of the
precious metals. We know that the mint of Constantinople was always rich in
gold, for its gold coinage circulated through western and northern Europe, for
several centuries after the destruction of the Western Empire. The proportion
in the value of gold to silver, which in the time of Herodotus was as one to
thirteen, was, after a lapse of eight centuries, in the time of Arcadius and
Honorius, as one to fourteen and two-fifths. The commerce of Constantinople
embraced, at this time, almost the trade of the world. The manufactories of the
East supplied Western Europe with many articles of daily use, and the merchants
carried on an extensive transport trade with Central Asia. By means of the Red
Sea, the productions of southern Africa and India were collected and
distributed among numerous nations who inhabited the shores within and without
the Straits of Babelmandeb —countries which were then
far richer, more populous, and in a much higher state of civilization than at
present. The precious metals, which were becoming rare in Europe, from the
stagnation of trade, and the circumscribed exchanges which take place in a rude
society, were still kept in active circulation by the various wants of the
population of the Eastern Empire. Commodities from far distant lands were still
consumed in large quantities. The island of Jotaba,
which was a free city in the Red Sea, became a mercantile position of great
importance; and from the title of the col- lectors of the imperial customs
which were exacted in its port, the Eastern emperors must have levied a duty of
ten per cent, on all the merchandise destined for the Roman Empire. This island
was occupied by the Arabs for some time, but returned under the power of the
Eastern Empire during the reign of Anastasius.
As the Eastern Empire generally maintained a decided
naval superiority over its enemies, commerce seldom suffered any serious
interruption. The pirates who infested the Hellespont about the year 438, and
the Vandals under Genseric who ravaged the coasts of Greece in 466 and 475,
were more dreaded by the people on account of their cruelty than by the
government or the merchants in consequence of their success, which was never
great. In the general disorder which reigned over the whole of Western Europe,
the only secure depots for merchandise were in the Eastern Empire. The emperors
saw the importance of their commercial influence, and made considerable
exertions to support their naval superiority. Theodosius II assembled a fleet
of eleven hundred transports when he proposed to attack the Vandals in Africa.
The armament of Leo the Great, for the same purpose, was on a still larger
scale, and formed one of the greatest naval forces ever assembled by the Roman
power.
Sect. X
Declining
condition of the Greek population in the European provinces of the Eastern
Empire
The ravages inflicted by the northern nations on the
frontier provinces, during the century which elapsed from the defeat of Valens
to the immigration of the Ostrogoths into Italy, were so continual that the
agricultural population was almost destroyed in the countries immediately to
the south of the Danube, and the inhabitants of Thrace and Macedonia were
greatly diminished in number, and began to lose the use of their ancient
languages. The declining trade caused by decreased consumption, poverty, and
insecurity of property, also lowered the scale of civilization among the whole
Greek people. One tribe of barbarians followed another, as long as anything was
left to plunder. The Huns, under Attila, laid waste the provinces to the south
of the Danube for about five years, and were only induced to retreat on
receiving from the emperor six thousand pounds of gold, and the promise of an
annual payment of two thousand. The Ostrogoths, after obtaining an
establishment to the south of the Danube, as allies of the empire, and
receiving an annual subsidy from the Emperor Marcian to guard the frontiers,
availed themselves of pretexts to plunder Moesia, Macedonia, Thrace, and Thessaly.
Their king, Theodoric, proved by far the most dangerous enemy that the Eastern
Empire had yet encountered. Educated as a hostage at the court of
Constantinople, a residence of ten years enabled him to acquire a complete
knowledge of the languages, the politics, and the administration of the
imperial government. Though he inherited an independent sovereignty in
Pannonia, he found that country so exhausted by the oppression of his
countrymen, and by the ravages of other barbarians, that the whole nation of
the Ostrogoths was compelled to emigrate, and Theodoric became a military
adventurer in the Roman service, and acted as an ally, a mercenary, or an
enemy, according as circumstances appeared to render the assumption of these
different characters most conducive to his own aggrandisement.
It would throw little additional light on the state of
the Greeks, to trace minutely the records of Theodoric’s quarrels with the
imperial court, or to narrate, in detail, the ravages committed by him, or by
another Gothic mercenary of the same name, in the provinces, from the shores of
the Black Sea to those of the Adriatic. These plundering expeditions were not
finally terminated until Theodoric quitted the Eastern Empire to conquer Italy,
and found the Ostrogothic monarchy, by which he obtained the title of the
Great.
It was certainly no imaginary feeling of respect which
prevented Alaric, Genseric, Attila, and Theodoric, from attempting the conquest
of Constantinople. If they had thought the task as easy as the subjugation of
Rome, there can be no doubt that the Eastern Empire would have been as fiercely
assailed as the Western, and new Rome would have shared the fate of the world’s
ancient mistress. These warriors were only restrained by the difficulties which
the undertaking presented, and by the conviction that they would meet with a
far more determined resistance on the part of the inhabitants, than the corrupt
condition of the imperial court and of the public administration appeared at
first sight to promise. Their experience in civil and military affairs revealed
to them the existence of an inherent strength in the population of the Eastern
Empire, and a multiplicity of resources which their attacks might call into
action but could not overcome. Casual encounters often showed that the people
were neither destitute of courage nor military spirit, when circumstances
favoured their display. Attila himself, the terror both of Goths and Romans —
the Scourge of God — was defeated before the town of Asemous,
a frontier fortress of Illyricum. Though he regarded its conquest as a matter
of the greatest importance to his plans, the inhabitants baffled all his
attempts, and set his power at defiance. Genseric was defeated by the
inhabitants of the little town of Taenarus in Laconia. Theodoric did not
venture to attack Thessalonica, even at a time when the inhabitants enraged at
the neglect of the imperial government drove out the officers of the emperor
Zeno, overthrew his statues, and prepared to defend themselves against the
barbarians with their own unassisted resources. There is another remarkable
example of the independent spirit of the Greek people, which saved their
property from ruin, in the case of Heraclea, a city of Macedonia. The
inhabitants, in the moment of danger, placed their bishop at the head of the
civil government, and intrusted him with power to treat with Theodoric, who, on
observing their preparations for defence, felt satisfied that it would be wiser
to retire on receiving a supply of provisions for his army, than venture on
plundering the country. Many other instances might be adduced to prove that the
hordes of the northern barbarians were in reality not sufficiently numerous to
overcome a determined resistance on the part of the Greek nation, and that the
principal cause of their success within the Roman territories was the vicious
nature of the Roman government.
Theodoric succeeded, during the year 479, in
surprising Dyrrachium by treachery; and the alarm which this conquest caused at
the court of Constantinople shows that the government was not blind to the
importance of preventing any foreign power from acquiring a permanent dominion
over a Greek city. The emperor Zeno offered to cede to the Goths the extensive
province of Dardania, which was then almost destitute of inhabitants, in order
to induce Theodoric to quit Dyrrachium. That city, the emperor declared,
constituted a part of the well-peopled provinces of the empire, and it was
therefore in vain for Theodoric to expect that he could keep possession of it.
This remarkable observation shows that the desolation of the northern provinces
was now beginning to compel the government of the Eastern Empire to regard the
countries inhabited by the Greeks, which were still comparatively populous, as
forming the national territory of the Roman Empire in Europe.
Sect. XI
Improvement in
the Eastern Empire from the death of Arcadius to the accession of Justinian
From the death of Arcadius to the accession of
Justinian, during a period of one hundred and twenty years, the empire of the
East was governed by six sovereigns of very different characters, whose reigns
have been generally viewed through the medium of religious prejudices; yet, in
spite of the dissimilarity of their personal conduct, the general policy of
their government is characterized by similar features. The power of the emperor
was never more unlimited, but it was never more systematically exercised. The
administration of the empire, and of the imperial household, were equally
regarded as forming a part of the sovereign’s private estate, while the lives
and fortunes of his subjects were considered as a portion of the property of
which he was the master. The power of the emperor was now controlled by the
danger of foreign invasions, and by the power of the church. The oppressed
could seek refuge with the barbarians, and the persecuted might find the means
of opposing the government by the power of the orthodox clergy, who were strong
in the support of a great part of the population. The fear of divisions in the
Church itself, which was now intimately connected with the State, served also
in some degree as a restraint on the arbitrary conduct of the emperor. The
interest of the sovereign became thus identified with the sympathies of the
majority of his subjects; yet the difficulty of deciding what policy the
emperor ought to follow in the ecclesiastical disputes of the heretics and the
orthodox was so great, as at times to give an appearance of doubt and
indecision to the religious opinions of several emperors.
The decline of the Roman power had created an eager
desire to remedy the disorders which had brought the empire to the brink of
destruction. Most of the provinces of the West were inhabited by mixed races
without union; the power of the military commanders was beyond the control of
public opinion; and neither the emperor, the senate, nor the higher clergy,
were directly connected with the body of the people. In the East, the opinion
of the people possessed some authority, and it was consequently studied and
treated with greater deference. The importance of enforcing the impartial
administration of justice was so deeply felt by the government, that the
emperors themselves attempted to restrict the application of their legislative
power in individual and isolated cases. The Emperor Anastasius ordered the
judges to pay no attention to any private rescript, if it should be found
contrary to the received laws of the empire, or to the public good; in such
cases, he commanded the judges to follow the established laws. The senate of
Constantinople possessed great authority in controlling the general
administration, and the dependent position of its members prevented that
authority from being regarded with jealousy. The permanent existence of this
body enabled it to establish fixed maxims of policy, and to render these maxims
the grounds of the ordinary decisions of government. By this means a systematic
administration was firmly consolidated, over which public opinion exerted some
direct influence, and by its systematic operation and fixed rules of procedure
it became in some degree a check on the temporary and fluctuating views of the
sovereign.
Theodosius II succeeded his father Arcadius at the age
of eight; and he governed the Empire for forty-two years, during which he left
the care of the public administration very much in the hands of others. His
sister Pulcheria, though only two years older than her brother, exercised great
influence over his education; and she seems, in all her actions, to have been
guided by sentiments of philanthropy as well as piety. She taught him to
perform the ceremonial portion of his imperial duties with grace and dignity,
but she could not teach him, perhaps he was incapable of learning, how to act
and think as became a Roman emperor. At the age of fifteen Pulcheria received
the rank of Augusta, and assumed the direction of public affairs for her
brother. Theodosius was naturally mild, humane, and devout. Though he possessed
some manly personal accomplishments, his mind and character were deficient in
strength. He cultivated the arts of writing and painting with such success as
to render his skill in the illumination of manuscripts his most remarkable
personal distinction. His Greek subjects, mingling kindness with contempt,
bestowed on him the name of Kalligraphos. His
incapacity for business was so great, that he is hardly accused of having
augmented the misfortunes of his reign by his own acts. A spirit of reform, and
a desire of improvement, had penetrated into the imperial administration; and
his reign was distinguished by many internal changes for the better. Among
these, the publication of the Theodosian code, and the establishment of the
university of Constantinople, were the most important. The Theodosian code
afforded the people the means of arraigning the conduct of their rulers before
fixed principles of law, and the university of Constantinople established the
influence of Greek literature, and gave the Greek language an official position
in the Eastern Empire. The reign of Theodosius was also distinguished by two
great remissions of arrears of taxation. By these concessions the greatest
possible boon was conferred on the people, for they extinguished all claim for
unpaid taxation over a period of sixty years. The weakness of the emperor, by
throwing the direction of public business into the hands of the senate and the
ministers, for a long period consolidated that systematic administration which
characterizes the government of his successors. He was the first of the
emperors who was more a Greek than a Roman in his feelings and tastes; but his
inactivity prevented his private character from exercising much influence on
his public administration.
In the long series of eight centuries which elapsed
from the final establishment of the Eastern Empire, at the accession of
Arcadius, to its destruction by the Crusaders, no Athenian citizen gained a
place of honour in the annals of the empire. The schools of Athens were
fruitful in pedants, but they failed to produce true men. In ancient times, it
was observed that those who were trained as athletes were not distinguished as
soldiers; and modern times confirm the testimony afforded by the history of the
Eastern Empire, that professors of universities, and even teachers of political
philosophy, make bad statesmen. But though the men of Athens had degenerated
into literary triflers, the women upheld the fame of the city of Minerva. Two Athenian
beauties, Eudocia and Irene, are among the most celebrated empresses who
occupied the throne of Constantinople. The eventful life of Eudocia, the wife
of Theodosius II, does not require to borrow romantic incidents from Eastern
tales; it only asks for genius in the narrator to unfold a rich web of romance.
Some circumstances in her history deserve notice, even in this volume, as they
throw light incidentally on the state of society among the Greeks.
The beautiful Eudocia was the daughter of an Athenian
philosopher, Leontios, who still sacrificed to the
heathen divinities. Her heathen name was Athenais. She received a classical
education, while she acquired the elegant accomplishments of that aristocratic
society which had cultivated the amenities of life from the time of Plato, who
made use of carpets in his rooms, and allowed ladies to attend his lectures.
Her extraordinary talents induced her father to give her a careful literary and
philosophical education. All her teachers were gratified with her progress. Her
native accent charmed the inhabitants of Constantinople, accustomed to pure
Attic Greek by the eloquence of Chrysostom; and she also spoke Latin with the
graceful dignity of a Roman lady. The only proof of rustic simplicity which her
biography enables us to trace in Athenian manners, is the fact that her father,
who was a man of wealth as well as a philosopher, believed that her beauty,
virtue, and accomplishments, would obtain her a suitable marriage without any
dowry. He left his whole fortune to his son, and the consequence was that the
beautiful Athenais, unable to find a husband among the provincial nobles who
visited Athens, was compelled to try her fortune at the court of
Constantinople, under the patronage of Pulcheria, in the semi-menial position
which we now term a maid of honour. Pulcheria was then only fifteen years old,
and Eudocia was probably twenty. The young Augusta was soon gratified by the
conversion of her beautiful heathen protégée to Christianity; but time passed
on, and the courtiers of Constantinople showed no better taste in matrimony
than the provincial decurions. The dowerless Eudocia remained unmarried, until
Pulcheria persuaded her docile brother to fall in love with the fair Athenian.
At the ripe age of twenty-seven, she became the wife of Theodosius II, who was
twenty, and the pagans might then boast that Leontios
had acted as a seer, not as a pedant, in leaving her without a dowry.
Twenty years after her marriage, Eudocia was accused
of a criminal passion for Paulinus, a handsome officer of the court. At the age
of fifty the blood is usually tame, and waits upon the judgment. We are also
led to suppose that Paulinus, whom one of the chroniclers tells us Eudocia
loved because he was very learned and very handsome, had also fallen into the
sere and yellow leaf, for the unlawful attachment of the empress was revealed
by his being laid up with the gout. The story runs thus. As the emperor
Theodosius was going to church on the feast of Epiphany, a poor man presented him
with a Phrygian apple of extraordinary size. The emperor and all the senate
stopped and admired the monstrous apple, and Theodosius made his treasurer pay
the poor man 150 gold byzants. The apple was sent immediately to Eudocia, who
lost no time in forwarding it to the constant object of her thoughts, the gouty
Paulinus. He, with less of devoted affection than might have been expected
considering the rank and circumstances of the donor, despatched it as a present
to the emperor, who, on his return from church, found his costly Phrygian apple
ready to welcome him a second time. Theodosius not being satisfied with the
manner in which his wife had treated his present, asked her what she had done
with it; and Eudocia, whose fifty years had not diminished her appetite for
fruit in a forenoon, replied with delightful simplicity, that she had eaten the
monster. This falsehood awakened green-eyed jealousy in the heart of
Theodosius. Perhaps the Kalligraphos, on his way home
from church, had contemplated adorning the initial letter of a manuscript with
a miniature of Eudocia holding the enormous apple in her hand. A scene of
course followed; the apple was produced; the emperor was eloquent in his
reproaches, the empress equally eloquent in her tears, as may be found better
expressed in similar cases in modern novels than in ancient histories. The
result was that the handsome man with the gout was banished, and shortly after
put to death. The empress was sent into exile with becoming pomp, under the
pretext of making a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, where she displayed her learning
by paraphrasing several portions of Scripture in heroic verses. Gibbon very
justly observes that this celebrated story of the apple is fit only for the
Arabian Nights, where something not very unlike it may be found. His opinion is
doubly valuable, from the disposition he generally shows to credit similar
tales of scandal, as in the case of the secret history of Procopius, to which
he ascribes more authority than it deserves. Eudocia on her deathbed declared
that the reports of her criminal attachment to Paulinus were false. They must
have been very prevalent, or she would not have considered it necessary to give
them this solemn denial. Her death is placed in the year 460.
Marcian, a Thracian of humble birth, who had risen
from a common soldier to the rank of senator, and had already attained the age
of fifty-eight, was selected by Pulcheria as the man most worthy to fill the
imperial throne on the death of her brother. He received the rank of her husband
merely to secure his title to the empire. She had taken monastic vows at an
early age, though she continued to bear, during her brother’s reign, a
considerable part in the conduct of public business, having generally acted as
his counsellor. The conduct of Marcian, after he became emperor, justified Pulcheria’s choice; and it is probable that he was one of
the senators who had supported the systematic policy by which Pulcheria
endeavoured to restore the strength of the empire; a policy which sought to
limit the arbitrary exercise of the despotic power of the emperor by fixed
institutions, well-regulated forms of procedure, and an educated and organized
body of civil officials. Marcian was a soldier who loved peace without fearing
war. One of his first acts was to refuse payment of the tribute which Attila
had exacted from Theodosius. His reign lasted six years and a half, and was
chiefly employed in restoring the resources of the empire, and alleviating its
burdens. In the theological disputes which divided his subjects, Marcian
attempted to act with impartiality; and he assembled the council of Chalcedon
in the vain hope of establishing a system of ecclesiastical doctrine common to
the whole empire. His attempt to identify the Christian church with the Roman
Empire only widened the separation of the different sects of Christians; and
the opinions of the dissenters, while they were regarded as heretical, began to
be adopted as national. Religious communities everywhere assumed a national
character. The Eutychian heresy became the religion of Egypt; Nestorianism was
that of Mesopotamia. In such a state of things Marcian sought to temporize from
feelings of humanity, and bigots made this spirit of toleration a reproach.
Leo the Elder, another Thracian, was elected emperor,
on the death of Marcian, by the influence of Aspar, a general of barbarian
descent, who had acquired an authority similar to that which Stilicho and
Aetius had possessed in the West. Aspar being a foreigner and an Arian, durst
not himself, notwithstanding his influence and favour with the army, aspire to
the imperial throne; a fact which proves that the political constitution of the
government, and the fear of public opinion, exercised some control over the
despotic power of the court of Constantinople. The insolence of Aspar and his
family determined Leo to diminish the authority of the barbarian leaders in the
imperial service; and he adopted measures for recruiting the army from his
native subjects. The system of his predecessors had been to place more reliance
on foreigners than on natives; to employ mercenary strangers as their guards,
and to form the best armed and highest paid corps entirely of barbarians. In
consequence of the neglect with which the native recruits had been treated, they
had fallen into such contempt that they were ranked in the legislation of the
empire as an inferior class of military. Leo could not reform the army without
removing Aspar; and, despairing of success by any other means, he employed
assassination; thus casting, by the murder of his benefactor, so deep a stain
on his own character that he received the surname of the Butcher. During his
reign, the arms of the empire were generally unsuccessful; and his great
expedition against Genseric, the most powerful and expensive naval enterprise
which the Romans had ever prepared, was completely defeated. As it was
dangerous to confide so mighty a force to any general of talent, Basiliscus,
the brother of the empress, was intrusted with the chief command. His incapacity
assisted the Vandals in defeating the expedition quite as much as the prudence
and talents of Genseric. The Ostrogoths, in the meantime, extended their
ravages from the Danube as far as Thessaly, and there appeared some probability
that they would succeed in establishing a kingdom in Illyricum and Macedonia,
completely independent of the imperial power. The civil administration of Leo
was conducted with great prudence. He followed in the steps of his predecessor
in all his attempts to lighten the burdens of his subjects, and to improve
their condition. When Antioch suffered severely from an earthquake, he remitted
the public taxes to the amount of one thousand pounds of gold, and granted
freedom from all imposts to those who rebuilt their ruined houses. In the
disputes which still divided the church, he adopted the orthodox or Greek
party, in opposition to the Eutychians and Nestorians. The epithet of Great has
been bestowed on him by the Greeks — a title, it should seem, conferred upon
him rather with reference to his being the first of his name, and on account of
his orthodoxy, than from the pre-eminence of his personal actions. He died at
the age of sixty-three, and was succeeded by his grandson, Leo II, an infant,
who survived his elevation only a few months, A.D. 474.
Zeno mounted
the throne on the death of his son, Leo II. He was an Isaurian, whom Leo the
Great had selected as the husband of his daughter Ariadne, when he was engaged
in rousing the military spirit of his own subjects against the barbarian
mercenaries. In the eyes of the Greeks, the Isaurians were little better than
barbarians; but their valour had obtained for them a high reputation among the
troops in the capital. The origin of Zeno rendered him unpopular with the
Greeks; and as he did not participate in their nationality in religion, any
more than in descent, he was accused of cherishing heretical opinions. He
appears to have been unsteady in his views, and vicious in his conduct; yet the
difficulties of his position were so great, and the prejudices against him so
strong, that, in spite of all the misfortunes of his reign, the fact of his
having maintained the integrity of the Eastern Empire attests that he could not
have been totally deficient in courage and talent. The year after he ascended
the throne, he was driven from Constantinople by Basiliscus, the brother of
Leo’s widow Verina; but Basiliscus could only keep possession of the capital
for about twenty months, and Zeno recovered his authority. The great work of
his reign, which lasted seventeen years and a half, was the formation of an
army of native troops to serve as a counterpoise to the barbarian mercenaries
who threatened the Eastern Empire with the same fate as the Western. About the
commencement of his reign he witnessed the final extinction of the Western
Empire, and, for many years, the Theodorics
threatened him with the loss of the greater part of the European provinces of
the Eastern. Surely the man who successfully resisted the schemes and the
forces of the great Theodoric could not have been a contemptible emperor, even
though his orthodoxy were questionable. When it is remembered, therefore, that
Zeno was an Isaurian, and a peacemaker in theological quarrels, it will not be
surprising that the Greeks, who regarded him as a heterodox barbarian, should
have heaped many calumnies on his memory. From his laws which have been
preserved in the code of Justinian, he seems to have adopted judicious measures
for alleviating the fiscal obligations of the landed proprietors, and his
prudence was shown by his not proposing to the senate the adoption of his
brother as his successor. The times were difficult; his brother was worthless,
and the support of the official aristocracy was necessary. The disposal of the
imperial crown was again placed in the hands of Ariadne.
Anastasius secured his election by his marriage with
Ariadne. He was a native of Dyrrachium, and must have been near the age of
sixty when he ascended the throne. In the year 514, Vitalian, general of the
barbarian mercenaries, and a grandson of Aspar, assumed the title of emperor,
and attempted to occupy Constantinople. His principal reliance was on the
bigotry of the orthodox Greeks, for Anastasius showed a disposition to favour
the Eutychians. But the military power of the mercenaries had been diminished
by the policy of Leo and Zeno; and it now proved insufficient to dispose of the
empire, as it could derive little support from the Greeks, who were more
distinguished for ecclesiastical orthodox than for military courage. Vitalian
was defeated in his attempt on Constantinople, and consented to resign the
imperial title on receiving a large sum of money and the government of Thrace.
The religious opinions of Anastasius unfortunately rendered him always
unpopular, and he had to encounter some serious seditions while the empire was
involved in wars with the Persians, Bulgarians, and Goths. Anastasius was more
afraid of internal rebellions and seditions than of defeat by foreign armies;
and he subdivided the command of his troops in such a way, that success in the
field of battle was almost impossible. In one important campaign against
Persia, the intendant-general was the officer of highest rank in an army of
fifty thousand men. Military subordination, and vigorous measures, under such
an arrangement, were impossible; and it reflects some credit on the
organization of the Roman troops, that they were enabled to keep the field
without total ruin.
Anastasius devoted his anxious care to alleviate the
misfortunes of his subjects, and to diminish the taxes which oppressed them. He
reformed the oligarchical system of the Roman curia, which had already received
some modifications tending to restrict the ruinous obligation of mutual
responsibility imposed on all members of municipalities for the whole amount of
the land-tax due to the imperial treasury. The immediate consequence of his
reforms was to increase the revenue, a result which was probably effected by
preventing the local aristocracy from combining with the officers of the fisc. Such changes, though they are extremely beneficial to
the great body of the people, are rarely noticed with much praise by
historians, who generally write under the influence of central prejudices. He
constructed the great wall, to secure from destruction the rich villages and
towns in the vicinity of Constantinople. This wall extended from the Sea of
Marmora, near Selymbria, to the Black Sea, forming an
arc of about forty-two miles, at a distance of twenty-eight miles from the
capital. The rarest virtue of a sovereign is the sacrifice of his own revenues,
and, consequently, the diminution of his own power, for the purpose of
increasing the happiness of his people. The greatest action of Anastasius was
this voluntary diminution of the revenues of the State. He abolished the
Chrysargyron, a lucrative but oppressive tax which affected the industry of
every subject. The increased prosperity which this concession infused into society
soon displayed its effects; and the brilliant exploits of the reign of
Justinian must be traced back to the reinvigoration of the body politic of the
Roman Empire by Anastasius. He also expended large sums in repairing the
damages caused by war and earthquakes. He constructed a canal from the lake Sophon to the Gulf of Astacus,
near Nicomedia, a work which Pliny had proposed to Trajan, and which was
restored by the Byzantine emperor Alexius I; yet so exact was his economy, and
so great were the revenues of the Eastern Empire, that he was enabled to
accumulate, during his reign, three hundred and twenty thousand pounds of gold
in the public treasury. The people had prayed at his accession that he might
reign as he had lived; and, even in the eyes of the Greeks, he would probably
have been regarded as the model of a perfect monarch, had he not shown a
disposition to favour heresy. Misled, either by his wish to comprehend all
sects in the established church, — as all nations were included in the empire,
— or by a too decided attachment to the doctrines of the Eutychians, he excited
the opposition of the orthodox party, whose domineering spirit troubled his
internal administration by several dangerous seditions, and induced the Greeks
to overlook his humane and benevolent policy. He reigned more than twenty-seven
years.
Justin, the successor of Anastasius, had the merit of
being strictly orthodox. He was a Thracian peasant from Tauresium,
in Dardania, who entered the imperial guard as a common soldier. At the age of
sixty-eight, when Anastasius died, he had attained the rank of
commander-in-chief of the imperial guards, and a seat in the senate. It is said
that he was intrusted with a large sum of money to further a court intrigue for
the purpose of placing the crown on the head of some worthless courtier. He
appropriated the money to secure his own election. His reign tended to unite
more closely the church with the imperial authority, and to render the
opposition of the heterodox more national in the various provinces where a
national clergy and a national language existed. Justin was without education,
but he possessed experience and talents. In his civil government he imitated
the wise and economical policy of his predecessor,
and his military experience enabled him to improve the condition of the army.
He furnished large sums to alleviate the misery caused by a terrible earthquake
at Antioch, and paid great attention to repairing the public buildings
throughout the empire. His reign lasted nine years, A.D. 518-527.
It must be observed that the five emperors of whose
character and policy the preceding sketch has described the prominent features,
were men born in the middle or lower ranks of society; and all of them, with
the exception of Zeno, had witnessed, as private individuals, the ravages of
the barbarians in their native provinces, and suffered personally from the weak
and disorganized state of the empire. They had all ascended the throne at a
mature age, and these coincidences tended to imprint on their councils that
uniformity of policy which marks their history. They had all more of the
feelings of the people than of the dominant class, and were, consequently, more
subjects than Romans. They appear to have participated in popular sympathies to
a degree natural only to men who had long lived without courtly honours, and
rare, indeed, even among those of the greatest genius, who are born or educated
near the steps of a throne. That some part of the merit of these sovereigns was
commonly ascribed to the experience which they had gained by a long life, is
evident from the reply which, it is said, the Emperor Justin gave to the
senators, who wished him to raise Justinian, at the age of forty, to the
dignity of Augustus: “You should pray”, said the prudent monarch, “that a young
man may never wear the imperial robes”.
During this eventful period, the Western Empire
crumbled into ruins, while the Eastern was saved, in consequence of these
emperors having organized the system of administration which has been most
unjustly calumniated, under the name of Byzantine. The highest officers, and
the proudest military commanders, were rendered completely dependent on
ministerial departments, and were no longer able to conspire or rebel with
impunity. The sovereign was no longer exposed to personal danger, nor the
treasury to open peculation. But, unfortunately, the central executive power
could not protect the people from fraud with the same ease as it guarded the
treasury; and the emperors never perceived the necessity of intrusting the
people with the power of defending themselves from the financial oppression of
the subaltern administration.
The principles of political science and civil liberty
were, indeed, very little understood by the people of the Roman Empire. The
legislative, executive, and administrative powers of government were
confounded, as well as concentrated, in the person of the sovereign. The
emperor represented the sovereignty of Rome, which, even after the
establishment of Christianity, was considered as something superhuman, if not
precisely a divine institution. But, so ill can despotism balance the various
powers of the State, and so incapable is it of studying the condition of the
governed, that even under the best emperors, seditions and rebellions were not
rare. They constituted the only means whereby the people could make their
petitions heard; and the moment the populace ceased to be overawed by military
force, every trifling discontent might, from accident, break out into a
rebellion. The continual abuse to which arbitrary power is liable was felt by
the emperors; and several of them attempted to restrain its exercise, in order
that the general principles of legislation might not be violated by the
imperial ordinances. Such laws express the sentiments of justice which animate
the administration, but they are always useless; for no law can be of any avail
unless a right to enforce its observance exist in some tribunal, independent of
the legislative and executive powers of the State; and the very existence of
such a tribunal implies that the State possesses a constitution which renders
the law more powerful than the prince. Much, however, as many of the Roman
emperors may have loved justice, no one was ever found who felt inclined to
diminish his own authority so far as to render the law permanently superior to
his own will. Yet a strong impulse towards improvement was felt throughout the
empire; and, if the middle and upper classes of society had not been already so
far reduced in number as to make their influence almost nugatory in the scale
of civilization, there might have been some hope of the political regeneration
of the Roman state. Patriotism and political honesty can, however, only become
national virtues when the people possess a control over the conduct of their
rulers, and when the rulers themselves publicly announce their political
principles.
Erroneous views also of political economy led many of
the emperors to increase the evil which they were endeavouring to remedy. Had
the Emperor Anastasius left the three hundred and twenty thousand pounds of
gold which he accumulated in the treasury circulating among his subjects, or
had he employed it in works extending the industry of his people and adding to
the security of their property, it is probable that his reign would have very
greatly augmented the population of the empire, and pressed back the barbarians
on their own thinly peopled lands. If it had been in his power to have added to
this boon some guarantee against arbitrary impositions on the part of his
successors, and against the unjust exactions of the administration, there can
be no doubt that his reign would have restored to the empire much of the
pristine energy of the republic; and that, instead of giving a false brilliancy
to the reign of Justinian, he would have increased the happiness of the most
civilized portion of mankind, and given a new impulse to population.
Sect. XII
State of
civilization and influence of national feelings during this period
The ravages of the Goths and Huns in Europe and Asia
assisted in producing a great change in the state of society in the Eastern
Empire, even though their efforts at conquest were successfully repulsed. In
many provinces the higher classes were completely exterminated. The loss of their
slaves and serfs, who had been carried away by the invaders, either reduced
them to the condition of humble cultivators, or forced them to emigrate, and
abandon their land, from which they were unable to obtain any revenue in the
miserable state of cultivation to which the capture of their slaves, the
destruction of their agricultural buildings, and the want of a market, had
reduced the country. In many of the towns the diminished population was reduced
to misery by the ruin of the district. The higher classes disappeared under the
weight of the municipal duties which they were called upon to perform. Houses
remained unlet; and even when let, the portion of rent which was not absorbed
by the imperial taxes, was insufficient to supply the demands of the local
expenditure. The labourer and the artisan alone could find bread; the walls of
cities were allowed to fall into ruins; the streets were neglected; many public
buildings had become useless; aqueducts remained unrepaired; internal
communications ceased; and, with the extinction of the wealthy and educated
classes, the local prejudices of the lower orders became the law of society.
Yet, on the other hand, even amidst all the evidences of decline and misery in
many parts of the empire, there were some favoured cities and districts which
afforded evidence of progress. The lives and fortunes of the lower orders, and
particularly of the slaves, were much better protected than in the most
glorious periods of Greek and Roman history. The police was improved; and
though luxury assisted the progress of effeminacy, it also aided the progress
of civilization by giving stability to order. The streets of the great cities
of the East were traversed with as much security during the night as by day.
The devastations of the northern invaders prepared the
way for a great change in the races of mankind who dwelt in the regions between
the Danube and the Mediterranean. New races were introduced from abroad and new
races were formed by the admixture of native proprietors and colons with
emigrants and domestic slaves. Colonies of agricultural emigrants were
introduced into every province of the empire. Several of the languages still
spoken in Eastern Europe bear evidence of changes which commenced at this
period. Modern Greek, Albanian, and Vallachian may be
considered more or less the representatives of the ancient languages of Greece,
Epirus, and Thrace, though modified by the influence of foreign elements. In
the provinces, the clergy alone were enabled to maintain a position which
allowed them to devote some time to study. They accordingly became the
principal depositaries of knowledge, and as their connection with the people
was of the most intimate and friendly character, they employed the popular
language to instruct their flocks, to preserve their attachment, and rouse
their enthusiasm. In this way, ecclesiastical literature grew up in every
province which possessed its own language and national character. The
Scriptures were translated, read, and expounded to the people in their native
dialect, in Armenian, in Syriac, in Coptic, and in Gothic, as well as in Latin
and Greek. It was this connection between the people and their clergy which
enabled the Orthodox Church, in the Eastern Empire, to preserve a popular
character, in spite of the exertions of the emperors and the popes to give it a
Roman or imperial, organization. Christianity, as a religion, was always
universal in its character, but the Christian church long carried with it many
national distinctions. The earliest church had been Jewish in its forms and
opinions, and in the East it long retained a tincture of the oriental
philosophy of its Alexandrine proselytes. After Christianity became the
established religion of the empire, a struggle arose between the Latin and
Greek clergy for supremacy. The greater learning and the more popular character
of the Greek clergy, supported by the superior knowledge and higher political
importance of the laity in the East, soon gave to the Greeks a predominant
influence. But this influence was still subordinate to the authority of the
Bishop of Rome, who arrogated the rank of a spiritual emperor, and whose claims
to represent the supremacy of Rome were admitted, though not without jealousy,
by the Greeks. The authority of the Bishop of Rome and of the Latin element in
the established church was so great in the reign of Marcian, that the legate of
Pope Leo the Great, at the general council of Chalcedon, though a Greek bishop,
made use of the Latin language when addressing an audience composed entirely of
Eastern bishops, and for whom his discourse required to be translated into
Greek. It was inconsistent with the dignity of the Roman pontiff to use any
language but that of Rome, though doubtless St. Peter had made use of Greek,
except when speaking with the gift of tongues. Latin, however, was the official
language of the empire; and the Emperor Marcian, in addressing the same council
of the church, spoke that language, though he knew that Greek alone could be
intelligible to the greater number of the bishops whom he addressed. It was
fortunate for the Greeks, perhaps also for the whole Christian world, that the
popes did not, at this time, lay claim to the gift of tongues, and address
every nation in its own language. If it had occurred to them that the head of
the universal church ought to speak all languages, the bishops of Rome might
perhaps have rendered themselves the political sovereigns of the Christian
world.
The attempt of the popes to introduce the Latin
language into the East roused the opposition of all the Greeks. The
constitution of the Eastern Church still admitted the laity to a share in the
election of their bishops, and obliged the members of the ecclesiastical
profession to cultivate the goodwill of their flocks. In the East, the language
of the people was the language of religion and of ecclesiastical literature,
consequently the cause of the Greek clergy and people was united. This
connection with the people gave a weight and authority to the Greek clergy,
which proved extremely useful in checking the religious despotism of the popes,
as well as in circumscribing the civil tyranny of the emperors.
Though the emperor still maintained his supremacy over
the clergy, and regarded and treated the popes and patriarchs as his ministers,
still the church as a body had already rendered itself superior to the person
of the emperor, and had established the principle, that the orthodoxy of the
emperor was a law of the empire. The Patriarch of Constantinople, suspecting
the emperor Anastasius of attachment to the Eutychian heresy, refused to crown
him until he gave a written declaration of his orthodoxy. Yet the ceremony of
the emperor’s receiving the imperial crown from the Patriarch was introduced,
for the first time, on the accession of Leo the Great, sixty-six years before
the election of Anastasius. It is true that the church was not always able to
enforce the observance of the principle that the empire of the East could only
be governed by an orthodox sovereign. The aristocracy and the army proved at
times stronger than the orthodox clergy.
The state of literature and the fine arts always
affords a correct representation of the condition of society among the Greeks,
though the fine arts, during the existence of the Roman Empire, were more
closely connected with the government and the aristocracy than with popular
feelings. The assertion that Christianity tended to accelerate the decline of
the Roman Empire has been already refuted; but although the Eastern Empire
received immeasurable benefits from Christianity, both politically and
socially, still the literature and the fine arts of Greece received from it a
mortal blow. The Christians soon declared themselves the enemies of all pagan
literature. Homer, and the Attic tragedians, were prohibited books; and the
fine arts were proscribed, if not persecuted. Many of the early fathers held
opinions which were not uncongenial with the fierce contempt for letters and
art entertained by the first Mohammedans. It is true that this anti-pagan
spirit might have proved temporary, had it not occurred at a period when the
decline of society had begun to render knowledge rarer, and learning of more
difficult attainment than formerly.
Theodosius the Younger found the administration in
danger of not procuring a regular supply of well-educated aspirants to civil
offices; and in order to preserve the state from such a misfortune, he
established a university at Constantinople, as has been already mentioned, and
which was maintained at the public expense. The composition of this university
demonstrates the important political position occupied by the Greek nation :
fifteen professors were appointed to teach Greek literature; thirteen only were
named to give instruction in Latin; two professors of law were added, and one
of philosophy. Such was the imperial university of Theodosius, who did
everything in his power to render the rank of professor highly honourable. The
candidate who aspired to a chair in the university was obliged to undergo an
examination before the senate, and it was necessary for him to possess an
irreproachable moral character, as well as to prove that his learning was
profound. The term of twenty years’ service secured for the professors the
title of count, and placed them among the nobility of the empire. Learning, it
is evident, was still honoured and cultivated in the East; but the attention of
the great body of society was directed to religious controversy, and the
greatest talents were devoted to these contests. The few philosophers who kept
aloof from the disputes of the Christian church, plunged into a mysticism more
injurious to the human intellect, and less likely to be of any use to society,
than the most furious controversy. Most of these speculators in metaphysical
science abandoned all interest in the fate of their country, and in the affairs
of this world, from an idle hope of being able to establish a personal
intercourse with an imaginary world of spirits. With the exception of religious
writings, and historical works, there was very little in the literature of this
period which could be called popular. The people amused themselves with chariot
races instead of the drama; and, among the higher orders, music had long taken
the place of poetry. Yet the poets wanted genius, not encouragement; for John Lydus tells us that one of his poetical effusions was
rewarded by the patron in whose praise it was written, with a gold byzant for
each line. Pindar probably would not have expected so much.
The same genius which inspires poetry is necessary to
excellence in the fine arts: yet, as these are more mechanical in their
execution, good taste may be long retained, after inspiration has entirely
ceased, merely by imitating good models. The very constitution of society in
the fifth century seemed to forbid the existence of genius. In order to produce
the highest degree of excellence in works of literature and art, it is
absolutely necessary that the author and the public should participate in some
common feelings of admiration for simplicity, beauty, and sublimity. When the
condition of society places the patron of works of genius in a totally
different rank of life from their authors, and renders the criticisms of a
small and exclusive circle of individuals the law in literature and art, then
an artificial taste must be cultivated, in order to secure the applause of
those who alone possess the means of rewarding the merit of which they approve.
The very fact that this taste, which the author or the artist is called upon to
gratify, is to him more a task of artificial study than an effusion of natural
feeling, must of itself produce a tendency to exaggeration or mannerism. There
is nothing in the range of human affairs so completely democratic as taste.
Sophocles addressed himself alike to the educated and the uneducated;
Demosthenes spoke to the crowd; Phidias worked for the people.
Christianity engaged in direct war with the arts. The
Greeks had united painting, sculpture, and architecture, in such a way, that
their temples formed a harmonious illustration of the beauties of the fine
arts. The finest temples were museums of paganism, and, consequently,
Christianity repudiated all connection with this class of buildings until it
had disfigured and degraded them. The courts of judicature, the basilicas, not
the temples, were chosen as the models of Christian churches, and the adoption
of the ideal beauty of ancient sculpture was treated with contempt. The earlier
Fathers of the church wished to represent our Saviour as unlike the types of the
pagan divinities as possible.
Works of art gradually lost their value as creations
of the mind; and their destruction commenced whenever the material of which
they were composed was of great value, or happened to be wanted for some other
purpose more useful in the opinion of the possessor. The Theodosian Code
contains many laws against the destruction of works of ancient art and the
plundering of tombs. The Christian religion, when it deprived the temples and
the statues of a religious sanction, permitted the avaricious to destroy them in
order to appropriate the materials; and, when all reverence for antiquity was
effaced, it became a profitable, though disgraceful occupation, to ransack the
pagan tombs for the ornaments which they contained. The clergy of the new
religion demanded the construction of new churches; and the desecrated
buildings falling into ruins, supplied materials at less expense than the
quarries.
Many of the celebrated works of art which had been
transported to Constantinople at its foundation, were destroyed in the numerous
conflagrations to which that city was always liable. The celebrated statues of
the Muses perished in the time of Arcadius. The fashion of erecting statues had
not become obsolete, though statuary and sculpture had sunk in the general
decline of taste; but the vanity of the ambitious was now more gratified by the
costliness of the material than by the beauty of the workmanship. A silver
statue of the empress Eudocia, placed on a column of porphyry, excited so
greatly the indignation of John Chrysostom, that he indulged in the most
violent invectives against the empress. His virulence caused the government to
exile him from the patriarchal chair. Many valuable Grecian works of bronze
were melted down, in order to form a colossal statue of the Emperor Anastasius,
which was placed on a lofty column to adorn the capital; others, of gold and
silver, were melted, and coined into money, and augmented the sums which he
laid up in the public treasury. Still it is unquestionable that a taste for
painting had not entirely ceased among the educated and wealthy classes.
Mosaics and engraved gems were fashionable luxuries, but the general poverty
had decreased the numbers of the patrons of art, and the prejudices of the
Christians had greatly restricted its range.
CHAPTER III
Condition of the Greeks under the Reign of Justinian,
A. D. 527-565.
Sect. I
Influence of the Imperial Power on the condition of
the Greek Nation during the reign of Justinian
It happens not unfrequently, that during long periods
of time national feelings and popular institutions escape the attention of
historians; their feeble traces are lost in the importance of events,
apparently the effect of accident, destiny, or the special intervention of
Providence. In such cases, history becomes a chronicle of facts, or a series of
biographical sketches; and it ceases to yield the instructive lessons which it
always affords, as long as it connects events with local habits, national customs,
and the general ideas of a people. The history of the Eastern Empire often
assumes this form, and is frequently little better than a mere chronicle. Its
historians hardly display national character or popular feeling, and only
participate in the superstition and party spirit of their situation in society.
In spite of the brilliant events which have given the reign of Justinian a
prominent place in the annals of mankind, it is presented to us in a series of
isolated and incongruous facts. Its chief interest is derived from the
biographical memorials of Belisarius, Theodora, and Justinian; and its most
instructive lesson has been drawn from the influence which its legislation has
exercised on foreign nations. The unerring instinct of mankind has, however, fixed
on this period as one of the greatest eras in man’s annals. The actors may have
been men of ordinary merit, but the events of which they were the agents
effected the mightiest revolutions in society. The frame of the ancient world
was broken to pieces, and men long looked back with wonder and admiration at
the fragments which remained, to prove the existence of a nobler race than
their own. The Eastern Empire, though too powerful to fear any external enemy,
was withering away from the rapidity with which the State devoured the
resources of the people; and this malady or corruption of the Roman government
appeared to the wisest men of the age so utterly incurable, that it was
supposed to indicate the approaching dissolution of the globe. No dawn of a new
social organization had yet manifested its advent in any part of the known
world. A large portion, perhaps the majority of the human race, continued to
live in a state of slavery; and slaves were still regarded as intelligent
domestic animals, not as men. Society was destined to be regenerated by the
destruction of predial slavery; but, to destroy predial slavery, the free
inhabitants of the civilized world were compelled to descend to the state of
poverty and ignorance in which they had, for ages, kept the servile population.
The field for general improvement could only be opened, and the reorganization
of society could only commence, when slaves and freemen were so closely
intermingled in the cares and duties of life as to destroy the prejudices of
class; then, at last, feelings of philanthropy were called into action by the
necessities of man’s condition.
The reign of Justinian is more remarkable as a portion
of the history of mankind, than as a chapter in the annals of the Roman Empire
or of the Greek nation. The changes of centuries passed in rapid succession
before the eyes of one generation. The life of Belisarius, either in its
reality or its romantic form, has typified his age. In his early youth, the
world was populous and wealthy, the empire rich and powerful. He conquered
extensive realms and mighty nations, and led kings captive to the footstool of
Justinian, the lawgiver of civilization. Old age arrived; Belisarius sank into
the grave suspected and impoverished by his feeble and ungrateful master; and
the world, from the banks of the Euphrates to those of the Tagus, presented the
awful spectacle of famine and plague, of ruined cities, and of nations on the
brink of extermination. The impression on the hearts of men was profound.
Fragments of Gothic poetry, legends of Persian literature, and fables
concerning the fate of Belisarius himself, still indicate the eager attention
with which this period was long regarded.
The expectation that Justinian would be able to
re-establish the Roman power was entertained by many, and not without
reasonable grounds, at the time of his accession to the throne; but, before his
death, the delusion was utterly dissipated. Anastasius, by filling the
treasury, and remodelling the army, had prepared the way for reforming the
financial administration and improving the condition of the people. Justinian
unfortunately employed the immense wealth and effective army to which he
succeeded, in such a manner as to increase the burden of the imperial
government, and render hopeless the future reform of the system. Yet it must
still be observed that the decay of the internal resources of the empire, which
proceeded with such fearful rapidity in the latter days of Justinian’s reign,
was interwoven with the frame of society. For six centuries, the Roman
government had ruled the East in a state of tranquillity, when compared with
the ordinary fortunes of the human race; and during this long period, the
people had been moulded into slaves of the imperial treasury. Justinian, by
introducing measures of reform, tending to augment the powers and revenues of
the State, only accelerated the inevitable catastrophe prepared by centuries of
fiscal oppression.
It is impossible to form a correct idea of the
position of the Greeks at this time without taking a general, though cursory
view of the nature of the Roman administration, and observing the effect which
it produced on the whole population of the empire. The contrast presented by
the increasing efforts of the government to centralize every branch of the
administration, and the additional strength which local feelings were gaining
in the distant provinces, was a singular though natural consequence of the
increasing wants of the sovereign, and of the declining civilization of the
people. The civil organization of the empire attained its highest degree of
perfection in the reign of Justinian; the imperial power secured a practical
supremacy over the military officers and beneficed clergy, and placed them
under the control of the civil departments of the state; the absolute authority
of the emperor was fully established, and systematically exercised in the army,
the church, and the state. A century of prudent administration had infused new
vigour into the government, and Justinian succeeded to the means of rendering
himself one of the greatest conquerors in the annals of the Roman Empire. The
change which time had effected in the position of the emperors, from the reign
of Constantine to that of Justinian, was by no means inconsiderable. Two hundred
years, in any government, must prove productive of great alterations.
It is true that in theory the power of the military
emperor was as great as that of the civil monarch; and, according to the
phrases in fashion with their contemporaries, both Constantine and Justinian
were constitutional sovereigns, equally restrained, in the exercise of their
power, by the laws and usages of the Roman Empire. But there is an essential
difference between the position of a general and a king; and all the Roman
emperors, until the accession of Arcadius, had been generals. The leader of an
army must always, to a certain extent, be the comrade of his soldiers; he must
often participate in their feelings, and make their interests and views
coincide with his own. This community of sentiment generally creates so close a
connection, that the wishes of the troops exercise great influence over the
conduct of their leader, and moderate to them, at least, the arbitrary exercise
of despotic power, by confining it within the usages of military discipline and
the habits of military life. When the civil supremacy of the Roman emperors
became firmly established by the changes which were introduced into the
imperial armies after the time of Theodosius the Great, the emperor ceased to
be personally connected with the army, and considered himself quite as much the
master of the soldiers whom he paid, as of the subjects whom he taxed. The
sovereign had no longer any notion of public opinion beyond its existence in
the church, and its display in the factions of the court or the amphitheatre.
The immediate effects of absolute power were not, however, fully revealed in
the details of the administration, until the reign of Justinian. Various
circumstances have been noticed in the preceding chapter, which tended to
connect the policy of several of the emperors who reigned during the fifth
century with the interests of their subjects. Justinian found order introduced
into every branch of the public administration, immense wealth accumulated in
the imperial treasury, discipline re-established in the army, and the church
eager to support an orthodox emperor. Unfortunately for mankind, this increase
in the power of the emperor rendered him independent of the good-will of his
subjects, whose interests seemed to him subordinate to the exigencies of the
public administration; and his reign proved one of the most injurious, in the
history of the Roman Empire, to the moral and political condition of its
subjects. In forming an opinion concerning the events of Justinian’s reign, it
must be borne in mind that the foundation of its power and glory was laid by
Anastasius, while Justinian sowed the seeds of the misfortunes of Maurice; and,
by persecuting the very nationality of his heterodox subjects, prepared the way
for the conquests of the Mussulmans.
Justinian mounted the throne with the feelings, and in
the position, of a hereditary sovereign, prepared, however, by every advantage
of circumstance, to hold out the expectation of a wise and prudent reign. Born
and educated in a private station, he had attained the mature age of forty-five
before he ascended the throne. He had received an excellent education. He was a
man of honourable intentions, and of a laborious disposition, attentive to
business, and well versed in law and theology; but his abilities were moderate,
his judgment was feeble, and he was deficient in decision of character. Simple
in his own habits, he, nevertheless, added to the pomp and ceremonial of the
imperial court, and strove to make the isolation of the emperor, as a superior
being, visible in the public pageantry of government. Though ambitious of
glory, he was infinitely more attentive to the exhibition of his power than to
the adoption of measures for securing the essentials of national strength.
The Eastern Empire was an absolute monarchy, of a
regular and systematic form. The emperor was the head of the government, and
the master of all those engaged in the public service; but the administration
was an immense establishment, artfully and scientifically constructed in its
details. The numerous individuals employed in each ministerial department of
the State consisted of a body of men appropriated to that special service,
which they were compelled to study attentively, to which they devoted their
lives, and in which they were sure to rise by talents and industry. Each
department of the State formed a separate profession, as completely distinct,
and as perfectly organized in its internal arrangements, as the legal
profession is in modem Europe. A Roman emperor would no more have thought of
suddenly creating a financier, or an administrator, than a modem sovereign
would think of making a lawyer. This circumstance explains at once how
education and official knowledge were so long and so well preserved in the
Roman administration, where, as in the law and the church, they flourished for
ages after the extinction of literary acquirements in all other classes of the
people; and it affords also an explanation of the singular duration of the
Roman government, and of its inherent principle of vitality. If it wanted the
energy necessary for its own regeneration, which could only have proceeded from
the influence of a free people on the sovereign power, it at least escaped the
evils of official anarchy and vacillating government. Nothing but this
systematic composition of the multifarious branches of the Roman administration
could have preserved the empire from dissolution during the period in which it
was a prey to internal wars and foreign invasions; and this supremacy of the
system over the will of individuals gave a character of immutability to
administrative procedure, which warranted the boast of the subjects of
Constantine and Justinian that they lived under the protection of the Roman
constitution. The greatest imperfection of the government arose from the total
want of any popular control over the moral conduct of the public servants.
Political morality, like pure taste, cannot live without the atmosphere of
public opinion.
The state of society in the Eastern Empire underwent
far greater changes than the imperial administration. The race of wealthy
nobles, whose princely fortunes and independent bearing had excited the fears
and the avarice of the early Caesars, had been long extinct. The imperial court
and household included all the higher classes in the capital. The senate was
now only a corps of officials, and the people had no position in the State but
that of tax-payers. While the officers of the civil, finance, and judicial
departments, the clergy and the military, were the servants of the emperor, the
people, the Roman people, were his slaves. No connecting link of common
interest or national sympathy united the various classes as one body, and
connected them with the emperor. The only bond of union was one of universal
oppression, as everything in the imperial government had become subordinate to
the necessity of supplying the treasury with money. The fiscal severity of the
Roman government had for centuries been gradually absorbing all the accumulated
wealth of society, as the possession of large fortunes was almost sure to
entail their confiscation. Even if the wealth of the higher classes in the
provinces escaped this fate, it was, by the constitution of the empire,
rendered responsible for the deficiencies which might occur in the taxes of the
districts from which it was obtained; and thus the rich were everywhere rapidly
sinking to the level of the general poverty. The destruction of the higher
classes of society had swept away all the independent landed proprietors before
Justinian commenced his series of reforms in the provinces.
The effect of these reforms extended to future times,
and exercised an important influence on the internal composition of the Greek
people. In ancient times, a very large portion of society consisted of slaves.
They formed the great body of the rural population; and, as they received no
moral training, they were inferior, in every mental quality, to the barbarians
of the north: from this very cause they were utterly incapable of making any
exertion to improve their condition; and whether the province which they
inhabited belonged to the Romans or Greeks, the Goths or the Huns, they
remained equally slaves. The Roman financial administration, by depressing the
higher classes, and impoverishing the rich, at last burdened the small
proprietors and the cultivators of the soil with the whole weight of the
land-tax. The labourer of the soil then became an object of great interest to
the treasury, and, as the chief instrument in furnishing the financial
resources of the State, obtained almost as important a position in the eyes of
the fisc as the landed proprietor himself. The first
laws which conferred any rights on the slave, are those which the Roman
government enacted to prevent the landed proprietors from transferring their
slaves engaged in the cultivation of lands, assessed for the land-tax, to other
employments which, though more profitable to the proprietor of the slave, would
have yielded a smaller, or less permanent, return to the imperial treasury. The
avarice of the imperial treasury, by reducing the mass of the free population
to the same degree of poverty as the slaves, had removed one cause of the
separation of the two classes. The position of the slave had lost most of its
moral degradation, and occupied precisely the same political position in
society as the poor labourer, from the moment that the Roman fiscal laws
compelled any freeman who had cultivated lands for the space of thirty years to
remain for ever attached, with his descendants, to the same estate. The lower
orders were from that period blended into one class: the slave rose to be a
member of this body; the freeman descended, but his descent was necessary for
the improvement of the great bulk of the human race, and for the extinction of
slavery. Such was the progress of civilization in the Eastern Empire. The
measures of Justinian which, by their fiscal rapacity, tended to sink the free
population to the same state of poverty as the slaves, really prepared the way
for the rise of the slaves as soon as any general improvement took place in the
condition of the human race.
Justinian found the central administration still aided
and controlled by municipal institutions and corporate communities throughout
the empire, as well as by the religious assemblies of the orthodox and
heterodox congregations. Many of these bodies possessed large revenues. The
fabric of the ancient world still existed. Consuls were still named. Rome,
though subject to the Goths, preserved its senate. Constantinople enjoyed all
the license of the hippodrome; Rome, Constantinople, Antioch, Alexandria, and
many other cities, received public distributions of grain. Athens and Sparta
were still governed as little states, and a body of Greek provincial militia
still guarded the pass of Thermopylae. The Greek cities possessed their own
revenues, and maintained their roads, schools, hospitals, police, public
buildings, and aqueducts; they paid professors and public physicians, and kept
their streets paved, cleaned, and lighted. The people enjoyed their local
festivals and games; and though music had supplanted poetry, the theatres were
still open for the public amusement.
Justinian defaced these traces of the ancient world
far more rapidly in Greece than Theodoric in Italy. He was a merciless
reformer, and his reforms were directed solely by fiscal calculations. The
importance of the consulate was abolished, to save the expenses attendant on
the installation of the consuls. The Roman senators were exterminated in the
Italian wars, during which the ancient race of the inhabitants of Rome was
nearly destroyed. Alexandria was deprived of its supplies of grain, and the
Greeks in Egypt were reduced in number and consideration. Antioch was sacked by
Chosroes, and the position of the Greek population of Syria permanently
weakened.
But it was in Greece itself that the Hellenic race and
institutions received the severest blow. Justinian seized the revenues of the
free cities, and deprived them of their most valuable privileges, for the loss
of their revenues compromised their political existence. Poverty produced
barbarism. Roads, streets, and public buildings could no longer be repaired or
constructed unless by the imperial treasury. That want of police which
characterizes the middle ages, began to be felt in the East. Public instruction
was neglected, but the public charities were liberally supported; the
professors and the physicians were robbed of the funds destined for their
maintenance. The municipalities themselves continued to exist in an enfeebled
state, for Justinian affected to reform, but never attempted to destroy them;
and even his libeller, Procopius, only accuses him of plundering, not of
destroying them. The poverty of the Greeks rendered it impossible for them to
supply their municipalities with new funds, or even to allow local taxes to be
imposed, for maintaining the old establishments. At this crisis, the population
was saved from utter barbarism by the close connection which existed between
the clergy and the people, and the powerful influence of the church. The clergy and the people being united by a
community of language, feelings, and prejudices, the clergy, as the most
powerful class of the community, henceforth took the lead in all public
business in the provinces. They lent their aid to support the charitable
institutions, to replace the means of instruction, and to maintain the
knowledge of the healing art; they supported the communal and municipal
organization of the people; and by preserving the local feelings of the Greeks,
they strengthened the foundations of a national organization. History supplies
few materials to illustrate the precise period at which the clergy in Greece
formed their alliance with the municipal organization of the people,
independent of the central authority; but the alliance became of great national
importance, and exercised permanent effects after the municipalities had been
impoverished by Justinian’s reforms.
Sect. II
Military Forces of the Empire
The history of the wars and conquests of Justinian is
narrated by Procopius, the secretary of Belisarius, who was often an eyewitness
of the events which he records with a minuteness which supplies much valuable
information on the military system of the age. The expeditions of the Roman
armies were so widely extended, that most of the nations of the world were
brought into direct communication with the empire. During the time Justinian's
generals were changing the state of Europe, and destroying some of the nations
which had dismembered the Western Empire, circumstances beyond the control of
that international system of policy, of which the sovereigns of Constantinople
and Persia were the arbiters, produced a general movement in the population of
central Asia. The whole human race was thrown into a state of convulsive
agitation, from the frontiers of China to the shores of the Atlantic. This
agitation destroyed many of the existing governments, and exterminated several
powerful nations, while, at the same time, it laid the foundation of the power
of new states and nations, some of which have maintained their existence to the
present time.
The Eastern Empire bore no inconsiderable part in
raising this mighty storm in the West, and in quelling its violence in the
East; in exterminating the Goths and Vandals, and in arresting the progress of
the Avars and Turks. Yet the number and composition of the Roman armies have
often been treated by historians as weak and contemptible. It is impossible, in
this sketch, to attempt any examination of the whole military establishment of
the Roman Empire during Justinian’s reign; but in noticing the influence
exercised by the military system on the Greek population, it is necessary to
make a few general observations. The army consisted of two distinct classes, —
the regular troops, and the mercenaries. The regular troops were composed both
of native subjects of the Roman empire, raised by conscription, and of
barbarians, who had been allowed to occupy lands within the emperor's
dominions, and to retain their own usages, on the condition of furnishing a
fixed number of recruits for the army. The Roman government still clung to the
great law of the empire, that the portion of its subjects which paid the
land-tax could not be allowed to escape that burden by entering the army. The
proprietors of the land were responsible for the tribute; the cultivators of
the soil, both slaves and serfs, secured the amount of the public revenues;
neither could be permitted to forego their fiscal obligations to perform
military duties. For some centuries it had been more economical to purchase the
service of barbarians than to employ native troops; and perhaps, if the
oppressive system of the imperial administration had not impaired the resources
of the State, and diminished the population by consuming the capital of the
people, this might have long continued to be the case. Native troops were
always drawn from the mountainous districts, which paid a scanty tribute, and
in which the population found difficulty in procuring subsistence. The
invasions of the barbarians, likewise, threw numbers of the peasantry of the
provinces to the south of the Danube out of employment, and many of these
entered the army. A supply of recruits was likewise obtained from the idle and
needy population of the towns. The most active and intelligent soldiers were
placed in the cavalry, — a force that was drilled with the greatest care,
subjected to the most exact discipline, and sustained the glory of the Roman
arms in the field of battle. As the higher and middle classes in the provinces
had, for ages, been excluded from the military profession, and the army had
been at last composed chiefly of the rudest and most ignorant peasants, of
enfranchised slaves, and naturalized barbarians, military service was viewed
with aversion; and the greatest repugnance arose among the civilians to become
soldiers. In the meantime, the depopulation of the empire daily increased the
difficulty of raising the number of recruits required for a service which
embraced an immense extent of territory, and entailed a great destruction of
human life.
The troops of the line, particularly the infantry, had
deteriorated considerably in Justinian’s time; but the artillery and engineer
departments were not much inferior, in science and efficiency, to what they had
been in the best days of the empire. Military resources, not military
knowledge, had diminished. The same arsenals continued to exist; mere
mechanical skill had been uninterruptedly exercised; and the constant demand
which had existed for military mechanicians, armourers, and engineers, had
never allowed the theoretical instruction of this class to be neglected, nor
their practical skill to decline from want of employment. This fact requires to
be borne in mind.
The mercenaries formed the most valued and brilliant
portion of the army; and it was the fashion of the day to copy and admire the
dress and manners of the barbarian cavalry. The empire was now surrounded by
numbers of petty princes, who, though they had seized possession of provinces
once belonging to the Romans, by force, and had often engaged in war with the
emperor, still acknowledged a certain degree of dependence on the Roman power.
Some of them, as the kings of the Heruls and the Gepids, and the king of Colchis, held their regal rank, by
a regular investiture, from Justinian. These princes, and the kings of the
Lombards, Huns, Saracens, and Moors, all received regular subsidies. Their best
warriors entered the Roman service, and served in separate bands, under their
own leaders, and with their national weapons, but subjected to the regular
organization and discipline of the Roman armies, though not to the Roman system
of military exercises and manoeuvres. Some of these corps of barbarians were
also formed of volunteers, who were attracted by the high pay which they
received, and the license with which they were allowed to behave.
The superiority of these troops arose from natural
causes. The northern nations who invaded the empire consisted of a population
trained from infancy to warlike exercises, and following no profession but that
of arms. Their lands were cultivated by the labour of their slaves, or by that
of the Roman subjects who still survived in the provinces they had occupied;
but their only pecuniary resources arose from the plunder of their neighbours,
or the subsidies of the Roman emperors. Their habits of life, the celerity of
their movements, and the excellence of their armour, rendered them the choicest
troops of the age. The emperors preferred armies composed of a number of small
bands of mercenary foreigners, attached to their own persons by high pay, and
commanded by chiefs who could never pretend to political rank, and who had much
to lose and little to gain by rebellion; for experience proved that they perilled their throne by intrusting the command of a
national army to a native general, who, from a popular soldier, might become a
dangerous rival. Though the barbarian mercenaries in the service of Rome
generally proved far more efficient troops than their free countrymen, yet they
were on the whole unequal to the native Roman cavalry of Justinian's army, the Cataphracti, sheathed in complete steel on the Persian
model, and armed with the Grecian spear, who were still the best troops in a
field of battle, and were the real type of the chivalry of the middle ages.
Justinian weakened the Roman army in several ways by
his measures of reform. His anxiety to reduce its expenditure induced him to
diminish the establishment of camels, horses, and chariots, which attended the
troops for transporting the military machines and baggage. This train had been
previously very large, as it was calculated to save the peasantry from any
danger of having their labours interrupted, or their cattle seized, under the
pretext of being required for transport. Numerous abuses were introduced by
diminishing the pay of the troops, and by neglecting to pay them with
regularity and to furnish them with proper food and clothing. At the same time
the efficiency of the army in the field was more seriously injured, by
continuing the policy adopted by Anastasius, of restricting the power of the
generals; a policy, however, which, it must be confessed, was not unnecessary
in order to avoid greater evils. This is evident from the numerous rebellions
in Justinian's reign, and the absolute want of any national or patriotic
feeling in the majority of the Roman officers. Large armies were at times
composed of a number of corps, each commanded by its own officer, over whom the
nominal commander-in-chief had little or no authority; and it is to this
circumstance that the unfortunate results of some of the Gothic and Persian
campaigns are to be attributed, and not to any inferiority of the Roman troops.
Even Belisarius himself, though he gave many proofs of attachment to
Justinian’s throne, was watched with the greatest jealousy. He was treated with
constant distrust, and his officers were at times encouraged to dispute his
measures, and never punished for disobeying his orders. The fact is, that
Belisarius might, if so disposed, have assumed the purple, and perhaps
dethroned his master. Narses was the only general who was implicitly trusted
and steadily supported; but Narses was an aged eunuch, and could never have
become emperor.
The imperial military forces consisted of one hundred
and fifty thousand men; and though the extent of the frontier which these
troops were compelled to guard was very great, and lay open to the incursions
of many active hostile tribes, still Justinian was able to assemble some
admirably appointed armies for his foreign expeditions. The armament which
accompanied Belisarius to Africa consisted of ten thousand infantry, five
thousand cavalry, and twenty thousand sailors. Belisarius must have had about
thirty thousand troops under his command in Italy before the taking of Ravenna.
Germanus, when he arrived in Africa, found that only one-third of the Roman
troops about Carthage had remained faithful, and the rebels under Stozas amounted to eight thousand men. As there were still
troops in Numidia which had not joined the deserters, the whole Roman force in
Africa cannot have been less than fifteen thousand. Narses, in the year 551,
when the empire began to show evident proofs of the bad effects of Justinian’s
government, could assemble thirty thousand chosen troops, an army which
defeated the veterans of Totila, and destroyed the
fierce bands of Franks and Alemanns which hoped to
wrest Italy from the Romans. The character of the Roman troops, in spite of all
that modern writers have said to depreciate them, still stood so high that Totila, the warlike monarch of the Goths, strove to induce
them to join his standard by offers of high pay. No army had yet proved itself
equal to the Roman troops on the field of battle; and their exploits in Spain,
Africa, Colchis, and Mesopotamia, prove their excellence; though the defeats
which they sustained, both from the Persians and on the Danube, reveal the fact
that their enemies were improving in military science, and ready to avail
themselves of the slightest neglect on the part of the Roman government.
Numerous examples could be cited of almost incredible
disorder in the armies, — originating generally in the misconduct of the
imperial government. Belisarius attempted, but found it impossible, to enforce
strict discipline, for his soldiers were often left unpaid and his officers
were at times encouraged to act independently of his orders. Two thousand Heruls ventured to quit his standard in Italy, and, after
marching round the Adriatic, were pardoned by Justinian, and again engaged in
the imperial service. Procopius mentions repeatedly that the disorders of the
unpaid troops ruined the provinces; and in Africa, no less than three Roman
officers, Stozas, Maximin, and Gontharis,
attempted to render themselves independent, and were supported by large bodies
of troops. The Greeks were the only portion of the population who were
considered as sincerely attached to the imperial government, or, at least, who
would readily defend it against every enemy; and accordingly, Gontharis, when he wished to secure Carthage, ordered all
the Greeks to be murdered without distinction. The Greeks were, however, from
their position and rank in society as burgesses or tax-payers, almost entirely
excluded from the army, and, though they furnished the greater part of the
sailors for the fleet, they were generally an unwarlike population. Witiges, the Gothic king, calls the Roman army of
Belisarius an army of Greeks, a band of pirates, actors, and mountebanks.
One of the most unfortunate measures of Justinian was
his disbanding all the provincial militia. This is incidentally mentioned in
the Secret History of Procopius, who informs us that Thermopylae had been
previously guarded by two thousand of these troops;
but that this corps was dissolved, and a garrison of regular troops placed in
Greece. As a general measure it was probably dictated by a plan of financial
reform, and not by any fear of popular insurrection; but its effects were
extremely injurious to the empire in the declining state of society, and in the
increasing disorganization of the central power; and though it may possibly
have prevented some provinces from recovering their independence by their own
arms, it prepared the way for the easy conquests of the Avars and Arabs.
Justinian was intent on centralizing all power, and rendering all public
burdens uniform and systematic; and had adopted the opinion that it was cheaper
to defend the empire by walls and fortresses than by a moveable army. The
necessity of frequently moving troops with great celerity to defend the
frontiers, had induced the officers to abandon the ancient practice of
fortifying a regular camp; and at last, even the art of encamping was
neglected. The barbarians, however, could always move with greater rapidity
than the regular troops of the empire.
To secure the frontiers, Justinian adopted a new
system of defence. He constructed extensive lines supported by innumerable
forts and castles, in which he placed garrisons, in order that they might be
ready to sally out on the invading bands. These lines extended from the
Adriatic to the Black Sea, and were farther strengthened by the long wall of
Anastasius, which covered Constantinople, by walls protecting the Thracian Chersonesus and the peninsula of Pallene, and by the
fortifications at Thermopylae, and at the Isthmus of Corinth, which were
carefully repaired. At all these posts permanent garrisons were maintained. The
eulogy of Procopius on the public edifices of Justinian seems almost
irreconcilable with the events of the latter years of his reign; for Zabergan, king of the Huns, penetrated through breaches he
found unrepaired in the long wall, and advanced almost to the very suburbs of
Constantinople.
Another instance of the declining state of military
tactics may be mentioned, as it must have originated in the army itself, and
not in consequence of any arrangements of the government. The combined
manoeuvres of the divisions of the regiments had been so neglected that the
bugle-calls once used had fallen into desuetude, and were unknown to the
soldiers. The motley recruits, of dissimilar habits, could not acquire, with
the requisite rapidity, a perception of the delicacy of the ancient music, and
the Roman infantry no longer moved
In perfect phalanx, to the Dorian mood.
Of flutes and soft recorders.
It happened, during the siege of Auximum
in Italy, that Belisarius was placed in difficulty from the want of an
instantaneous means of communicating orders to the troops engaged in
skirmishing with the Goths. On this occasion it was suggested to him by Procopius,
his secretary and the historian of his wars, to replace the forgotten
bugle-calls by making use of the brazen trumpet of the cavalry to sound a
charge, and of the infantry bugle to summon a retreat.
Foreigners were preferred by the emperors as the
occupants of the highest military commands; and the confidence with which the
barbarian chiefs were honoured by the court enabled many to reach the highest
rank in the army. Narses, the most distinguished military leader after
Belisarius, was a Pers-Armenian captive. Peter, who
commanded against the Persians in the campaign of 528, was also a Pers-Armenian. Pharas, who
besieged Gelimer in Mount Pappua, was a Herul. Mundus, who commanded in Illyria and Dalmatia, was a
Gepid prince. Chilbud, who,
after several victories, perished with his army in defending the frontiers
against the Sclavonians, was of northern descent, as
may be inferred from his name. Salomon, who governed Africa with great courage
and ability, was a eunuch from Dara. Artaban was an
Armenian prince. John Troglita, the patrician, the
hero of the poem of Corippus, called the Johannid, is
also supposed to have been an Armenian. Yet the empire might still have
furnished excellent officers, as well as valiant troops; for the Isaurians and
Thracians continued to distinguish themselves in every field of battle, and
were equal in courage to the fiercest of the barbarians.
It became the fashion in the army to imitate the
manners and habits of the barbarians; their headlong personal courage became
the most admired quality, even in the highest rank; and nothing tended more to
hasten the decay of the military art. The officers in the Roman armies became
more intent on distinguishing themselves for personal exploits than for exact
order and strict discipline in their corps. Even Belisarius himself appears at
times to have forgotten the duties of a general in his eagerness to exhibit his
personal valour on his bay charter; though he may, on such occasions, have
considered that the necessity of keeping up the spirits of his army was a
sufficient apology for his rashness. Unquestionably the army, as a military
establishment, had declined in excellence ere Justinian ascended the throne,
and his reign tended to sink it much lower; yet it is probable that it was never
more remarkable for the enterprising valour of its officers, or for their
personal skill in the use of their weapons. The death of numbers of the highest
rank in battles and skirmishes in which they rashly engaged, proves this fact.
There was, however, one important feature of ancient tactics still preserved in
the Roman armies, which gave them a decided superiority over their enemies.
They had still the confidence in their discipline and skill to form their
ranks, and encounter their opponents in line; the bravest of their enemies,
whether on the banks of the Danube or the Tigris, only ventured to charge them,
or receive their attack, in close masses.
Sect. III
Influence of
Justinian’s legislation on the Greek population.
The Greeks long remained strangers to the Roman law.
The free cities continued to be governed by their own legal systems and local
usages, and the Greek lawyers did not consider it necessary to study the civil
law of their masters. But this state of things underwent a great modification,
after Constantine transformed the Greek town of Byzantium into the Roman city
of Constantinople. The imperial administration after that period, came into more
immediate connection with its eastern subjects; the legislative power of the
emperors was more frequently exercised in the regulation of provincial
business; and the Christian church, by uniting the whole Greek population into
one body, often called forth general measures of legislation. While the
confusion arising from the incongruity of old laws to the new exigencies of
society was generally felt, the increasing poverty, depopulation, and want of
education in the Greek cities, rendered it difficult to maintain the ancient
tribunals. The Greeks were often compelled to study at the universities where
Roman jurisprudence alone was cultivated, and thus the municipal law-courts
were at last guided in their decisions by the rules of Roman law. As the number
of the native tribunals decreased, their duties were performed by judges named
by the imperial administration; and thus Roman law, silently, and without any
violent change or direct legislative enactment, was generally introduced into
Greece.
Justinian, from the moment of his accession to the
throne, carried his favourite plan, of centralizing the direction of the
complicated machine of the Roman administration in his own person, as far as
possible. The necessity of condensing the various authorities of Roman jurisprudence,
and of reducing the mass of legal opinions into a system of legislative
enactments, possessing unity of form and facility of reference, was deeply
felt. Such a system of legislation is useful in every country; but it becomes
peculiarly necessary, after a long period of civilization, in an absolute
monarchy, in order to restrain the decisions of legal tribunals by published
law, and prevent the judges from assuming arbitrary power, under the pretext of
interpreting obsolete edicts and conflicting decisions. A code of laws, to a
certain degree, serves as a barrier against despotism, for it supplies the
people with the means of calmly confuting the acts of their government and the
decisions of their judges by recognised principles of justice; and at the same
time it is a useful ally to the absolute sovereign, as it supplies him with
increased facilities for detecting injustice committed by his official agents.
The faults or merits of Justinian’s system of laws
belong to the lawyers intrusted with the execution of his project, but the
honour of having commanded this work may be ascribed to the emperor alone. It
is to be regretted that the position of an absolute sovereign is so liable to
temptation from passing events, that Justinian himself could not refrain from
injuring the surest monument of his fame, by later enactments, which mark too
clearly that they emanated either from his own increasing avarice, or from
weakness in yielding to the passions of his wife or courtiers. It could not be
expected that his political sagacity should have devised the means of securing
the rights of his subjects against the arbitrary exercise of his own power; but
he might have consecrated the great principle of equity, that legislation can
never act as a retrospective decision; and he might have ordered his
magistrates to adopt the oath of the Egyptian judges, who swore, when they
entered an office, that they would never depart from the principles of equity
(law), and that if the sovereign ordered them to do wrong, they would not obey.
Justinian, however, was too much of a despot, and too little of a statesman, to
proclaim the law, even while retaining the legislative power in his person, to
be superior to the executive branch of the government. But in maintaining that
the laws of Justinian might have been rendered more perfect, and have been
framed to confer greater benefits on mankind, it is not to be denied that the
work is one of the most remarkable monuments of human wisdom; and we should
remember with gratitude, that for thirteen hundred years the Pandects served as the magazine of legal lore to the
Christian world, both in the East and in the West; and if it has now become an
instrument of administrative tyranny in the continental monarchies of Europe,
the fault is in the nations who refuse to follow out the principles of equity
logically in regulating the dispensation of justice, and do not raise the law
above the sovereign, nor render every minister and public servant amenable to
the regular tribunals for every act he may commit in the exercise of his
official duty, like the humblest citizen.
The government of Justinian’s empire was Roman, its
official language was Latin, Oriental habits and usages, as well as time and
despotic power, had indeed introduced modifications in the old forms; but it
would be an error to consider the imperial administration as having assumed a
Greek character. The accident of the Greek language having become the ordinary
dialect in use at court, and of the church in the East being deeply tinctured
with Greek feelings, is apt to create an impression that the Eastern Empire had
lost something of its Roman pride, in order to adopt a Greek character. The
circumstance that its enemies often reproached it with being Greek, is a proof
that the imputation was viewed as an insult. As the administration was entirely
Roman, the laws of Justinian — the Code, the Pandects,
and the Institutions — were published in Latin, though many of the latter
edicts (novells)
were published in Greek. Nothing can illustrate in a stronger manner the
artificial and antinational position of the eastern Roman Empire than this
fact, that Latin was the language of the laws of an empire, of which Greek was
the language of the church and the people. Latin was preserved in official
business, and in public ceremonials, from feelings of pride connected with the
ancient renown of the Romans, and the dignity of the Roman Empire. So strong is
the hold which antiquated custom maintains over the minds of men, that even a
professed reformer, like Justinian, could not break through so irrational an
usage as the publication of his laws in a language incomprehensible to most of
those for whose use they were framed.
The laws and legislation of Justinian throw only an
indistinct and vague light on the state of the Greek population. They were
drawn entirely from Roman sources, calculated for a Roman state of society, and
occupied with Roman forms and institutions. Justinian was so anxious to
preserve them in all their purity, that he adopted two measures to secure them
from alteration. The copyists were commanded to refrain from any abridgment,
and the commentators were ordered to follow the literal sense of the laws. All
schools of law were likewise forbidden, except those of Constantinople, Rome,
and Berytus, a regulation which must have been
adopted to guard the Roman law from being corrupted, by falling into the hands
of Greek teachers, and becoming confounded with the customary law of the
various Greek provinces. This restriction, and the importance attached to it by
the emperor, prove that the Roman law was now the universal rule of conduct in
the empire. Justinian took every measure which prudence could dictate to secure
the best and purest legal instruction and administration for the Roman
tribunals; but only a small number of students could study in the licensed
schools, and Rome, one of these schools, was, at the time of the publication of
the law, in the hands of the Goths. It is therefore not surprising that a rapid
decline in the knowledge of Roman law commenced very shortly after the
promulgation of Justinian's legislation.
Justinian’s laws were soon translated into Greek
without the emperor’s requiring that these paraphrases should be literal; and
Greek commentaries of an explanatory nature were published. His novells were
subsequently published in Greek when the case required it; but it is evident
that any remains of Greek laws and customs were rapidly yielding to the
superior system of Roman legislation, perfected as this was by the judicious
labours of Justinian’s councillors. Some modifications were made in the
jurisdiction of the judges and municipal magistrates at this time; and we must
admit the testimony of Procopius as a proof that Justinian sold judicial
offices, though the vagueness of the accusation does not afford us the means of
ascertaining under what pretext the change in the earlier system was adopted.
It is perhaps impossible to determine what share of authority the Greek
municipal magistrates retained in the administration of justice and police,
after the reforms effected by Justinian in their financial affairs, and the
seizure of a large part of their local revenues. The existence of Greek
corporations in Italy shows that they retained an acknowledged existence in the
Roman Empire.
Sect. IV
Internal
Administration as it affected the Greeks
The religious intolerance and financial rapacity of
Justinian’s internal administration increased the deep-rooted hatred of the
imperial power throughout the provinces, and his successors soon experienced
the bitter effects of his policy. Even the commencement of his own reign gave
some alarming manifestations of the general feeling. The celebrated sedition of
the Nika, though it broke out among the factions of the amphitheatre, acquired
its importance in consequence of popular dissatisfaction with the fiscal
measures of the emperor. This sedition possesses an unfortunate celebrity in
the annals of the empire, from the destruction of many public buildings and
numerous works of ancient art, occasioned by the conflagrations raised by the
rebels. Belisarius succeeded in suppressing it with considerable difficulty
after much bloodshed, and not until Justinian had felt his throne in imminent
danger. The alarm produced a lasting impression on his mind; and more than one
instance occurred during his reign to remind him that popular sedition puts a
limit to despotic power. At a subsequent period, an insurrection of the people
compelled him to abandon a project for recruiting the imperial finances,
according to a common resource of arbitrary sovereigns, by debasing the value
of the coin.
We possess only scanty materials for describing the
condition of the Greek population during the reign of Justinian. The relations
of the Greek provinces and cities with the central administration had endured
for ages, slowly undergoing the changes produced by time, but without the
occurrence of any general measure of reform, until the decree of Caracalla
conferred on all the Greeks the rights and privileges of Roman citizens. That
decree, by converting all Greeks into Romans, must have greatly modified the
constitution of the free and autonomous cities; but history furnishes no means
of determining with precision its effect on the inhabitants of Greece.
Justinian made another great change by confiscating the local revenues of the
municipalities; but in the six centuries which had elapsed from the fall of the
Roman republic to the extinction of municipal freedom in the Greek cities, the
prominent feature of the Roman administration had been invariably the same —
fiscal rapacity, which gradually depopulated the country, and prepared the way
for its colonization by foreign races.
The colossal fabric of the Roman government embraced
not only a numerous imperial court and household, a host of administrators,
finance agents, and judges, a powerful army and navy, and a splendid church
establishment; it also conferred the privilege of titular nobility on a large
portion of the higher classes, both on those who were selected to fill local
offices in connection with the public administration, and on those who had held
public employments during some period of their lives. The titles of this
nobility were official; its members were the creatures of government, attached
to the imperial throne by ties of interest; they were exempted from particular
taxes, separated from the body of the people by various privileges, and formed,
from their great numbers, rather a distinct nation than a privileged class.
They were scattered over all the provinces of Justinian’s empire, from the
Atlantic to the Euphrates, and constituted, at this period, the real nucleus of
civil society in the Roman world. Of their influence, many distinct traces may
be found, even after the extinction of the Roman power, both in the East and in
the West.
The population of the provinces, and more especially
the proprietors and cultivators of the soil, stood completely apart from these
representatives of the Roman supremacy, and almost in a state of direct
opposition to the government. The weight of the Roman yoke had now pressed down
all the provincials to nearly the same level. As a general rule, they were
excluded from the profession of arms; their poverty caused them to neglect the
cultivation of arts, sciences, and literature, and their whole attention was
absorbed in watching the increasing rapacity of the imperial treasury, and in
finding means to evade the oppression which they saw no possibility of
resisting. The land and capitation taxes formed the source of this oppression.
No taxes were, perhaps, more equitable in their general principle, and few
appear ever to have been administered, for so long a period, with such
unfeeling prudence. Their severity had been so gradually increased, that but a
very small annual encroachment had been made on the savings of the people, and
centuries elapsed before the whole accumulated capital of the empire was
consumed; but at last the whole wealth of its subjects was drawn into the
imperial treasury; free men were sold to pay taxes; vineyards were rooted out,
and buildings were destroyed to escape taxation.
The manner of collecting the land and capitation taxes
displays singular ingenuity in the mode of estimating the value of the property
to be taxed, and an inhuman sagacity in framing a system capable of extracting
the last farthing which that property could yield. The registers underwent a
public revision every fifteenth year, but the indictio, or amount of taxation
to be paid, was annually fixed by an imperial ordinance. The whole empire was
divided into capita, or hides of
land. The proprietors of these capita
were grouped together in communities, the wealthier members of which were
formed into a permanent magistracy, and rendered liable for the amount of the
taxes due by their community. The same law of responsibility was applied to the
senates and magistrates of cities and free states. Confiscation of private
property had, from the earliest days of the empire, been regarded as an
important financial resource. In the
days of Tiberius, the nobles of Rome, whose power, influence, and character
alarmed the jealous tyrant, were swept away. Nero attacked the wealthy to fill
his exhausted treasury; and from that time to the days of Justinian, the
richest individuals in the capital and the provinces had been systematically
punished for every offence by the confiscation of their fortunes. The pages of
Suetonius and Tacitus, of Zosimus and Procopius, attest the extent and duration
of this war against private wealth. Now, in the eyes of the Roman government,
the greatest political offence was the failure to perform a public duty; and
the most important duty of a Roman subject had long been to furnish the amount
of taxes required by the State. The increase of the public burdens at last
proceeded so far, that every year brought with it a failure in the taxes of
some province, and consequently the confiscation of the private property of the
wealthiest citizens of the insolvent district, until at last all the rich
proprietors were ruined, and the law became nugatory. The poor and ignorant
inhabitants of the rural districts in Greece forgot the literature and arts of
their ancestors; and as they had no longer anything to sell, nor the means of
purchasing foreign commodities, money ceased to circulate.
But though the proud aristocracy and the wealthy
votaries of art, literature, and philosophy, disappeared, and though
independent citizens and proprietors now stood scattered over the provinces as
isolated individuals, without exercising any direct influence on the character
of the age, still the external framework of ancient society displayed something
of its pomp and greatness. The decay of its majesty and strength was felt;
mankind perceived the approach of a mighty change, but the revolution had not
yet arrived; the past glory of Greece shed its colouring on the unknown future,
and the dark shadow which that future now throws back, when we contemplate
Justinian’s reign, was then imperceptible.
Many of the habits, and some of the institutions of
ancient civilization, still continued to exist among the Greek population.
Property, though crumbling away under a system of slow corrosion, was regarded
by public opinion as secure against lawless violence or indiscriminate
confiscation; and it really was so, when a comparison is made between the
condition of a subject of the Roman empire and a proprietor of the soil in any
Other country of the then known world. If there was much evil in the state of
society, there was also some good; and, when contemplating it from our modern
social position, we must never forget that the same causes which destroyed the
wealth, arts, literature, and civilization of the Romans and Greeks, began to
eradicate from among mankind the greatest degradation of our species — the
existence of slavery.
In the reign of Justinian, the Greeks as a people had
lost much of their superiority over the other subjects of the empire. The
schools of philosophy, which had afforded the last refuge for the ancient
literature of the country, had long fallen into neglect, and were on the very
eve of extinction, when Justinian closed them by a public edict. The poverty
and ignorance of the inhabitants of Greece had totally separated the
philosophers from the people. The town population had everywhere embraced
Christianity. The country population, composed in great part of the offspring
of freedmen and slaves, was removed from all instruction, and paganism
continued to exist in the retired mountains of the Peloponnesus, Those
principles of separation which originated in non-communication of ideas and
interests, and which began to give the Roman empire the aspect of an
agglomeration of nations, rather than the appearance of a single State,
operated as powerfully on the Greek people as on the Egyptian, Syrian, and
Armenian population. The needy cultivators of the soil — the artisans in the
towns — and the servile dependents on the imperial administration, —formed
three distinct classes of society. A strong line of distinction was created
between the Greeks in the service of the empire and the body of the people,
both in the towns and country. The mass of the Greeks naturally participated in
the general hostility to the Roman administration; yet the immense numbers who
were employed in the State, and in the highest dignities of the Church,
neutralized the popular opposition, and deprived Greece of intellectual
leaders, who might have taught it to aspire to national independence.
It has been already observed that Justinian restricted
the powers and diminished the revenues of the Greek municipalities, but that
these corporations continued to exist, though shorn of their former power and
influence. Splendid monuments of Grecian architecture, and beautiful works of
Grecian art, still adorned the Agora and the Acropolis in many Greek cities.
Where the ancient walls were falling into decay, and the untenanted buildings
presented an aspect of ruin, they were cleared away to construct new
fortifications, churches, and monasteries, which Justinian was constantly
building in every province of the empire. The hasty construction of these
buildings, rapidly erected from the materials furnished by the ancient
structures around, accounts both for their number and for the facility with
which time has effaced almost every trace of their existence. Still, even in
architecture, the Roman Empire displayed some traces of its greatness; the
church of St Sophia, and the aqueduct of Constantinople, attest the superiority
of Justinian’s age over subsequent periods, both in the East and in the West.
The superiority of the Greek population must at this
time have been most remarkable in their regulations of internal government and
police administration. Public roads were still maintained in a serviceable
state, though not equal in appearance or solidity of construction to the Appian
Way in Italy, which excited the admiration of Procopius. Streets were kept in
repair by the proprietors of houses. The astynomoi and the agoranomoi were
still elected, but their number often indicated the former greatness of a
diminished population. The post-houses, post-mansions, and every means of
transport, were maintained in good order, but they had long been rendered a
means of oppressing the people; and, though laws had often been passed to
prevent the provincials from suffering from the exactions of imperial officers
when travelling, the extent of the abuse was beginning to ruin the
establishment. The Roman Empire, to the latest period of its existence, paid
considerable attention to the police of the public roads, and it was indebted
to this care for the preservation of its military superiority over its enemies,
and of its lucrative commerce.
The activity of the government in clearing the country
of robbers and banditti, and the singular severity of the laws on this subject,
show that the slightest danger of a diminution of the imperial revenues inspired
the Roman government with energy and vigour. Nor were other means of advancing
the commercial interests of the people neglected. The ports were carefully
cleaned, and their entry indicated by lighthouses, as in earlier times; and, in
short, only that portion of ancient civilization which was too expensive for
the diminished resources of the age had fallen into neglect. Utility and
convenience were universally sought, both in private and public life; but
solidity, taste, and the durability which aspires at immortality, were no
longer regarded as objects of attainable ambition. The basilica, or the
monastery, constructed by breaking to pieces the solid blocks of a neglected
temple, and cemented together by lime burnt from the marble of the desecrated
shrine, or from some heathen tomb, was intended to contain a certain number of
persons; and the cost of the building, and its temporary sufficiency for the
required purpose, were just as much the general object of the architect’s
attention in the time of Justinian as in our own.
The worst feature of Justinian's administration was
its venality. This vice, it is true, generally prevails in every administration
uninfluenced by public opinion and based on an organized bureaucracy; for
whenever the corps of administrators becomes too numerous for the moral
character of individuals to be under the direct control of their superiors,
usage secures to them a permanent official position, unless they grossly
neglect their duties. Justinian, however, countenanced the venality of his
subordinates by an open sale of offices; and the violent complaints of
Procopius are confirmed by the legislative measures of the emperor. When shame
prevented the emperor himself from selling an official appointment, he did not
blush to order the payment of a stated sum to be made to the empress Theodora.
This conduct opened a door to abuses on the part of the imperial ministers and
provincial governors, and contributed, in no small degree, to the misfortunes
of Justin II. It diminished the influence of the Roman administration in the
distant provinces, and neutralized the benefits which Justinian had conferred
on the empire by his legislative compilations. A strong proof of the declining
condition of the Greek nation is to be found in the care with which every
misfortune of this period is recorded in history. It is only when little hope
is felt of repairing the ravages of disease, fire, and earthquakes, that these
evils permanently affect the prosperity of nations. In an improving state of
society, great as their ravages may prove, they are only personal misfortunes
and temporary evils; the void which they create in the population is quickly
replaced, and the property which they destroy rises from its ruins with
increased solidity and beauty. When it happens that a pestilence leaves a
country depopulated for many generations, and that conflagrations and
earthquakes ruin cities, which are never again reconstructed of their former
size — these evils are apt to be mistaken by the people as the primary cause of
the national decline, and acquire an undue historical importance in the popular
mind. The age of Justinian was remarkable for a terrible pestilence which
ravaged every province of the empire in succession, for many famines which
swept away no inconsiderable portion of the population, and for earthquakes
which laid waste no small number of the most flourishing and populous cities of
the empire.
Greece had suffered very little from hostile attacks
after the departure of Alaric; for the piratical incursions of Genseric were
neither very extensive nor very successful; and after the time of these
barbarians, the ravages of earthquakes begin to figure in history, as an
important cause of the impoverished and declining condition of the country. The
Huns, it is true, extended their plundering expeditions, in the year 540, as
far as the Isthmus of Corinth, but they do not appear to have succeeded in
capturing a single town of any note. The fleet of Totila
plundered Corcyra, and the coast of Epirus, from Nicopolis
up to Dodona; but these misfortunes were temporary and partial, and could have
caused no irreparable loss, either of life or property. The fact appears to be,
that Greece was in a declining condition; but that the means of subsistence
were abundant, and the population had but an incorrect and vague conception of
the means by which the government was consuming their substance and
depopulating their country. In this state of things, several earthquakes, of
singular violence, and attended by unusual phenomena, made a deep impression on
men’s minds, by producing a degree of desolation which a declining state of
society rendered irreparable. Corinth, which was still a populous city, Patrae, Naupactus, and Coronea,
were all laid in ruins. An immense assembly of Greeks was collected at the time
to celebrate a public festival; the whole population was swallowed up in the
midst of their ceremonies. The waters of the Maliac
Gulf retired suddenly, and left the shores of Thermopylae dry; but the sea,
suddenly returning with violence, swept up the valley of the Spercheius, and carried away the inhabitants. In an age of
ignorance and superstition, when the prospects of mankind were despondent, and
at the moment when the emperor was effacing the last relics of the religion of
their ancestors — a religion which had filled the sea and the land with
guardian deities — these awful occurrences could not fail to produce an
alarming effect on men’s minds, and were not unnaturally regarded as a
supernatural confirmation of the despair which led many to imagine that the
ruin of our globe was approaching. It is not wonderful that many pagans
believed with Procopius that Justinian was the demon destined to complete the
catastrophe of the human race.
The condition of the Greek population in Achaia seems
to have been as little understood by the courtiers of Justinian as that of the
newly-established Greek kingdom by its Bavarian masters and the protecting
Powers. The splendid appearance which the ancient monuments, shining in the clear
sky with the freshness of recent constructions, gave to the Greek cities,
induced the Constantinopolitans and other strangers who visited the country, to
suppose that the aspect of elegance and delicacy of finish, everywhere
apparent, was the result of constant municipal expenditure. The buildings of
Constantine and Theodosius in the capital were probably begrimed with dust and
smoke, so that it was natural to conceive that those of Pericles and
Epaminondas could retain a perpetual youth only by a liberal expenditure for
their preservation. The celebrity of the city of Athens, the privileges which
it still enjoyed, the society by which it was frequented, as an agreeable
residence, as a school for study, or as a place of retirement for the wealthy
literary men of the age, gave the people of the capital a far too exalted idea
of the well-being of Greece. The contemporaries of Justinian judged the Greeks
of their age by placing them in too close a relation with the inhabitants of
the free states of antiquity; we, on the contrary, are too apt to confound them
with the rude inhabitants who dwelt in the Peloponnesus after it was filled
with Sclavonian and Albanian colonies. Had Procopius
rightly estimated the condition of the rural population, and reflected on the
extreme difficulty which the agriculturist always encounters in quitting his
actual employment in order to seek any distant occupation, and the
impossibility of finding money in a country where there are no purchasers for
extra produce, he would not have signalized a penurious disposition as the
national characteristic of the Greeks. The population which spoke the Greek
language in the capital and in the Roman administration was now influenced by a
very different spirit from that of the inhabitants of the true Hellenic lands;
and this separation of feeling became more and more conspicuous as the empire
declined in power. The central administration soon ceased to pay any particular
attention to Greece, which was sure to furnish its tribute, as it hated the Romans
less than it feared the barbarians. From henceforward, therefore, the
inhabitants of Hellas become almost lost to the historians of the empire; and
the motley and expatriated population of Constantinople, Asia Minor, Syria, and
Alexandria, is represented to the literary world as forming the real body of
the Greek nation — an error which has concealed the history of a nation from
our study, and replaced it by the annals of a court and the records of a
government.
Sect. V
Influence of
Justinian’s Conquests on the Greek Population and the change effected by the
Conquest of the Vandal Kingdom of Africa
The attention of Justinian’s immediate predecessors
had been devoted to improving the internal condition of the empire, and that
portion of the population which spoke Greek, forming the most important body of
the emperor’s subjects, had participated in the greatest degree in this
improvement. The Greeks were, apparently, on the eve of securing a national
preponderance in the Roman state, when Justinian forced them back into their
former secondary condition, by directing the influence of the public
administration to arms and law, the two departments of the Roman government
from which they were in a great measure excluded. The conquests of Justinian,
however, tended to improve the condition of the mercantile and manufacturing
portion of the Greek population, by extending its commercial relations with the
West; and this extended commerce tended to support the central government at Constantinople,
when the framework of the Roman imperial administration began to give way in
the provinces. With the exception of Sicily, and the southern portion of Italy,
the whole of Justinian’s conquests in the West were peopled by the Latin race;
and the inhabitants, though attached to the emperor of Constantinople as the
political head of the Orthodox Church, were already opposed to the Greek
nation.
When the Goths, Sueves, and
Vandals had completed their establishment in Spain, Africa, and Italy, and were
spread over these countries as landed proprietors, the smallness of their
number became apparent to the mass of the conquered population; and the barbarians
soon lost in individual intercourse as citizens the superiority which they had
enjoyed while united in armed bands. The Romans, in spite of the confiscation
of a portion of their estates to enrich their conquerors, and in spite of the
oppression with which they were treated, still formed the majority of the
middle classes; the administration of the greater part of the landed property,
the commerce of the country, the municipal and judicial organization, all
centred in their hands. In addition to this, they were separated from their
conquerors by religion. The northern invaders of the Western Empire were
Arians, the Roman population was orthodox. This religious feeling was so
strong, that the Catholic king of the Franks, Clovis, was often able to avail
himself of the assistance of the orthodox subjects of the Arian Goths, in his
wars with the Gothic kings. As soon, however, as Justinian proved that the
Eastern Empire had recovered some portion of the ancient Roman vigour, the eyes
of all the Roman population in Spain, Gaul, Africa, and Italy, were directed to
the imperial court; and there can be no doubt that the government of Justinian
maintained extensive relations with the Roman population and the orthodox
clergy over all Europe, who did much to assist his military operations.
Justinian succeeded to the empire while it was
embroiled in war with Persia, but he was fortunate enough to conclude a peace
with Chosroes the Great, who ascended the Persian throne in the fourth year of
his reign. In the East the emperor could never expect to make any permanent
conquests; while in the West a large portion of the population was ready to
receive his troops with open arms; and, in case of success, formed submissive
and probably attached subjects. Both policy and religion induced Justinian to
commence his attacks on the invaders of the Roman Empire in Africa. The
conquest of the northern coast of Africa by the Vandals, like the conquest of
the other great provinces of the Western Empire by the Goths, the Burgundians,
and the Franks, was gradually effected, in a series of consecutive campaigns,
for the Vandals who first entered the country with Genseric were not
sufficiently numerous to subdue and garrison the whole province. The Vandals,
who quitted Spain in 428, could not arm more than 80,000 men. In the year 431,
Genseric having defeated Boniface, took Hippo; but it was not until 439 that he
gained possession of Carthage; and the conquest of the whole African coast to
the frontier of the Greek settlements in Cyrenaica was not completed until
after the death of Valentinian III, and the sack of Rome in 455. The Vandals
were bigoted Arians, and their government was peculiarly tyrannical; they
treated the Roman inhabitants of Africa as political enemies, and persecuted them
as religious opponents. The Visigoths in Spain seized two-thirds of the
subjugated lands, the Ostrogoths in Italy were satisfied with one-third; and
both these people acknowledged the civil rights of the Romans as citizens and
Christians. The Vandals adopted a different policy. They exterminated the Roman
landlords and seized all the richest lands. Genseric reserved immense domains
to himself and to his sons. He divided the densely peopled and rich district of
Africa proper among the Vandal warriors, exempting them from taxation, and
binding them to military service. Eighty thousand lots were apportioned,
clustered round the large possessions of the highest officers. Only the poorer
proprietors were permitted to preserve the arid and distant parts of the
country. Still the number of Romans excited the fears of the Vandals, who
destroyed the walls of the provincial towns in order to deprive the inhabitants
of all means of defence in case of their venturing to rebel. The Roman
population was enfeebled by these measures, but its hatred of the Vandal
government was increased; and when Gelimer assumed the royal authority in the
year 531, the people of Tripolis rebelled, and
solicited assistance from Justinian.
Justinian could not forget the great wealth of Africa
at the time of its conquest by Genseric; the distributions of grain which it
had furnished for Rome, and the immense tribute which it had once paid. He
could hardly have imagined that the government of the Vandal kings could have
depopulated the country and annihilated the greater part of its wealth in the
space of a single century. The conquest of a civilized population by rude
warriors must always be attended by the ruin, and often by the extermination,
of the numerous classes which are supported by those manufactures which are
destined for the consumption of the refined. The first conquerors despise the
manners of the conquered, and never adopt immediately their costly dress, which
is naturally considered as a sign of effeminacy and cowardice, nor do they
adorn their dwellings with the same taste and refinement. The vanquished being
deprived of the wealth necessary to procure these luxuries, the ruin of a
numerous class of manufacturers, and of a great portion of the industrious
population, is an inevitable consequence of this cessation of demand. Thousands
of artisans, tradesmen, and labourers, must either emigrate or perish by
starvation; and the annihilation of a large commercial capital employed in
supporting human life takes place with wonderful rapidity. Yet the conquerors
may long live in what to them is wealth and luxury; the accumulated riches of
the country will for many years be found amply sufficient to gratify all their
desires, and the whole of this wealth will generally be consumed, and even the
power of reproducing it be greatly diminished, before any signs of poverty are
perceived. These facts are illustrated in the clearest manner by the history of
the Vandal domination in Africa. The emigration of Vandal families from Spain
did not consist of more than eighty thousand males of warlike age; and when
Genseric conquered Carthage, his whole army amounted only to fifty thousand
warriors; yet this small horde devoured all the wealth of Africa in the course
of a single century, and, from an army of hardy soldiers, it was converted into
a caste of luxurious nobles living in splendid villas round Carthage. In order
fully to understand the influence of the Vandals on the state of the country
which they occupied, it must be observed that their oppressive government had
already so far lowered the condition and reduced the numbers of the Roman
provincials, that the native Moors began to reoccupy the country from which
Roman industry and Roman capital had previously excluded them. The Moorish
population being in a lower state of civilization than the lowest grade of the
Romans, could exist in districts abandoned as uninhabitable after the
destruction of buildings and plantations which the oppressed farmer had no
means of replacing; and thus, from the time of the Vandal invasion, we find the
Moors continually gaining ground on the Latin colonists, gradually covering an
increased extent of country, and augmenting in numbers and power.
The Vandals had become one of the most luxurious
nations in the world, when they were attacked by Belisarius, but as they
continued to affect the character of soldiers, they were admirably armed, and
ready to take the field with their whole male population. Their equipments were splendid, but the neglect of military
discipline and science rendered their armies very inefficient. A revolution had
lately occurred. Hilderic, the fifth monarch of the Vandal kingdom, the
grandson of Genseric, and son of Eudocia, the daughter of the Emperor
Valentinian III, showed himself inclined to protect his orthodox and Roman
subjects. This disposition, and his Roman descent, excited the suspicion of his
Vandal and Arian countrymen, without attaching the orthodox provincials to his
hated race. Gelimer, the great-grandson of
Genseric, availed himself of the general discontent to
dethrone Hilderic, but the revolution was not effected without manifestations
of dissatisfaction. The Roman inhabitants of the province of Tripolis availed themselves of the opportunity to throw off
the Vandal yoke, and solicit assistance from Justinian; and a Gothic officer
who commanded in Sardinia, then a dependency of the Vandal kingdom, rebelled
against the usurper.
The succession of the Vandal monarchs was as follows:
They invaded Africa, A.D. 428
Genseric ascended the throne. 429
Hunneric, 477
Gundamund, 484
Thorismund, 496
Hilderic, 523
Gelimer seized the crown, 531
The treason of Gelimer afforded Justinian an excellent
pretext for invading the Vandal kingdom. Belisarius, a general already
distinguished by his conduct in the Persian war, was selected to command an
expedition of considerable magnitude, though by no means equal to the great
expedition which Leo I had sent to attack Genseric. Ten thousand infantry, and
five thousand cavalry, were embarked in a fleet of five hundred transports,
which was protected and escorted by ninety-two light galleys of war. The troops
were all veterans, inured to discipline, and the cavalry was composed of the
choicest soldiers in the imperial service. After a long navigation, and some
delay at Methone and in Sicily, they reached Africa.
The Vandals, who, in the time of Genseric, had been redoubted pirates, and as
such were national enemies of the commercial Greeks, were now too wealthy to
court danger, and were ignorant of the approach of the Roman armament, until
they received the news that Belisarius was marching towards Carthage. They were
numerous, and doubtless brave, but they were no longer trained to war, or
accustomed to regular discipline, and their behaviour in the field of battle
was contemptible. Two engagements of cavalry, in the bloodiest of which the
Vandals lost only eight hundred men, decided the fate of Africa, and enabled
Belisarius to subjugate the Vandal kingdom. The brothers of Gelimer fell
gallantly in the field. His own behaviour renders even his personal courage
doubtful,—he fled to the Moors of the mountainous districts; but the misery of
barbarous warfare, and the privations of a besieged camp, soon extinguished his
feelings of pride, and his love of independence. He surrendered, and Belisarius
led him prisoner to Constantinople, where he appeared in the pageantry of a
triumphal procession. A conquering general, a captive monarch, and a Roman
triumph, offered strong temptations to romantic fancies; but the age was a time
of great events and common-place men. Gelimer received from Justinian large
estates in Galatia, to which he retired with his relations. Justinian offered
him the rank of patrician, and a seat in the senate; but he was attached to his
Arian principles, or he thought that his personal dignity would be best
maintained by avoiding to appear in a crowd of servile senators. He refused to
join the Orthodox Church, and evaded accepting the proffered honour.
The Vandals displayed as little patriotism and
fortitude as their king. Some were slain in the war, the rest were incorporated
in the Roman armies, or escaped to the Moors. The provincials were allowed to
reclaim the lands from which they had been expelled at the conquest; the Arian
heresy was proscribed, and the race of these remarkable conquerors was in a
short time exterminated. A single generation sufficed to confound their women
and children in the mass of the Roman inhabitants of the province, and their
very name was soon totally forgotten. There are few instances in history of a
nation disappearing so rapidly and so completely as the Vandals of Africa.
After their conquest by Belisarius, they vanish from the face of the earth as
completely as the Carthaginians after the taking of Carthage by Scipio. Their
first monarch, Genseric, had been powerful enough to plunder both Rome and
Greece, yet his army hardly exceeded fifty thousand men. His successors, who
held the absolute sovereignty of Africa for one hundred and seven years, do not
appear to have commanded a larger force. The Vandals seem never to have
multiplied so much that the individuals lost the oligarchical position in which
their sudden acquisition of immense wealth had placed them.
Belisarius soon established the Roman authority so
firmly round Carthage, that he was able to despatch troops in every direction,
in order to secure and extend his conquests. The western coast was subjected as
far as the Straits of Hercules: a garrison was placed in Septum, and a body of
troops stationed in Tripolis, to secure the eastern
part of this extensive province from the incursions of the Moors. Sardinia, Corsica,
Majorca, Minorca, and Ibiza, were added to the empire, merely by sending
officers to take the command of these islands, and troops to form the
garrisons. The commercial relations of the Greeks, and the civil institutions
of the Romans, still exercised a very powerful influence over the population of
these islands.
Justinian determined to re-establish the Roman
government on precisely the same basis as it existed before the Vandal
invasion; but as the registers of the land-tax and capitation, and the official
admeasurement of the estates, no longer existed, officers were sent from
Constantinople for the assessment of the taxes; and the old principle of
extorting as much of the surplus produce of the land as possible, was adopted
as the rule for apportioning the tribute. Yet, in the opinion of the
provincials, the financial rapacity of the imperial government was a more
tolerable evil than the tyranny of the Vandals, and they remained long
sincerely attached to the Roman power. Unfortunately, the rebellion of the
barbarian mercenaries, who formed the flower of Justinian’s army in Africa, the
despair of the persecuted Arians, the seductions of the Vandal women, and the
hostile incursions of the Moorish tribes, aided the severity of the taxes in
desolating this flourishing province. The exclusion of the Roman population
from the right of bearing arms, and forming themselves into a local militia,
even for the protection of their property against the plundering expeditions of
the neighbouring barbarians, prevented the African provincials from aspiring at
independence, and rendered them incapable of defending their property without
the aid of the experienced though disorderly soldiery of the imperial armies.
Religious persecution, financial oppression, the seditions of unpaid troops,
and the incursions of barbarous tribes, though they failed to cause a general
insurrection of the inhabitants, ruined their wealth, and lessened their
numbers. Procopius records the commencement of the desolation of Africa in his time;
and subsequently, as the imperial government grew weaker, more negligent, and
more corrupt, it pressed more heavily on the industry and well-being of the
provincials, and enabled the barbarous Moors to extend their encroachments on
Roman civilization.
The glory of Belisarius deserves to be contrasted with
the oblivion which has covered the exploits of John the Patrician, one of the
ablest generals of Justinian. This experienced general assumed the command in
Africa when the province had fallen into a state of great disorder; the
inhabitants were exposed to a dangerous coalition of the Moors, and the Roman
army was in such a state of destitution that their leader was compelled to
import the necessary provisions for his troops. Though John defeated the Moors,
and restored prosperity to the province, his name is almost forgotten. His
actions and talents only affected the interests of the Byzantine Empire, and
prolonged the existence of the Roman province of Africa; they exerted no
influence on the fate of any of the European nations whose history has been the
object of study in modern times, so that they were utterly forgotten, when the
recently discovered poetry of Corippus, one of the last and worst of the Roman
poets, rescued them from complete oblivion.
Sect. VI
Causes of the easy Conquest of the Ostrogothic Kingdom
of Italy by Belisarius
The government of the Ostrogoths, though established
on just principles by the wisdom of the great Theodoric, soon fell into the
same state of disorder as that of the Vandals, though the Goths themselves,
from being more civilized, and living more directly under the restraint of the
laws which protected the property of their Roman subjects, had not become
individually so corrupted by the possession of wealth. The conquest of Italy
had not produced any very great revolution in the state of the country. The
Romans had long been accustomed to be nominally defended, but, in fact, to be
ruled, by the commanders of the mercenary troops in the emperor’s service. They
were as completely excluded from military service under their own emperors for
a long period, as they were by the Gothic kings. And though the conquest
deprived them of one-third of their landed property, it secured to them the
enjoyment of the remaining two-thirds under a stronger, and more regular
administration than that of the later emperors. They retained their moveable
wealth, and as they were relieved from extraordinary military contributions, it
is probable that their incomes were not greatly diminished, and that their
social position underwent very little change. Policy induced Theodoric to treat
the inhabitants of Italy with mildness. The permanent maintenance of his
conquests required a considerable revenue, and that revenue could only be
supplied by the industry and civilization of his Italian subjects. His sagacity
told him, that it was wiser to tax the Romans than to plunder them, and that it
was necessary, in order to secure the fruits of a regular system of taxation,
to leave them in the possession of those laws and privileges which enabled them
to defend their civilization. It is singular that the empire of Theodoric, the
most extensive and most celebrated of those which were formed by the conquerors
of the Roman provinces, should have proved the least durable. The justice of
Theodoric, and the barbarity of Genseric, were equally ineffectual in
consolidating a permanent dominion. The civilization of the Romans was more
powerful than the mightiest of the barbarian monarchs; and until that
civilization had sunk nearly to the level of their conquerors, the institutions
of the Romans were always victorious over the national strength of the
barbarians. Under Theodoric, Italy was still Roman. The senate of Rome, the
municipal councils of the other cities, the old courts of law, the parties of
the circus, the factions in the Church, and even the titles and the pensions
attached to nominal offices in the State, all existed unchanged; men still
fought with wild beasts in the Coliseum. The orthodox Roman lived under his own
law, with his own clergy, and the Arian Goth only enjoyed equal liberty. The
powerful and the wealthy, whether they were Romans or Goths, were equally sure
of obtaining justice; the poor, whether Goths or Romans, were in equal danger
of being oppressed.
The kingdom which the great Theodoric left to his
grand-son Athalaric, under the guardianship of his
daughter Amalasunta, embraced not only Italy, Sicily,
and a portion of the south of France; it also included Dalmatia, a part of
Illyricum, Pannonia, Noricum, and Rhaetia. In these extensive dominions, the
Gothic race formed but a small part of the population; and yet the Goths, from
the privileges which they enjoyed, were everywhere regarded with jealousy by
the bulk of the inhabitants. Dissensions arose in the royal family; Athalaric died young; Amalasunta
was murdered by Theodatus, his successor; and as she
had been in constant communication with the court of Constantinople, this crime
afforded Justinian a decent pretext for interfering in the affairs of the
Goths. To prepare the way for the reconquest of Italy, Belisarius was sent to
attack Sicily, which he invaded with an army of seven thousand five hundred
men, in the year 535, and subjected without difficulty. During the same
campaign, Dalmatia was conquered by the imperial arms, recovered by the Goths,
but again reconquered by Justinian’s troops. A rebellion of the troops in
Africa arrested, for a while, the progress of Belisarius, and compelled him to
visit Carthage; but he returned to Sicily in a short time, and crossing over to
Rhegium, marched directly to Naples. As he proceeded,
he was everywhere welcomed by the inhabitants, who were almost universally
Greeks; even the Gothic commander in the south of Italy favoured the progress
of the Roman general.
The city of Naples made a vigorous defence; but after
a siege of three weeks it was taken by introducing into the place a body of
troops through the passage of an ancient aqueduct. The conduct of Belisarius,
after the capture of the city, was dictated by policy, and displayed very
little humanity. As the inhabitants had shown some disposition to assist the
Gothic garrison in defending the city, and as such conduct would have greatly
increased the difficulty of his campaign in Italy, in order to intimidate the
population of other cities he appears to have winked at the pillage of the
town, to have tolerated the massacre of many of the citizens in the churches,
where they had sought an asylum, and to have overlooked a sedition of the
lowest populace, in which the leaders of the Gothic party were assassinated.
From Naples, Belisarius marched forward to Rome.
Only sixty years had elapsed since Rome was conquered
by Odoacer; and during this period its population, the ecclesiastical and civil
authority of its bishop, who was the highest dignitary in the Christian world,
and the influence of its senate, which still continued to be in the eyes of
mankind the most honourable political body in existence, enabled it to preserve
a species of independent civic constitution. Theodoric had availed himself of
this municipal government to smooth away many of the difficulties which
presented themselves in the administration of Italy. The Goths, however, in
leaving the Romans in possession of their own civil laws and institutions, had
not diminished their aversion to a foreign yoke; yet, as they possessed no
distinct feelings of nationality apart from their connection with the imperial
domination and their religious orthodoxy, they never aspired to independence,
and were content to turn their eyes towards the emperor of the East as their
legitimate sovereign. Belisarius, therefore, entered the ‘Eternal City’ rather
as a, friend than as a conqueror; but he had hardly entered it before he
perceived that it would be necessary to take every precaution to defend his
conquest against the new Gothic king Witiges. He
immediately repaired the walls, strengthened them with a breastwork, collected
large stores of provisions, and prepared to sustain a siege.
The Gothic war forms an important epoch in the history
of the city of Rome; for, within the space of sixteen years, it changed masters
five times, and suffered three severe sieges.
Rome was taken by Belisarius A.D. 536
Besieged by Witiges, 537
Besieged and taken by Totila,
546
Retaken by Belisarius, 547
Again besieged and retaken by Totila,
549
Taken by Narses, 552
Its population was
almost destroyed; its public buildings and its walls must have undergone many
changes, according to the exigencies of its defence. It has, consequently, been
too generally assumed that the existing walls indicate the exact position of
those of Aurelian. This period is also memorable for the ruin of many monuments
of ancient art, which the generals of Justinian destroyed without compunction.
With the conquest of Rome by Belisarius the history of the ancient city may be
considered as terminating; and with his defence against Witiges
commences the history of the Middle Ages,—of the times of destruction and of
change.
Witiges laid siege to Rome with an army which Procopius says amounted to 150,000
men, yet this army was insufficient to invest the whole circuit of the city.
The Gothic king distributed his troops in seven fortified camps; six were
formed to surround the city, and the seventh was placed to protect the Milvian
Bridge. Five camps covered the space from the Praenestine
to the Flaminian gates, and the remaining camp was formed beyond the Tiber, in
the plain below the Vatican. By these arrangements the Goths only commanded
about half the circuit of Rome, and the roads to Naples and to the ports at the
mouth of the Tiber remained open. The Roman infantry was now the weakest part
of a Roman army. Even in the defence of a fortified city it was subordinate to
the cavalry, and the military superiority of the Roman arms was sustained by
mercenary horsemen. It is strange to find the tactics of the middle ages
described by Procopius in classic Greek. The Goths displayed an utter ignorance
of the art of war; they had no skill in the use of military engines, and they
were unable to render their numerical superiority available in assaults. The
leading operations of the attack and defence consisted in a series of cavalry
engagements fought under the walls; and in these the superior discipline and
skill of the mercenaries of Belisarius generally secured them the victory. The
Roman cavalry,—for so the mixture of Huns, Heruls,
and Armenians which formed the elite of the army must be termed,—trusted
chiefly to the bow; while the Goths placed their reliance on the lance and
sword, which the able manoeuvres of their enemies seldom allowed them to use
with effect. The infantry of both armies usually remained idle spectators of
the combat. Belisarius himself considered it of little use in a field of
battle; and when he once reluctantly admitted it, at the pressing solicitation
of its commanders, to share in one of his engagements, its defeat, after the
exhibition of great bravery on the part both of the officers and men, confirmed
him in his preference of the cavalry. In spite of the prudent arrangements
adopted by Belisarius to insure supplies of provisions from his recent conquests
in Sicily and Africa, Rome suffered severely from famine during the siege; but
the Gothic army was compelled to undergo equal hardships, and suffered far
greater losses from disease. The communications of the garrison with the coast
were for a time interrupted, but at last a body of five thousand fresh troops,
and an abundant supply of provisions, despatched by Justinian to the assistance
of Belisarius, entered Rome. Shortly after the arrival of this reinforcement,
the Goths found themselves constrained to abandon the siege, in which they had
persevered for a year. Justinian again augmented his army in Italy, by sending
over seven thousand troops under the command of the eunuch Narses, a man whose
military talents were in no way inferior to those of Belisarius, and whose name
occupies an equally important place in the history of Italy. The emperor,
guided by the prudent jealousy which dictated the strictest control over all
the powerful generals of the empire, had conferred on Narses an independent authority
over his own division, and that general, presuming too far on his knowledge of
Justinian’s feelings, ventured to throw serious obstacles in the way of
Belisarius. The dissensions of the two generals delayed the progress of the
Roman arms. The Goths availed themselves of the opportunity to continue the war
with vigour; they succeeded in reconquering Milan, which had admitted a Roman
garrison, and sacked the city, which was second only to Rome in wealth and
population. They massacred the whole male population, and behaved with such
cruelty that three hundred thousand persons were said to have perished—a number
which probably only indicates the whole population of Milan at this periods
A state of warfare soon disorganized the ill-cemented
government of the Gothic kingdom; and the ravages caused by the wide-extended
military operations of the armies, which degenerated into a succession of
sieges and skirmishes, created a dreadful famine in the north of Italy. Whole
provinces remained uncultivated; great numbers of the industrious natives
perished by actual starvation, and the ranks of the Goths were thinned by
misery and disease. Society receded a step towards barbarism. Procopius, who
was himself in Italy at the time, records a horrible story of two women who
lived on human flesh, and were discovered to have murdered seventeen persons,
in order to devour their bodies. This famine assisted the progress of the Roman
arms, as the imperial troops drew their supplies of provisions from the East,
while the measures of their enemies were paralyzed by the general want.
Witiges, finding his resources inadequate to stop the conquests of Belisarius,
solicited the aid of the Franks, and despatched an embassy to Chosroes to
excite the jealousy of the Persian monarch. The Franks, under Theodebert, entered Italy, but they were soon compelled to
retire; and Belisarius, being placed at the head of the whole army by the
recall of Narses, quickly terminated the war. Ravenna, the Gothic capital, was
invested; but the siege was more remarkable for the negotiations which were
carried on during its progress than for the military operations. The Goths,
with the consent of Witiges, made Belisarius the
singular offer of acknowledging him as the Emperor of the West, on condition of
his joining his forces to theirs, and permitting them to retain their position
and property in Italy, thus insuring them the possession of their nationality
and their peculiar laws. Perhaps neither the state of the mercenary army which
he commanded, nor the condition of the Gothic nation, rendered the project very
feasible. It is certain that Belisarius only listened to it, in order to hasten
the surrender of Ravenna, and secure the person of Witiges
without farther bloodshed. Italy submitted to Justinian, and the few Goths who
maintained their independence beyond the Po pressed Belisarius in vain to
declare himself emperor. But even without these solicitations, his power had
awakened the fears of his sovereign, and he was recalled, though with honour,
from his command in Italy. He returned to Constantinople leading Witiges captive, as he had formerly appeared conducting
Gelimer.
Belisarius had hardly quitted Italy when the Goths
reassembled their forces. They were accustomed to rule, and nourished in the profession
of arms. Justinian sent a civilian, Alexander the logothete, to govern Italy,
hoping that his financial arrangements would render the new conquest a source
of revenue to the imperial treasury. The fiscal administration of the new
governor soon excited great discontent. He diminished the number of the Roman
troops, and put a stop to those profits which a state of war usually affords
the military; while, at the same time, he abolished the pensions and privileges
which formed no. inconsiderable portion of the revenue of the higher classes,
and which had never been entirely suppressed during the Gothic domination.
Alexander may have acted in some cases with undue severity in enforcing these
measures; but it is evident, from their nature, that he must have received
express orders to put an end to what Justinian considered the lavish
expenditure of Belisarius. A part of the Goths in the north of Italy retained
their independence after the surrender of Witiges.
They raised Hildibald to the throne, which he occupied
about a year, when he was murdered by one of his own guards. The tribe of Rugians then raised Erarich their
leader to the throne; but on his entering into negotiations with the Romans he
was murdered, after a reign of only five months. Totila
was then elected king of the Goths, and had he not been opposed to the greatest
men whom the declining age of the Roman Empire produced, he would probably have
succeeded in restoring the Gothic monarchy in Italy. His successes endeared him
to his countrymen, while the justice of his administration, contrasted with the
rapacity of Justinian’s government, gained him the respect and submission of
the Italians. He was on the point of commencing the siege of Rome, when
Belisarius, who, after his departure from Ravenna, had been employed in the
Persian war, was sent back to Italy to recover the ground already lost. The
imperial forces were destitute of that unity and military organization which
constitute a number of different corps into one army. The various bodies of
troops were commanded by officers completely independent of one another, and
obedient only to Belisarius as commander-in-chief. Justinian, acting on his
usual maxims of jealousy, and distrusting Belisarius more than formerly,
retained the greater part of that general’s body-guard, and all his veteran
followers, at Constantinople; so that he now appeared in Italy unaccompanied by
a staff of scientific officers and a body of veteran troops on whose experience
and discipline he could rely for implicit obedience to his orders. The
heterogeneous elements of which his army was composed made all combined
operations impracticable, and his position was rendered still more
disadvantageous by the change that had taken place in that of his enemy. Totila was now able to command every sacrifice on the part
of his followers, for the Goths, taught by their misfortunes and deprived of
their wealth, felt the importance of union and discipline, and paid the
strictest attention to the orders of their sovereign. The Gothic king laid
siege to Rome, and Belisarius established himself in Porto, at the mouth of the
Tiber; but all his endeavours to relieve the besieged city proved unsuccessful,
and Totila compelled it to surrender under his eye,
and in spite of all his exertions.
The national and religious feelings of the orthodox
Romans rendered them the irreconcilable enemies of the Arian Goths. Totila soon perceived that it would not be in his power to
defend Rome against a scientific enemy and a hostile population, in consequence
of the great extent of the fortifications, and the impossibility of dislodging
the imperial troops from the forts at the mouth of the Tiber. But he also
perceived that the Eastern emperors would be unable to maintain a footing in
central Italy without the support of the Roman population, whose industrial,
commercial, aristocratic, and ecclesiastical influence was concentrated in the
city population of Rome. He therefore determined to destroy the Eternal City,
and if policy authorizes kings on great occasions to trample on the precepts of
humanity, the king of the Goths might claim a right to destroy the capital of
the Romans. Even the statesman may still doubt whether the decision of Totila, if it had been carried into execution in the most
merciless manner, would not have purified the moral atmosphere of Italian
society. He commenced the destruction of the walls; but either the difficulty
of completing his project, or the feelings of humanity which were inseparable
from his enlightened ambition, induced him to listen to the representations of
Belisarius, who conjured him to abandon his barbarous scheme of devastation. Totila, nevertheless, did everything in his power to
depopulate Rome; he compelled the inhabitants to retire into the Campagna, and
forced the senators to abandon their native city. It is to this emigration that
the utter extinction of the old Roman race and civic government must be
attributed; for when Belisarius, and, at a later period, when Totila himself, attempted to repeople Rome, they laid the
foundations of a new society, which connects itself rather with the history of
the middle ages than with that of preceding times.
Belisarius entered the city after the departure of the
Goths; and as he found it deserted, he had the greatest difficulty in putting
it in a state of defence. But though Belisarius was enabled, by his military
skill, to defend Rome against the attacks of Totila,
he was unable to make any head against the Gothic army in the open field; and
after vainly endeavouring to bring back victory to the Roman standards in
Italy, he received permission to resign his command and return to
Constantinople. His want of success must be attributed solely to the inadequacy
of the means placed at his disposal for encountering an active and able
sovereign like Totila. The unpopularity of his second
administration in Italy arose from the neglect of Justinian in paying the
troops, and the necessity which that irregularity imposed on their commander,
of levying heavy contributions on the Italians, while it rendered the task of
enforcing strict discipline, and of protecting the property of the people from
the ill-paid soldiery, quite impracticable. Justice, however, requires that we
should not omit to mention that Belisarius, though he returned to
Constantinople with diminished glory, did not neglect his pecuniary interests,
and came back without any diminution of his own wealth.
Great as the talents of Belisarius really were, and
sound as his judgment appears to have been, still it must be confessed that his
name occupies a more prominent place in history than his merits are entitled to
claim. The accident that his conquests put an end to two powerful monarchies,
of his having led captive to Constantinople the representatives of the dreaded
Genseric and the great Theodoric, joined with the circumstance that he enjoyed
the singular good fortune of having his exploits recorded in the classic
language of Procopius, the last historian of the Greeks, have rendered a
brilliant career more brilliant from the medium through which it is seen. At
the same time the tale of his blindness and poverty has made his very name
express heroism reduced to misery by royal ingratitude, and extended a sympathy
with his misfortunes into circles which would have remained indifferent to the
real events of his history. Belisarius, though he refused the Gothic throne and
the empire of the West, did not despise nor neglect wealth; he accumulated
riches which could not have been acquired by any commander-in-chief amidst the
wars and famines of the period, without rendering the military and civil
administration subservient to his pecuniary profit. On his return from Italy he
lived at Constantinople in almost regal splendour, and maintained a body of
seven thousand cavalry attached to his household. In an empire where
confiscation was an ordinary financial resource, and under a sovereign whose
situation rendered jealousy only common prudence, it is not surprising that the
wealth of Belisarius excited the imperial cupidity, and induced Justinian to
seize great part of it. His fortune was twice reduced by confiscations. The
behaviour of the general under his misfortunes, and the lamentable picture of
his depression which Procopius has drawn, when he was impoverished by his first
disgrace, does not tend to elevate his character. At a later period, his wealth
was again confiscated on an accusation of treason, and on this occasion it is
said that he was deprived of his sight, and reduced to such a state of
destitution that he begged his bread in a public square, soliciting charity
with the exclamation, “Give Belisarius an obolus!” But ancient historians were
ignorant of this fable, which has been rejected by every modern authority in
Byzantine history. Justinian, on calm reflection, disbelieved the treason
imputed to a man who, in his younger days, had refused to ascend a throne; or
else he pardoned what he supposed to be the error of a general to whose
services he was so deeply indebted; and Belisarius, reinstated in some part of
his fortune, died in possession of wealth and honour.
As soon as Totila was freed
from the restraint imposed on his movements by the fear of Belisarius, he
quickly recovered possession of Rome; and the loss of Italy appeared
inevitable, when Justinian decided on making a new effort to retain it. As it
was necessary to send a large army against the Goths, and invest the
commander-in-chief with great powers, it is not probable that Justinian would
have trusted any other of his generals more than Belisarius had he not
fortunately possessed an able officer, the eunuch Narses, who could never rebel
with the hope of placing the imperial crown on his own head. This assurance of
his fidelity gave Narses great influence in the interior of the palace, and
secured him a support which no other general attained. His military talents,
and his freedom from the reproach of avarice or peculation, augmented his
personal influence, and his diligence and liberality soon assembled a powerful
army. The choicest mercenary troops — Huns, Heruls,
Armenians, and Lombards — marched under his standard with the veteran Roman
soldiers. The first object of Narses after his arrival in Italy was to force
the Goths to risk a general engagement, trusting to the excellence of his
troops, and to his own skill in the employment of their superior discipline.
The rival armies met at Tagina, near Nocera, and the
victory of Narses was completed Totila and six
thousand Goths perished, and Rome again fell under the dominion of Justinian.
At the solicitation of the Goths an army of Franks and Germans was permitted by
Theobald, king of Austrasia, to enter Italy for the purpose of making a
diversion in their favour. Bucelin, the leader of
this army, was met by Narses on the banks of the Vulturnus,
near Capua. The forces of the Franks consisted of thirty thousand men, those of
the Romans did not exceed eighteen thousand, but the victory of Narses was so complete
that but few of the invaders escaped. The Goths elected another king, Theias, who perished with his army near the banks of the Samo. His death put an end to the kingdom of the
Ostrogoths, and allowed Narses to turn his whole attention to the civil government
of his conquests, and to establish security of property and a strict
administration of justice. He appears to have been a man singularly well
adapted to his situation — possessing the highest military talents, combined
with a perfect knowledge of the civil and financial administration, he was able
to estimate with exactness the sum which he could remit to Constantinople,
without arresting the gradual improvement of the country. His fiscal government
was, nevertheless, regarded by the Italians as extremely severe, and he was
unpopular with the inhabitants of Rome.
Chronology of the Kings of the Ostrogoths.
A. D.
Theodoric, 493-526
Athalaric, 526-534
Amalasunta.
Theodatus, 534-536
Witiges, 536-540
Hildibald, 540-541
Erarich, 541-541
Totila, 541-552
Theias, 552-653
The existence of a numerous Roman population in Spain,
connected with the Eastern Empire by the memory of ancient ties, by active
commercial relations, and by a strong orthodox feeling against the Arian
Visigoths, enabled Justinian to avail himself of these advantages in the same
manner as he had done in Africa and Italy. The king Theudes
attempted to make a diversion in Africa by besieging Ceuta, in order to call
off the attention of Justinian from Italy. His attack was unsuccessful, but the
circumstances were not favourable at the time for Justinian’s attempting to
revenge the injury. Dissensions in the country soon after enabled the emperor
to find a pretext for sending a fleet and troops to support the claims of a
rebel chief, and in this way he gained possession of a large portion of the
south of Spain. The rebel Athanagild having been elected king of the Visigoths,
vainly endeavoured to drive the Romans out of the provinces which they had
occupied. Subsequent victories extended the conquests of Justinian from the
mouth of the Tagus, Ebora, and Corduba,
along the coast of the ocean, and that of the Mediterranean almost as far as
Valentia; and at times the relations of the Romans with the Catholic population
of the interior enabled them to carry their arms almost into the centre of
Spain. The Eastern Empire retained possession of these distant conquests for
about sixty years.
Sect. VII
Relations of the Northern Nations with the Roman
Empire and the Greek Nation
The reign of Justinian witnessed the total decline of
the power of the Gothic race on the banks of the Danube, where a void was
created in the population which neither the Huns nor the Sclavonians
could fill. The consequence was that new races of barbarians from the East
poured into the countries between the Black Sea and the Carinthian
Alps; and the military aristocracy of the Goths, whose social arrangements
conformed to the system of the ancient world, was succeeded by the ruder
domination of nomad tribes. The causes of this change are to be found in the
same great principle which was modifying the position of the various races of
mankind in every region of the earth; and by the destruction of the elements of
civilization in the country immediately to the south of the Danube, in
consequence of the repeated ravages to which it had been exposed; and in the
impossibility of any agricultural population, not sunk very low in the scale of
civil society, finding the means of subsistence, where villages, farm-houses,
and barns were in ruins; where the fruit-trees were cut down; where the
vineyards were destroyed, and the cattle required for cultivating the land were
carried off. The Goths, who had once ruled all the country from the Lake Maeotis to the Adriatic, and who were the most civilized of
all the invaders of the Roman Empire, were the first to disappear. Only a
single tribe, called the Tetraxits, continued to
inhabit their old seats in the Tauric Chersonese,
where some of their descendants survived until the sixteenth century. The Gepids, a kindred people, had defeated the Huns, and
established their independence after the death of Attila. They obtained from
Marcian the cession of a considerable district on the banks of the Danube, and
an annual subsidy in order to secure their alliance in defending the frontier
of the empire against other invaders. In the reign of Justinian their
possessions were reduced to the territories lying between the Save and the
Drave, but the alliance with the Roman Empire continued in force, and they
still received their subsidy.
The Heruls, a people whose
connection with Scandinavia is mentioned by Procopius, and who took part in
some of the earliest incursions of the Gothic tribes into the empire, had,
after many vicissitudes, obtained from the emperor Anastasius a fixed
settlement; and in the time of Justinian they possessed the country to the
south of the Save, and occupied the city of Singidunum
(Belgrade). The Lombards, a Germanic people, who had once been subject to the Heruls, but who had subsequently defeated their masters,
and driven them within the bounds of the empire for protection, were induced by
Justinian to invade the Ostrogothic kingdom, and establish themselves in
Pannonia, to the north of the Drave. They occupied the country between the
Danube and the Theiss, and, like their neighbours,
received an annual subsidy from the Eastern Empire. These Gothic nations never
formed the bulk of the population in the lands which they occupied; they were
only the lords of the soil, who knew no occupations but those of war and
hunting. But their successes in war, and the subsidies by which they had been
enriched, had accustomed them to a degree of rude magnificence which became
constantly of more difficult attainment, as their own oppressive government,
and the ravages of their more barbarous neighbours, depopulated all the regions
around their settlements. When they became, like the other northern conquerors,
a territorial aristocracy, they suffered the fate of all privileged classes
which are separated from the mass of the people. Their luxury increased, and
their numbers diminished. At the same time, incessant wars and ravages of
territory swept away the unarmed population, so that the conquerors were at
last compelled to abandon these possessions to seek richer seats, as the
Indians of the American continent quit the lands where they have destroyed the
wild game, and plunge into new forests.
Beyond the territory of the Lombards, the country to
the south and east was inhabited by various tribes of Sclavonians,
who occupied the country between the Adriatic and the Danube, including a part
of Hungary and Vallachia, where they mingled their
settlements with the Dacian tribes who had dwelt in these regions from an
earlier period. The independent Sclavonians were, at
this time, a nation of savage robbers, in the lowest condition of social
civilization, whose ravages and incursions were rapidly tending to reduce all
their neighbours to the same state of barbarism. Their plundering expeditions
were chiefly directed against the rural population of the empire, and were
often pushed many days’ journey to the south of the Danube. Their cruelty was
dreadful; but neither their numbers nor their military power excited, at this
time, any fear that they would be able to effect permanent conquests within the
bounds of the empire.
The Bulgarians, a nation of Hunnish
or Turkish race, occupied the eastern parts of ancient Dacia, from the
Carpathian Mountains to the Dniester. Beyond them, as far as the plains to the
east of the Tanais, the country was still ruled by
the Huns, who had now separated into two independent kingdoms: that to the west
was called the Kutigur; and the other, to the east,
the Utugur. The Huns had conquered the whole Tauric Chersonese except the city of Cherson. The
importance of the commercial relations which Cherson kept up between the
northern and southern nations was so advantageous to all parties, that it
enabled the Greek colonists in this distant spot to preserve their political
independence.
In the early part of Justinian’s reign (A.D, 528) the
city of Bosporus was taken and plundered by the Huns. It was soon recovered by
an expedition fitted out by the emperor at Odessus
(Varna); but these repeated conquests of a mercantile emporium, and an agricultural
colony, by pastoral nomads like the Huns, and by mercenary soldiers like the
imperial army, must have had a very depressing effect on the remains of Greek
civilization in the Tauric Chersonesus.
The increasing barbarism of the inhabitants of these regions diminished the
commerce which had once flourished in the neighbouring lands, and which was now
almost entirely centred in Cherson. The hordes of plundering nomads, who never
remained long in one spot, had little to sell, and did not possess the means of
purchasing foreign luxuries; and the language and manners of the Greeks, which
had once been prevalent all around the shores of the Euxine, began to fall into
neglect. The various Greek cities which still maintained some portion of their
ancient social and municipal institutions received many severe blows during the
reign of Justinian. The towns of Kepoi and Phanagoris, situated near the Cimmerian Bosphorus, were
taken by the Huns. Sebastopolis, or Diospolis, and Pityous, distant two days’ journey from one another, on the
eastern shores of the Euxine, were abandoned by their garrisons during the
Colchian war; and the conquests of the Avars at last confined the influence of
the Roman Empire, and the trade and civilization of the Greeks, to the cities
of Bosporus and Cherson.
It is necessary to record a few incidents which mark
the progress of barbarism, poverty, and depopulation, in the lands to the south
of the Danube, and explain the causes which compelled the Roman and Greek races
to abandon their settlements in these countries. Though the commencement of
Justinian’s reign was illustrated by a signal defeat of the Antes, a powerful Sclavonian tribe, still the invasions of that people were
soon renewed with all their former vigour. In the year 533 they defeated and
slew Chilbudius, a Roman general of great reputation,
whose name indicates his northern origin. In 538 a band of Bulgarians defeated
the Roman army chained with the defence of the country, captured the general Constantiolus, and compelled him to purchase his liberty by
the payment of one thousand pounds of gold, —a sum which was considered
sufficient for the ransom of the flourishing city of Antioch by the Persian
monarch Chosroes. In 539 the Gepids ravaged
Illyricum, and the Huns laid waste the whole country from the Adriatic to the
long wall which protected Constantinople. Cassandra was taken, and the
peninsula of Pallene plundered; the fortifications of the Thracian Chersonese
were forced, and a body of the Huns crossed over the Dardanelles into Asia,
while another, after ravaging Thessaly, turned Thermopylae, and plundered
Greece as far as the Isthmus of Corinth. In this expedition, the Huns are said
to have collected and carried away one hundred and twenty thousand prisoners,
chiefly belonging to the rural population of the Greek provinces. The
fortifications erected by Justinian, and the attention which the misfortunes of
his arms compelled him to pay to the efficiency of his troops on the northern
frontier, restrained the incursions of the barbarians for some years after this
fearful foray; but in 548, the Sclavonians again
ravaged Illyricum to the very walls of Dyrrachium, murdering the inhabitants,
and carrying them away as slaves in face of a Roman army of fifteen thousand
men, which was unable to arrest their progress. In 550 fresh incursions
desolated Illyricum and Thrace. Topirus, a
flourishing city on the Aegean Sea, was taken by assault. Fifteen thousand of
the inhabitants were massacred, while an immense number of women and children
were carried away into captivity. In 551 an eunuch named Scholasticus, who was
intrusted with the defence of Thrace, was defeated by the barbarians near
Adrianople. Next year, the Sclavonians again entered
Illyricum and Thrace, and these provinces were reduced to such a state of
disorder, that an exiled Lombard prince, who was dissatisfied with the rank and
treatment which he had received from Justinian, taking advantage of the
confusion, fled from Constantinople with a company of the imperial guards and a
few of his own countrymen, and, after traversing all Thrace and Illyricum,
plundering the country as he passed, and evading the imperial troops, at last
reached the country of the Gepids in safety. Even
Greece, though usually secure from its distance and its mountain passes against
the incursions of the northern nations, did not escape the general destruction.
It has been mentioned that Totila despatched a fleet
of three hundred vessels from Italy to ravage Corcyra and the coast of Epirus,
and this expedition plundered Nicopolis and Dodona.
Repeated ravages at last reduced the great plains of Moesia to such a state of
desolation that Justinian allowed even the savage Huns to form settlements to
the south of the Danube.
Thus the Roman government began to replace the
agricultural population by hordes of nomad herdsmen, and abandoned the defence
of civilization as a vain struggle against the increasing strength of
barbarism.
The most celebrated invasion of the empire at this
period, though by no means the most destructive, was that of Zabergan, the king of the Kutigur
Huns, who crossed the Danube in the year 559. Its historical fame is derived
from its success in approaching the walls of Constantinople, and because its
defeat was the last military exploit of Belisarius. Zabergan
formed his army into three divisions, and finding the country everywhere
destitute of defence, he ventured to advance on the capital with one division,
amounting to only seven thousand men. After all the lavish expenditure of
Justinian in building forts and erecting fortifications, he had allowed the
long wall of Anastasius to fall into such a state of dilapidation, that Zabergan passed it without difficulty, and advanced to
within seventeen miles of Constantinople, before he encountered any serious
resistance. The modern historian must be afraid of conveying a false impression
of the weakness of the empire, and of magnifying the neglect of the government,
if he venture to transcribe the ancient accounts of this expedition. Yet the miserable
picture which ancient writers have drawn of the close of Justinian’s reign is
authenticated by the calamities of his successors. As soon as the wars with the
Persians and Goths ceased, Justinian dismissed the greater part of those chosen
mercenaries who had proved themselves the best troops of the age, and he
neglected to fill up the vacancies in the native legions of the empire by
enrolling new recruits. His immense expenditure in fortifications, civil and
religious buildings, and court pageants, forced him at times to be as
economical as he was at others careless and lavish. The army which had achieved
so many foreign conquests was reduced, and Constantinople, where Belisarius had
lately appeared with seven thousand horsemen, was now so destitute of troops
that the great wall was left unguarded. Zabergan
established his camp at the village of Melantias, on
the river Athyras, which flows into the lake now
called Buyuk Tchekmedjee,
or the great bridge.
At this crisis the fate of the Roman Empire depended
on the ill-paid and neglected troops of the line, who formed the ordinary
garrison of the capital, and on the veterans and pensioners who happened to
reside there, and who immediately resumed their arms. The corps of imperial
guards called Silentiarii, Protectores,
and Domestici, shared with the chosen mercenaries the
duty of mounting guard on the fortifications of the imperial palace, and of
protecting the person of Justinian, not only against the barbarian enemy, but
also against any attempt which a rebellious general or a seditious subject
might make, to profit by the general confusion. After the walls of
Constantinople were properly manned, Belisarius marched out of the city with
his army. The legion of scholarians formed the
principal body of his troops, and it was distinguished by the regularity of its
organization and the splendour of its equipments.
This privileged corps consisted of 3500 men, and its ordinary duty was to guard
the outer court and the avenues of the emperor’s residence. They may be
considered as the representatives of the praetorian guards of an earlier period
of Roman history, and the manner in which their discipline was ruined by
Justinian affords a curious parallel to many similar bodies in other despotic
states. The scholarians received higher pay than the
troops of the line. Previous to the reign of Zeno, they had been composed of
veteran soldiers, who were appointed to vacancies in the corps as a reward for
good service. Armenians were generally preferred by Zeno’s immediate predecessors,
because the volunteers of this warlike nation were considered more likely to
remain firmly attached to the emperor’s person in case of any rebellious
movement in the empire, than native subjects who might participate in the
exasperation caused by the measures of the government. The instability of
Zeno’s throne induced him to change the organization of the scholarians.
His object was to form a body of troops whose interests secured their fidelity
to his person. Instead of veteran soldiers who brought their military habits
and prejudices into the corps, he filled its ranks with his own countrymen,
from the mountains of Isauria. These men were valiant, and accustomed to the
use of arms. Though they were ignorant of tactics and impatient of discipline,
their obedience to their officers was secured by their attachment to Zeno as
their countryman and benefactor, and by their absolute dependence on his power
as emperor for the enjoyment of their enviable position. The jealousy with
which these rude mountaineers were regarded by the whole army, and the hatred
felt to them by the people of Constantinople, kept them separate from the rest
of the world, secluded in their barracks and steady to their duty in the
palace. Anastasius and Justin I introduced the practice of appointing the scholarians by favour, without reference to their military
services; and Justinian is accused of establishing the abuse of selling places
in their ranks to wealthy citizens, and householders of the capital who had no
intention of following a military life, but who purchased their enrolment in
the scholarians to enjoy the privilege of the
military class in the Roman empire. It is remarkable that absolute princes,
whose power is so seriously endangered by the inefficiency of their army,
should be so often themselves the corrupters of its discipline. The abuses
which render chosen troops useless as soldiers are generally introduced by the
sovereign, as in this example of the scholarians of
Justinian, but they are sometimes caused by the power of the soldiers, who
convert their corps into a hereditary corporation, as in the case of the
janissaries of the Othoman Empire.
On such troops Belisarius was forced to depend for the
defence of the country round Constantinople, and for the more difficult task of
conserving his own military reputation unsullied in his declining years. While
the federates remained to guard Justinian, his general marched to encounter the
Huns at the head of a motley army, composed of the neglected troops of the line,
and of the sleek scholarians, who, though they formed
the most imposing and brilliant portion of his force in appearance, were in
reality the worst-trained and least courageous troops under his orders. A crowd
of volunteers also joined his standard, and from these he was able to select
upwards of 300 of those veteran horseguards who had
been so often victorious over the Goths and the Persians. Belisarius
established his camp at Chettoukome, a position which
enabled him to circumscribe the ravages of the Huns, and stop their advance to
the villages and country houses in the immediate vicinity of Constantinople.
The peasants who had fled from the enemy assembled round his army, and their
labour enabled him to cover his position with strong works and a deep ditch,
before the Huns could attack his troops.
There can be doubt that the historians of this
campaign misrepresent the facts when they state that the Roman army was
inferior in number to the division of the Huns which Zabergan
led against Constantinople. This inferiority could only exist in the cavalry;
but we know that Belisarius had no confidence in the Roman infantry, and the
ill-disciplined troops then under his orders must have excited his contempt.
They, on the other hand, were confident in their numbers, and their general was
fearful lest their rashness should compromise his plan of operations. He
therefore addressed them in a speech, which modified their precipitation by
assuring them of success after a little delay. A cavalry engagement, in which Zabergan led 2000 Huns in person to beat up the quarters of
the Romans, was completely defeated. Belisarius allowed the enemy to approach
without opposition, but before they could extend their line to charge, they
were assailed in flank by the unexpected attack of a body of two hundred chosen
cavalry, which issued suddenly from a woody glen, and at the same moment
Belisarius charged them in front. The shock was irresistible. The Huns fled
instantly, but their retreat was embarrassed by their position, and they left
four hundred men dead on the field. This trifling affair finished the campaign.
The Huns, finding that they could no longer collect supplies, were anxious to
save the booty in their possession. They broke up their camp at Melantias, retired to St. Stratonikos,
and hastened to escape beyond the long wall. Belisarius had no body of cavalry
with which he could venture to pursue an active and experienced enemy. An
unsuccessful skirmish might still compromise the safety of many districts, and
the jealousy of Justinian was perhaps as dangerous as the army of Zabergan. The victor returned to Constantinople, and there
heard himself reproached by courtiers and sycophants for not bringing back the
king of the Kutigurs a prisoner, as in other days he
had presented the kings of the Vandals and of the Ostrogoths captives before
Justinian’s throne. Belisarius was ungratefully treated by Justinian, suspected
of resenting the imperial ingratitude, accused of treason, plundered, and
pardoned.
The division of the Huns sent against the Thracian
Chersonese was as unsuccessful as the main body of the army. But while the Huns
were incapable of forcing the wall which defended the isthmus, they so utterly
despised the Roman garrison, that six hundred embarked on rafts, in order to
paddle round the fortifications. The Byzantine general possessed twenty
galleys, and with this naval force he easily destroyed all who had ventured to
sea. A well-timed sally on the barbarians who had witnessed the destruction of
their comrades, routed the remainder, and showed them that their contempt of
the Roman soldiery had been carried too far. The third division of the Huns had
been ordered to advance through Macedonia and Thessaly. It penetrated as far as
Thermopylae, but was not very successful in collecting plunder, and retreated
with as little glory as the other two.
Justinian, who had seen a barbarian at the head of an
army of twenty thousand men ravage a considerable portion of his empire,
instead of pursuing and crushing the invader, engaged the king of the Utugur Huns, by promises and money, to attack Zabergan. These intrigues were successful and the
dissensions of the two monarchs prevented the Huns from again attacking the
empire. A few years after this incursion the Avars invaded Europe, and, by
subduing both the Hunnish kingdoms, gave the Roman
emperor a far more dangerous and powerful neighbour than had lately threatened
his northern frontier.
The Turks and the Avars become politically known to
the Greeks, for the first time, towards the end of Justinian’s reign. Since
that period the Turks have always continued to occupy a memorable place in the
history of mankind, as the destroyers of ancient civilization. In their
progress towards the West, they were preceded by the Avars, a people whose
arrival in Europe produced the greatest alarm, whose dominion was soon widely
extended, but whose complete extermination, or amalgamation with their
subjects, leaves the history of their race a problem never likely to receive a
very satisfactory solution. The Avars are supposed to have been a portion of
the inhabitants of a powerful Asiatic empire which figures in the annals of
China as ruling a great part of the centre of Asia, and extending to the Gulf
of Corea. The great empire of the Avars was
overthrown by a rebellion of their Turkish subjects, and the noblest caste soon
became lost to history amidst the revolutions of the Chinese empire.
The original seats of the Turks were in the country
round the great chain of Mount Altai. As subjects of the Avars, they had been
distinguished by their skill in working and tempering iron; their industry had
procured them wealth, and wealth had inspired them with the desire for
independence. After throwing off the yoke of the Avars, they waged war with that
people, and compelled the military strength of the nation to fly before them in
two separate bodies. One of these divisions fell back on China; the other
advanced into western Asia, and at last entered Europe. The Turks engaged in a
career of conquest, and in a few years their dominions extended from the Volga
and the Caspian Sea to the shores of the ocean, or the Sea of Japan, and from
the banks of the Oxus (Gihoun) to the deserts of
Siberia. The western army of the Avars, increased by many tribes who feared the
Turkish government, advanced into Europe as a nation of conquerors, and not as
a band of fugitives. The mass of this army is supposed to have been composed of
people of the Turkish race, because those who afterwards bore the Avar name in
Europe seem to have belonged to that family. It must not, however, be
forgotten, that the mighty army of Avar emigrants might easily, in a few
generations, lose all national peculiarities, and forget its native language,
amidst the greater number of its Hunnish subjects,
even if we should suppose the two races to have been originally derived from
different stocks. The Avars, however, are sometimes styled Turks, even by the
earliest historians. The use of the appellation Turk, in an extended sense,
including the Mongol race, is found in Theophylactus Simocatta, a writer possessing considerable knowledge of
the affairs of eastern Asia, and who speaks of the inhabitants of the
flourishing kingdom of Taugast as Turks. This
application of the term appears to have arisen from the circumstance, that the
part of China to which he alluded was subject at the time to a foreign, or, in
his phrase, a Turkish dynasty.
The Avars soon conquered all the countries as far as
the banks of the Danube, and before Justinian’s death they were firmly
established on the borders of Pannonia. Their pursuers, the Turks, did not
visit Europe until a later period; but they extended their conquests in central
Asia, where they destroyed the kingdom of the Ephthalite
Huns to the east of Persia, a part of which Chosroes had already subdued. They
engaged in long wars with the Persians; but it is sufficient to pass over the
history of the first Turkish Empire with this slight notice, as it exercised
but a very trifling direct influence on the fortunes of the Greek nation. The
wars of the Turks and Persians tended, however, greatly to weaken the Persian
Empire, to reduce its resources, and increase the oppression of the internal
administration, by the call for extraordinary exertions, and thus prepared the way
for the easier conquest of the country by the followers of Mahomet.
The sudden appearance of the Avars and Turks in
history, marks the singular void which a long period of vicious government and
successive conquests had created in the population of regions which were once
flourishing. Both these nations took a prominent part in the destruction of the
frame of ancient society in Europe and Asia; but neither of them contributed
anything to the reorganization of the political, social, or religious condition
of the modem world. Their empires soon fell to decay, and the very nations were
again almost lost to history. The Avars, after having attempted the conquest of
Constantinople, became at last extinct; and the Turks, after having been long
forgotten, slowly rose to a high degree of power, and at length achieved the
conquest of Constantinople, which their ancient rivals had vainly attempted.
Sect. VIII
Relations of
the Roman Empire with Persia
The Asiatic frontier of the Roman Empire was less
favourable for attack than defence. The range of the Caucasus was occupied, as
it still is, by a cluster of small nations of various languages, strongly
attached to their independence, which the nature of their country enabled them
to maintain amidst the wars and conflicting negotiations of the Romans,
Persians, and Huns, by whom they were surrounded. The kingdom of Colchis
(Mingrelia) was in permanent alliance with the Romans, and the sovereign
received a regular investiture from the emperor. The Tzans,
who inhabited the mountains about the sources of the Phasis, enjoyed a
subsidiary alliance with Justinian until their plundering expeditions within
the precincts of the empire induced him to garrison their country. Iberia, to
the east of Colchis, the modern Georgia, formed an independent kingdom under
the protection of Persia.
Armenia, as an independent kingdom, had long formed a
slight counterpoise between the Roman and Persian empires. In the reign of
Theodosius II it had been partitioned by its powerful neighbours; and about the
year 429, it had lost the shadow of independence which it had been allowed to
retain. The greater part of Armenia had fallen to the share of the Persians;
but as the people were Christians, and
possessed their own church and literature, they had
maintained their nationality uninjured after the loss of their political
government. The western, or Roman part of Armenia, was bounded by the mountains
in which the Araxes, the Boas, and the Euphrates take their rise; and it was
defended against Persia by the fortress of Theodosiopolis
(Erzeroum), situated on the very frontier of Pers-Armenia. From Theodosiopolis
the empire was bounded by ranges of mountains which cross the Euphrates and extend
to the river Nymphaeus, and here the city of Martyropolis, the capital of Roman Armenia, east of the
Euphrates, was situated. From the junction of the Nymphaeus
with the Tigris the frontier again followed the mountains to Dara, and from
thence it proceeded to the Chaboras and the fortress
of Circesium.
The Arabs or Saracens who inhabited the district
between Circesium and Idumaea,
were divided into two kingdoms: that of Ghassan, towards Syria, maintained an
alliance with the Romans; and that of Hira, to the east, enjoyed the protection
of Persia. Palmyra, which had fallen into ruins after the time of Theodosius
II, was repaired and garrisoned; and the country between the Gulfs of Ailath and Suez, forming a province called the Third
Palestine, was protected by a fortress constructed at the foot of Mount Sinai,
and occupied by a strong body of troops.
Such a frontier, though it presented great
difficulties in the way of invading Persia, afforded admirable means for
protecting the empire; and, accordingly, it had very rarely indeed happened
that a Persian army had ever penetrated into a Roman province. It was reserved
for Justinian’s reign to behold the Persians break through the defensive line,
and contribute to the ruin of the wealth, and the destruction of the
civilization, of some of the most flourishing and enlightened portions of the
Eastern Empire. The wars which Justinian carried on with Persia reflect little
glory on his reign; but the celebrated name of his rival, the great Chosroes Nushirvan, has rendered his political and military
mismanagement venial in the eyes of historians. The Persian and Roman empires
were at this time nearly equal in power and civilization: both were ruled by
princes whose reigns form national epochs; yet history affords ample evidence
that the brilliant exploits of both these sovereigns were effected by a
wasteful expenditure of the national resources, and by a consumption of the
lives and capital of their subjects which proved irreparable. Neither empire
was ever able to regain its former state of prosperity, nor could society
recover the shock which it had received. The governments were too demoralized
to venture on political reforms, and the people too ignorant and too feeble to
attempt national revolutions.
The government of declining countries often gives
slight signs of weakness and approaching dissolution as long as the ordinary
relations of war and peace require to be maintained only with habitual friends
or enemies, though the slightest exertion, created by extraordinary
circumstances, may cause the political fabric to fall to pieces. The armies of
the Eastern Empire and of Persia had, by long acquaintance, found the means of
balancing any peculiar advantage of their enemy, by some modification of
tactics, or some improvement in military discipline, which neutralized its
effect. War between the two states was consequently carried on according to a
regular routine of service, and was continued during a succession of campaigns
in which much blood and treasure were expended, and much glory gained, with
very little change in the relative military power, and none in the frontiers,
of the two empires.
The avarice of Justinian, and his inconstancy in
pursuing his political and military projects, often induced him to leave the
eastern frontier of the empire very inadequately garrisoned; and this frontier
presented an extent of country against which a Persian army, concentrated
behind the Tigris, could choose its point of attack. The option of carrying the
war into Syria, Mesopotamia, Armenia, or Colchis generally lay with the
Persians; and Chosroes attempted to penetrate into the empire by every portion
of this frontier during his long wars. The Roman army, in spite of the change
which had taken place in its arms and organization, still retained its
superiority.
The war with Persia in which Justinian found the
empire engaged on his succession, was terminated by a peace which the Romans
purchased by the payment of eleven thousand pounds of gold to Chosroes. The
Persian monarch required peace to regulate the affairs of his own kingdom; and
the calculation of Justinian, that the sum which he paid to Persia was much
less than the expense of continuing the war, though it may have been correct,
did not render the payment less impolitic, as it really conveyed an admission
of inferiority and weakness. Justinian's object had been to place the great
body of his military forces at liberty, in order to direct his exclusive
attention to recovering the lost provinces of the Western Empire. Had he
availed himself of peace with Persia to diminish the burdens on his subjects,
and consolidate the defence of the empire instead of extending its frontiers,
he might perhaps have re-established the Roman power. As soon as Chosroes heard
of the conquests of Justinian in Africa, Sicily, and Italy, his jealousy
induced him to renew the war. The solicitations of an embassy sent by Witiges are said to have had some effect in determining him
to take up arms.
In 540 Chosroes invaded Syria with a powerful army, and
laid siege to Antioch, the second city of the empire in population and wealth.
He offered to raise the siege on receiving payment of one thousand pounds’
weight of gold, but this small sum was refused. Antioch was taken by storm, its
buildings were committed to the flames, and its inhabitants were carried away
captive, and settled as colonists in Persia. Hierapolis, Berrhoea
(Aleppo), Apamea, and Chalcis, escaped this fate by
paying the ransom demanded from each. To save Syria from utter destruction, Belisarius
was sent to take the command of an army assembled for its defence, but he was
ill supported, and his success was by no means brilliant. The fact that he
saved Syria from utter devastation, nevertheless, rendered his campaign of 543
by no means unimportant for the empire. The war was carried on for twenty
years, but during the latter period of its duration, military operations were
confined to Colchis. It was terminated in 562 by a truce for fifty years, which
effected little change in the frontiers of the empire. The most remarkable
clause of this treaty of peace imposed on Justinian the disgraceful obligation
of paying Chosroes an annual subsidy of thirty thousand pieces of gold; and he
was compelled immediately to advance the sum of two hundred and ten thousand,
for seven years. The sum, it is true, was not very great, but the condition of
the Roman empire was sadly changed, when it became necessary to purchase peace
from all its neighbours with gold, and with gold to find mercenary troops to
carry on its wars. The moment, therefore, a supply of gold failed in the
imperial treasury, the safety of the Roman power was compromised.
The weakness of the Roman Empire, and the necessity of
finding allies in the East, in order to secure a share of the lucrative
commerce of which Persia had long possessed a monopoly, induced Justinian to
keep up friendly communications with the king of Ethiopia (Abyssinia). Elesboas, who then occupied the Ethiopian throne, was a
prince of great power, and a steady ally of the Romans. The wars of this
Christian monarch in Arabia are related by the historians of the empire; and
Justinian endeavoured, by his means, to transfer the silk trade with India from
Persia to the route by the Red Sea. The attempt failed from the great length of
the sea voyage, and the difficulties of adjusting the intermediate commerce of
the countries on this line of communication; but still the trade of the Red Sea
was so great, that the king of Ethiopia, in the reign of Justin, was able to
collect a fleet of seven hundred native vessels, and six hundred Roman and
Persian merchantmen, which he employed to transport his troops into Arabia. The
diplomatic relations of Justinian with the Avars and Turks, and particularly
with the latter nation, were influenced by the position of the Roman Empire
with regard to Persia, both in a commercial and political point of view.
Sect. IX
Commercial position of the Greeks and comparison with
the other Nations living under the Roman Government
Until the northern nations conquered the southern
provinces of the Western Empire, the commerce of Europe was in the hands of the
subjects of the Roman emperors: and the monopoly of the Indian trade, its most
lucrative branch, was almost exclusively possessed by the Greeks. But the
invasions of the barbarians, by diminishing the wealth of the countries which
they subdued, greatly diminished the demand for the valuable merchandise
imported from the East; and the financial extortions of the imperial government
gradually impoverished the Greek population of Syria, Egypt, and Cyrenaica, the
greater portion of which had derived its prosperity from this now declining
trade. In order to comprehend fully the change which must have taken place in
the commercial relations of the Greeks with the western portion of Europe, it
is necessary to compare the situation of each province, in the reign of
Justinian, with its condition in the time of Hadrian. Many countries which had
once supported an extensive trade in articles of luxury imported from the East,
became incapable of purchasing any foreign production, and could hardly supply
a diminished and impoverished population with the mere necessaries of life. The
wines of Lesbos, Rhodes, Cnidos, Thasos, Chios,
Samos, and Cyprus, the woollen cloths of Miletus and Laodicea, the purple
dresses of Tyre, Gaetulia, and Laconia, the cambric
of Cos, the manuscripts of Egypt and Pergamus, the
perfumes, spices, pearls, and jewels of India, the ivory, the slaves, and
tortoise-shell of Africa, and the silks of China, were once abundant on the
banks of the Rhine and in the north of Britain. Treves and York were long
wealthy and flourishing cities, where every foreign luxury could be obtained.
Incredible quantities of the precious metals in coined money then circulated
freely, and trade was carried on with activity far beyond the limits of the
empire. The Greeks who traded in amber and fur, though they may have rarely
visited the northern countries in person, maintained constant communications
with these distant lands, and paid for the commodities which they imported in
gold and silver coin, in ornaments, and by inducing the barbarians to consume
the luxuries, the spices, and the incense of the East. Nor was the trade in
statues, pictures, vases, and objects of art in marble, metals, earthenware,
ivory, and painting, a trifling branch of commerce, as it may be conjectured
from the relics which are now so frequently found, after having remained
concealed for ages beneath the soil.
In the time of Justinian, Britain, Gaul, Rhaetia,
Pannonia, Noricum, and Vindelicia, were reduced to
such a state of poverty and desolation, that their foreign commerce was almost
annihilated, and their internal trade reduced to a trifling exchange of the
rudest commodities. Even the south of Gaul, Spain, Italy, Africa, and Sicily,
had suffered a great decrease of population and wealth under the government of
the Goths and Vandals; and though their cities still carried on a considerable
commerce with the East, that commerce was very much less than it had been in
the times of the empire. As the greater part of the trade of the Mediterranean
was in the hands of the Greeks, this trading population was often regarded in
the West as the type of the inhabitants of the eastern Roman Empire. The
mercantile class was generally regarded by the barbarians as favouring the
Roman cause; and probably not without reason, for its interests must have
required it to keep up constant communications with the empire. When Belisarius
touched at Sicily, on his way to attack the Vandals, Procopius found a friend
at Syracuse, who was a merchant, carrying on extensive dealings in Africa, as
well as with the East. The Vandals, when they were threatened by Justinian’s
expedition, threw many of the merchants of Carthage into prison, as they
suspected them of favouring Belisarius. The laws adopted by the barbarians for
regulating the trade of their native subjects, and the dislike with which most
of the Gothic nations viewed trade, manufactures, and commerce, naturally
placed all commercial and money transactions in the hands of strangers. When it
happened that war or policy excluded the Greeks from participating in these
transactions, they were generally conducted by the Jews. We find, indeed, after
the fall of the Western Empire, that the Jews, availing themselves of their
commercial knowledge and neutral political character, began to be very numerous
in all the countries gained by conquest from the Romans, and particularly so in
those situated on the Mediterranean, which maintained constant communications
with the East.
Several circumstances, however, during the reign of
Justinian contributed to augment the commercial transactions of the Greeks, and
to give them a decided preponderance in the Eastern trade. The long war with
Persia cut off all those routes by which the Syrian and Egyptian population had
maintained their ordinary communications with Persia; and it was from Persia
that they had always drawn their silk, and great part of their Indian commodities,
such as muslins and jewels. This trade now began to seek two different
channels, by both of which it avoided the dominions of Chosroes; the one was to
the north of the Caspian Sea, and the other by the Red Sea. This ancient route
through Egypt still continued to be that of the ordinary trade. But the
importance of the northern route, and the extent of the trade carried on by it
through different ports on the Black Sea, are authenticated by the numerous
colony of the inhabitants of central Asia established at Constantinople in the
reign of Justin II. Six hundred Turks availed themselves, at one time, of the
security offered by the journey of a Roman ambassador to the Great Khan of the
Turks, and joined his train. This fact affords the strongest evidence of the
great importance of this route, as there can be no question that the great
number of the inhabitants of central Asia, who visited Constantinople, were
attracted to it by their commercial occupations. The Indian commerce through
Arabia and by the Red Sea was still more important; much more so, indeed, than
the mere mention of Justinian’s failure to establish a regular importation of
silk by this route might lead us to suppose. The immense number of trading
vessels which habitually frequented the Red Sea shows that it was very great.
It is true that the population of Arabia now first
began to share the profits and feel the influence of this trade. The spirit of
improvement and inquiry roused by the excitement of this new field of
enterprise, and the new subjects for thought which it opened, prepared the
children of the desert for national union, and awakened the social and
political impulse which gave birth to the character of Mahomet.
As the whole trade of Western Europe, in Chinese and
Indian productions, passed through the hands of the Greeks, its amount, though
small in any one district, yet as a whole must have been large. The Greek
mercantile population of the Eastern Empire had declined, though perhaps not
yet in the same proportion as the other classes, so that the relative
importance of the trade remained as great as ever with regard to the general
wealth of the empire; and its profits were probably greater than formerly,
since the restricted nature of the transactions in the various localities must
have discouraged competitors and produced the effects of a monopoly, even in
those countries where no recognised privileges were granted, to the merchants.
Justinian was also fortunate enough to secure to the Greeks the complete
control of the silk trade, by enabling them to share in the production and
manufacture of this precious commodity. This trade had excited the attention of
the Romans at an early period. One of the emperors, probably Marcus Aurelius,
had sent an ambassador to the East, with the view of establishing commercial
relations with the country where silk was produced, and this ambassador
succeeded in reaching China. Justinian long attempted in vain to open direct
communications with China; but all his efforts to obtain a direct supply of
silk either proved unavailing or were attended with very partial success. The
Persians alone were able to supply the Chinese and Indian trade with the
commodities suitable for that distant market. They were, however, unable to
retain the monopoly of this profitable commerce; for the high price of silk in
the West during the Persian wars induced the nations of central Asia to open
direct communications by land with China, and convey it, by caravans to the
frontiers of the Roman Empire. This trade followed various channels, according
to the security which political circumstances afforded to the traders. At times
it was directed towards the frontiers of Armenia, while at others it proceeded
as far north as the Sea of Azov. Jornandes, in
speaking of Cherson at this time, calls it a city whence the merchant imports
the produce of Asia.
At a moment when Justinian must almost have abandoned
the hope of participating in the direct trade with China, he was fortunate
enough to be put in possession of the means of cultivating silk in his own
dominions. Christian missions have been the means of extending very widely the
benefits of civilization. Christian missionaries first established regular
communications between Ethiopia and the Roman Empire, and they frequently visited
China. In the year 551 two monks, who had studied the method of rearing
silkworms and winding silk in China, succeeded in conveying the eggs of the
moth to Constantinople, enclosed in a cane. The emperor, delighted with the
acquisition, granted them every assistance which they required, and zealously
encouraged their under- taking. It would not, therefore, be just to deny to
Justinian some share in the merit of having founded a flourishing branch of
trade, which tended very materially to support the resources of the Eastern
Empire, and to enrich the Greek nation for several centuries.
The Greeks, at this time, maintained their superiority
over the other people in the empire only by their commercial enterprise, which
preserved that civilization in the trading cities which was rapidly
disappearing among the agricultural population. In general they were reduced
almost to the same level with the Syrians, Egyptians, Armenians, and Jews. In
Cyrenaica and Alexandria they suffered from the same government, and declined
in the same proportion, as the native population. Of the decline of Egypt we
possess exact information, which it may not be unprofitable to pass in review.
In the reign of Augustus, Egypt furnished Rome with a tribute of twenty
millions of modii of grain annually,
and it was garrisoned by a force rather exceeding twelve thousand regular
troops. Under Justinian the tribute in grain was reduced to about five millions
and a half modii, that is 800,000 artabas; and the
Roman troops, to a cohort of six hundred men. Egypt was prevented from sinking
still lower by the exportation of its grain to supply the trading population on
the shores of the Red Sea. The canal connecting the Nile with the Red Sea
afforded the means of exporting an immense quantity of inferior grain to the
arid coasts of Arabia, and formed a great artery for civilization and commerce.
About this period the Jewish nation attained a degree
of importance which is worthy of attention, as explaining many circumstances
connected with the history of the human race. The Jews either by natural
multiplication or by proselytism appear to have
increased very much in the age immediately preceding Justinian’s reign. This
increase is to be accounted for by the decline of the rest of the population in
the countries round the Mediterranean, and by the general decay of
civilization, in consequence of the severity of the Roman fiscal system, which trammeled every class of society with regulations
restricting the industry of the people. These circumstances afforded an opening
for the Jews, whose social position had been previously so bad, that the
decline of their neighbours, at least, afforded them some relative improvement.
The Jews, too, at this period, were the only neutral nation who could carry on
their trade equally with the Persians, Ethiopians, Arabs, and Goths; for,
though they were hated everywhere, the universal dislike was a reason for
tolerating a people never likely to form common cause with any other. In Gaul
and Italy they had risen to considerable importance; and in Spain they carried
on an extensive trade in slaves, which excited the indignation of the Christian
church, and which kings and ecclesiastical councils vainly endeavoured to
destroy. The Jews generally found support from the barbarian monarchs; and
Theodoric the Great granted them every species of protection. Their alliance
was often necessary to render the country independent of the wealth and
commerce of the Greeks.
To commercial jealousy, therefore, as well as
religious zeal, we must attribute some of the persecutions which the Jews
sustained in the Eastern Empire. The cruelty of the Roman government nourished
that bitter nationality and revengeful hatred of their enemies, which have
always marked the energetic character of the Israelites; but the history of the
injustice of one party, and of the crimes of the other, does not fall within
the scope of this inquiry, though the position of the Jews and Greeks in modem
times offers many points of similarity and comparison.
The Armenians, who have at different times taken a
large share in the trade of the East, were then entirely occupied with war and
religion, and appeared in Europe only as mercenary soldiers in the pay of
Justinian, in whose service many attained the highest military rank. In
civilization and literary attainments, the Armenians held, however, as high a
rank as any of their contemporaries. In the year 552 their patriarch, Moses II,
assembled their learned men, in order to reform their calendar; and they then
fixed on the aera which the Armenians have since continued to use. It is true
that the numerous translations of Greek books which distinguished the
literature of Armenia were chiefly made during the preceding century, for the
sixth only produced a few ecclesiastical works. The literary energy of Armenia
is remarkable, inasmuch as it excited the fears of the Persian monarch, who
ordered that no Armenian should visit the Eastern Empire to study at the Greek
universities of Constantinople, Athens, or Alexandria.
The literature of the Greek language ceased, from this
time, to possess a national character, and became more identified with the
government, the governing classes of the Eastern Empire, and the Orthodox
Church, than with the inhabitants of Greece. The fact is easily explained by
the poverty of the native Hellenes, and by the position of the ruling caste in
the Roman Empire. The highest offices in the court, in the civil
administration, and in the Orthodox Church, were filled with a Graeco-Roman
caste, sprung originally from the Macedonian conquerors of Asia, and now proud
of the Roman name which repudiated all idea of Greek nationality, and affected
to treat Greek national distinctions as mere provincialism, at the very time it
was acting under the impulse of Greek prejudices, both in the State and the
Church. The long existence of the new Platonic school of philosophy at Athens,
seems to have connected paganism with Hellenic national feelings and Justinian
was doubtless induced to put an end to it, and drive its last teachers into
banishment from his hostility to all independent institutions.
The universities of the other cities of the empire
were intended for the education of the higher classes destined for the public
administration, or for the church. That of Constantinople possessed a
philosophical, philological, legal, and theological faculty. Alexandria added
to these a celebrated medical school. Berytus was
distinguished for its school of jurisprudence, and Edessa was remarkable for
its Syriac, as well as its Greek faculties. The university of Antioch suffered
a severe blow in the destruction of the city by Chosroes, but it again rose
from its ruin. The Greek poetical literature of this age is utterly destitute
of popular interest, and shows that it formed only the amusement of a class of
society, not the portrait of a nation’s feelings. Paul the Silentiary and Agathias the historian,
wrote many epigrams, which exist in the Anthology. The poem of ‘Hero and
Leander’, by Musaeus, is generally supposed to have been
composed about the year 450, but it may be mentioned as one of the last Greek
poems which displays a true Greek character; and it is peculiarly valuable, as
affording us a testimony of the late period to which the Hellenic people
preserved their correct taste. The poems of Coluthus
and Tryphiodorus, which are almost of the same
period, are very far inferior in merit; but as both were Egyptian Greeks, it is
not surprising that their poetical productions display the frigid character of
the artificial school. After this period, the verses of the Greeks are entirely
destitute of the spirit of poetry, and even the curious scholar finds their
perusal a wearisome task.
The prose literature of the sixth century can boast of
some distinguished names. The commentary of Simplicius
on the manual of Epictetus has been frequently printed, and the work has even
been translated into German. Simplicius was a pupil
of Damascius, and one of the philosophers who, with
that celebrated teacher, fled to Persia on the dispersion of the Athenian
schools. The collection of Stobaeus, even in the
mutilated form in which we possess it, contains much curious information; the
medical works of Aetius and Alexander of Tralles have
been printed several times, and the geographical writings of Hierocles and Cosmas Indicopleustes
possess considerable interest. In history, the writings of Procopius and Agathias are of great merit, and have been translated into
several modern languages. Many other names of authors, whose works have been
preserved in part and published in modern times, might be cited; but they
possess little interest for the general reader, and it does not belong to our
inquiry to enter into details, which can be found in the history of Greek
literature, nor does it fill within our province to enumerate the legal and
ecclesiastical writers of the age.
Sect. X
Influence of
the Orthodox Church on the national feelings of the Greeks
It is necessary here to advert to the effect which the
existence of the established Church, as a constituted body, and forming a part
of the State, produced both on the government and on the people; though it will
only be to notice its connection with the Greeks as a nation. The political
connection of the Church with the State displayed its evil effects by the
active part which the clergy took in exciting the numerous persecutions which
distinguish this period. The alliance of Justinian and the Roman government of
his time with the orthodox Christians was forced on the parties by their
political position. Their interests in Africa, Italy, and Spain, identified the
imperial party and the orthodox believers, and invited them to appeal to arms
as the arbiter of opinions. It became, or was thought necessary, at times, even
within the limits of the empire, to unite political and ecclesiastical power in
the same hands; and the union of the office of prefect and patriarch of Egypt,
in the person of Apollinarius, is a memorable
instance. To the combination, therefore, of Roman policy with orthodox bigotry,
we must attribute the religious persecutions of the Arians, Nestorians,
Eutychians, and other heretics; as well as of Platonic philosophers,
Manichaeans, Samaritans, and Jews. The various laws which Justinian enacted to
enforce unity of opinion in religion, and to punish any difference of belief
from that of the established church, occupy a considerable space in his
legislation; yet as if to show the impossibility of fixing opinions, it
appeared at the end of his reign that this most orthodox of Roman emperors and
munificent patron of the church, held that the body of Jesus was incorruptible,
and adopted a heterodox interpretation of the Nicene creed, in denying the two
natures of Christ.
The religious persecutions of Justinian tended to
ripen the general dissatisfaction with the Roman government into feelings of
permanent hostility in all those portions of the empire in which the heretics
formed the majority of the population. The Orthodox Church, unfortunately,
rather exceeded the common measure of bigotry in this age; and it was too
closely connected with the Greek nation for the spirit of persecution not to
acquire a national as well as a religious character. As Greek was the language
of the civil and ecclesiastical administration, those acquainted with the Greek
language could alone attain the highest ecclesiastical preferments. The
jealousy of the Greeks generally endeavoured to raise a suspicion of the
orthodoxy of their rivals, in order to exclude them from promotion; and,
consequently, the Syrians, Egyptians, and Armenians found themselves placed in
opposition to the Greeks by their national language and literature.
The Scriptures had, at a very early period, been translated
into all the spoken languages of the East; and the Syrians, Egyptians, and
Armenians, not only made use of their own language in the service of the
church, but also possessed at this time a provincial clergy in no ways inferior
to the Greek provincial clergy in learning and piety, and their ecclesiastical
literature was fully equal to the portion of the Greek ecclesiastical
literature which was accessible to the mass of the people. This use of the
national language gave the church of each province a national character; the ecclesialstical opposition which political circumstances
created in these national churches against the established church of the
emperors, furnished a pretext for the imputation of heresy, and, probably, at
times gave a heretical impulse to the opinions of the provincials. But a large
body of the Armenians and the Chaldaeans had never
submitted to the supremacy of the Greek church in ecclesiastical matters, and a
strong disposition to quarrel with the Greeks had always displayed itself among
the natives of Egypt. Justinian carried his persecutions so far that in several
provinces the natives separated from the established church and elected their
own bishops, an act which, in the society of the time, was a near approach to
open rebellion. Indeed, the hostility to the Roman government throughout the
East was everywhere connected with an opposition to the Greek clergy. The Jews
revived an old saying indicating a national as well as political and religious
animosity, — “Cursed is he who eateth swine's flesh,
or teacheth his child Greek”
Power, whether ecclesiastical or civil, is so liable
to abuse, that it is not surprising that the Greeks, as soon as they had
succeeded in transforming the established church of the Roman Empire into the
Greek church, should have acted unfairly to the provincial clergy of the
eastern provinces in which the Greek liturgy was not used; nor is it surprising
that national differences should have soon been identified with points of
doctrine. As soon as any question arose, the Greek clergy, from their alliance
with the State, and their possession of the ecclesiastical revenues of the
Church, were sure of being orthodox; and the provincial clergy were in constant
danger of being regarded as heterodox, merely because they were not Greeks.
There can be no doubt that several of the national churches of the East owed
some increase of their hostility to the Roman government to the circumstances
adverted to. The sixth century gave strong proofs that every nation which
possesses a language and literature of its own ought, if it be practicable, to
possess its own national church; and the struggle of the Roman Empire and the
Greek ecclesiastical establishment against this attempt at national
independence on the part of the Armenians, Syrians, Egyptians, and Africans,
involved the empire in many difficulties, and opened a way, first for the
Persians to push their invasions into the heart of the empire, and afterwards
for the Mohammedans to conquer the eastern provinces, and virtually to put an
end to the Roman power.
Sect. XI
State of Athens
during the Decline of Paganism and until the Extinction of its Schoob by Justinian
Ancient Greek literature and Hellenic traditions
expired at Athens in the sixth century. In the year 529 Justinian closed the
schools of rhetoric and philosophy, and confiscated the property devoted to
their support. The measure was probably dictated by his determination to
centralize all power and patronage at Constantinople in his own person; for the
municipal funds appropriated annually by the Athenian magistrates to pay the
salaries of public teachers could not have excited the cupidity of the emperor
during the early part of his reign, while the imperial treasury was still
overflowing with the savings of Anastasius and Justin. The conduct of the great
lawgiver must have been the result of policy rather than of rapacity.
It seems to be generally supposed that Athens had
dwindled into a small town; that its schools were frequented only by a few lazy
pedants, and that the office of professor had become a sinecure before
Justinian closed for ever the gates of the Academy, the Lyceum, and the Stoa,
and exiled the last Athenian philosophers to Persia, where, though they enjoyed
the protection of the great Chosroes, they sought in vain for votaries to
supply the places of those whom they had lost in the Roman Empire. A passage of
Synesius, who was compelled to touch at the port of the Piraeus without having
any desire to visit Athens, has been cited to prove the decay of learning, and
the decline of population. The African philosopher says that the deserted
aspect of the city of Minerva reminded him of the skin of an animal which had
been sacrificed, and whose body had been consumed as an offering. Athens had
nothing to boast of but great names. The Academy, the Lyceum, and the Stoa,
were indeed still shown to travellers, but learning had forsaken these ancient
retreats, and, instead of philosophers in the agora, you met only dealers in
honey. The Dorian prejudices of the Cyrenian, who
boasted of his descent from Spartan kings, evidently overpowered the candour of
the visitor. His spleen may have been caused by some neglect on the part of the
Athenian literary aristocracy to welcome their distinguished guest, but it does
little honour to the taste of Synesius that he could see the glorious spectacle
of the Acropolis in the rich hue of its original splendour, and walk along
surrounded by the many noble monuments of architecture, sculpture, and
painting, which then adorned the city, without one expression of admiration.
The time of his visit was not the most favourable for one who sought Athenian
society, for it was only two years after the invasion of Alaric; but, after
every allowance has been made for the peevishness of the writer, and for the
deserted state of the city in consequence of the Gothic invasion, there exists
ample proof that this description is a mere flourish of rhetorical
exaggeration. History tells us that Athens prospered, and that her schools were
frequented by many eminent men long after the ravages of Alaric and the visit
of Synesius. The empress Eudocia (Athenais) was a year old, and Synesius might
have seen in a nurse’s arms the infant who received at Athens the education
which made her one of the most accomplished ladies of a brilliant and luxurious
court, as well as a person of learning, even without reference to her sex and
rank.
Athens was not then a rude provincial town. It was
still a literary capital frequented by the aristocratic portion of society in
the Eastern Empire, where Hellenic literature was cultivated and the doctrines
of Plato were taught; and it is not impossible that in elegance it rivalled
Constantinople, however inferior it may have been in luxury. St. John
Chrysostom informs us that, in the court of the first Eudocia, the mother of
Pulcheria, a knowledge of dress, embroidery, and music, were considered the
most important objects on which taste could be displayed; but that to converse
with elegance, and to compose pretty verses, were regarded as necessary proofs
of intellectual superiority. Pulcheria, though born in this court, against
which Chrysostom declaimed with eloquent but sometimes unseemly violence, lived
the life of a saint. Yet she adopted the beautiful heathen maiden Athenais as a
protégé, and, when she had succeeded in converting her to Christianity,
bestowed on her the name of her own mother Eudocia. Though history tells us
nothing of the fashionable society of Athens at this time, it supplies us with
some interesting information concerning the social position of her learned men,
and we know that they were generally gentlemen whose chief pride was that they
were also scholars.
When the members of the native aristocracy in Greece
found that they were excluded by the Romans from the civil and military service
of the State, they devoted themselves to literature and philosophy. It became
the tone of good society to be pedantic. The wealth and fame of Herodes Atticus have rendered him the type of the Greek
aristocratic philosophers. The Emperor Hadrian revived the importance and
augmented the prosperity of Athens by his visits, and gave additional
consequence to its schools by appointing an official professor of the branch of
learning called sophistics. Lollianus,
who first occupied this chair, was a native of Ephesus; but he was welcomed by
the Athenians, as if he had been a native citizen, for the strong remedies the
Romans had applied to diminish their pride had at least cured them of the
absurd vanity of autochthonism. Lollianus not only
received the rights of citizenship; he was elected strategos, then the highest
office in the local magistracy. During his term of service he employed his own
wealth and his personal credit to alleviate the sufferings caused by a severe
famine. He discharged all the debts contracted by the city in collecting and
distributing provisions from his private fortune. The Athenians rewarded him
for his generosity by erecting two statues to his memory.
Antoninus Pius increased the public importance of the schools of Athens, and gave
them an official character, by allowing the professors named by the emperor an
annual salary of ten thousand drachmas. Marcus Aurelius, who visited Athens on
his return from the East after the rebellion of Avidius
Cassius, established official teachers of every kind of learning then publicly
taught, and organized the philosophers into an university. Scholarchs were
appointed for the four great philosophical sects of the stoics, platonists, peripatetics, and
epicureans, who received fixed salaries from the government. The wealth and
avarice of the Athenian philosophers became after this common subjects of envy
and reproach. Many names of some eminence in literature might be cited as
connected with the Athenian schools during the second and third centuries; but
to show the universal character of the studies pursued, and the freedom of
inquiry that was allowed, it is only necessary to mention the Christian writers
Quadratus, Aristeides, and Athenagoras, who shared
with their heathen contemporaries the fame and patronage of which Athens could
dispose.
It appears that even before the end of the second
century the population of the city had undergone a great change, in consequence
of the constant immigration of Asiatic and Alexandrian Greeks who visited it in
order to frequent its schools and make use of its libraries. The attendants and
followers of these wealthy strangers settled at Athens in such numbers as to
modify the spoken dialect, which then lost its classic purity; and it was only
in the depopulated demoi, and among the
impoverished landed proprietors of Attica, who were too poor to purchase
foreign slaves or to associate with wealthy sophists, that pure Attic Greek was
any longer heard. Strangers filled the chairs of eloquence and philosophy, and
rhetoricians were elected to be the chief magistrates. In the third century,
however, we find the Athenian Dexippus, a
rhetorician, a patriot, and a historian, holding the highest offices in the
local administration with honour to himself and to his country.
Both Athens and the Piraeus had completely recovered
from the ravages committed by the Goths before the time of Constantine. The
large crews which were embarked in ancient galleys, and the small space which
they contained for the stowage of provisions, rendered it necessary to select a
port, which could furnish large supplies of provisions either from its own
resources or from its being a centre of commercial communication, as a station
for a great naval force. The fact that Constantine selected the Piraeus as the
harbour at which his son Crispus concentrated the large force with which he
defeated Licinius at the Hellespont, proves at least
that the Athenian markets afforded abundant supplies of provisions.
The heathen city of Minerva continued to enjoy the
favour and protection of the Christian emperors. Constantine enlarged the
privileges of the scholarchs and professors, and exempted them from many
onerous taxes and public burdens. He furnished the city with an annual supply
of grain for distribution, and he accepted the title of strategos, as Hadrian
had accepted that of archon, to show that he deemed it an honour to belong to
its local magistrature. Constantius granted a donative of grain to the city as
a special mark of favour to Proaeresius; and during
his reign we find its schools extremely popular, crowded with wealthy students
from every province of the empire, and attended by all the great men of the
time. Four celebrated men resided there nearly at the same period — the future
Emperor Julian, the sophist Libanius, St. Basil, and
St. Gregory Nazianzenus. Athens then enjoyed the
inestimable blessing of toleration. Heathens and Christians both frequented her
schools unmolested, in spite of the laws already promulgated against some pagan
rites, for the regulations against soothsayers and diviners were not supposed
to be applicable to gentlemen and philosophers. Athenian society consequently
suffered for some time very little from the changes which took place in the
religious opinions of the emperors. It gained nothing from the heathenism of
Julian, and lost nothing by the Arianism of Valens.
Julian, it is true, ordered all the temples to be
repaired and regular sacrifices to be performed with order and pomp; but his
reign was too short to effect any considerable change, and his orders met with
little attention in Greece, for Christianity had already made numerous converts
among the priests of the temples, who, strange to say, appear to have embraced
the doctrines of Christianity much more readily and promptly than the
philosophers. Many priests had already been converted to Christianity with
their whole families, and in many temples it was difficult to procure the
celebration of the heathen ceremonies. Julian attempted to inflict one serious
wound on Christianity at Athens, by issuing an unjust and arbitrary edict
forbidding Christians from giving instruction publicly in rhetoric and
literature. His respect for the character of Proaeresius,
an Armenian, who was then a professor at Athens, induced him to exempt that
teacher from his ordinance; but Proaeresius refused
to avail himself of the emperor’s permission, for, as new ceremonies were
prescribed in the resorts of public teaching, he considered it his duty to
cease lecturing rather than appear tacitly to conform to heathen usages.
The supremacy of paganism was of short duration. About
two years after Julian had proclaimed it again the established religion of the
Roman Empire, Valentinian and Valens published an edict forbidding
incantations, magical ceremonies, and offerings by night, under pain of death.
The application of this law, according to the letter, would have prevented the
celebration of the Eleusinian mysteries, and rendered life intolerable to many
fervid votaries of Hellenic superstition, and of the Neo-platonic philosophy.
The suppression of the great heathen festivals, of which some of the rites were
celebrated during the night, would have seriously injured the prosperity of
Athens, and some other cities in Greece. The celebrated Praetextatus,
a heathen highly esteemed for his integrity and administrative talents, was
then proconsul of Achaia. His representations induced the emperors to make some
modifications in the application of the edict, and the Eleusinian mysteries
continued to be celebrated until Alaric destroyed the temple.
Paganism rapidly declined, but the heathen
philosophers at Athens continued to live as a separate class of society,
refusing to embrace Christianity, though without offering any opposition to its
progress. They considered their own religious opinions as too elevated for the
vulgar, so that there existed no community of feeling between the aristocratic Neo-platonists of the schools, the burgesses of the towns,
whether they were heathens or Christians, and the agriculturists in the
country, who were generally pagans. Hence the emperors entertained no political
dislike to the philosophers, and continued to employ them in the public
service. Neither Christian emperors nor Christian bishops felt any rancour
against the amiable scholars who cherished the exclusive prejudices of Hellenic
civilization, and who considered the philanthropic spirit of Christianity as an
idle dream. The Neo-platonists viewed man as by
nature a brutal creature, and they deemed slavery to be the proper condition of
the labouring classes. They scorned equally the rude idolatry of corrupted
paganism, and the simple doctrines of pure Christianity. They were deeply
imbued with those social prejudices which have for centuries separated the
rural and urban population in the East; prejudices which were first created by
the prevalence of predial slavery, but which were greatly increased by the
fiscal system of the Romans, which enthralled men to degraded employment in
hereditary castes. Libanius, Themistius, and
Symmachus, were favoured even by the orthodox emperor Theodosius the Great. St.
Basil corresponded with Libanius. Musonius,
who had taught rhetoric at Athens, was imperial governor of Asia in the year
367; but, as it is possible that he had then embraced Christianity, this
circumstance can only be cited to prove the social rank still maintained by the
teachers of the Athenian schools.
The last breath of Hellenic life was now rapidly
passing away, and its dissolution confined no glory on Greece. The Olympic
games were celebrated until the reign of Theodosius I, and they ceased in the
first year of the 293rd Olympiad, A.D. 393. The last recorded victor was an
Armenian, named Varastad, of the race of the Arsacidae. Alexander, son of Amyntas,
king of Macedon, had not been allowed to become a competitor for a prize until
he had proved his Hellenic descent; but the Hellenes were at this time prouder
of being Romaioi than of being Greeks, and the
Armenian Varastad, whose name closes the long list
which commences with demi-gods, and is filled with heroes, was a Romaios. Hellenic art also fled from the soil of Hellas.
The chryselephantine statue of the Olympian Jupiter was transported to Constantinople,
where it was destroyed in the year 476 by one of the great fires which so often
laid waste that city. The statue of Minerva, which the pagans believed had
protected her favourite city against Alaric, was carried off about the same
time, and thus the two great works of Phidias were exiled from Greece. The
destruction of the great temple of Olympia followed soon after, but the exact
date is unknown. Some have supposed that it was burned by the Gothic troops of
Alaric; others think that it was destroyed by Christian bigotry in the reign of
Theodosius II. The Olympiads, which for generation after generation had served
to record the noble emulation of the Greeks, were now supplanted by the
notation of the indiction. Glory resigned her
influence over society to taxation.
The restrictions which Julian had placed on public
instruction in order to injure Christianity, had not been productive of
permanent effects. Theodosius II was the first emperor who interfered with
public instruction for the direct object of controlling and circumscribing
public opinion. While he honoured those professors who were appointed by his
own authority, and propagated the principles of submission, or rather of
servility, to the imperial commands, he struck a mortal blow at the spirit of
free inquiry by forbidding private teachers to give public lectures under pain
of infamy and banishment. Private teachers of philosophy had hitherto enjoyed
great freedom in teaching throughout Greece; but henceforth thought was
enslaved even at Athens, and no opinions were allowed to be taught except such
as could; obtain a license from the imperial authorities. Emulation was
destroyed, and genius, which is always regarded with suspicion by men of
routine, for it sheds new light even on the oldest subject, was now officially
suppressed. Men not having the liberty of uttering their thoughts soon ceased
to think.
Though we are acquainted with very few precise facts
relating to the state of society in Athens from the time of Theodosius II to
the suppression of the schools of philosophy by Justinian, we are,
nevertheless, able to form some idea of the peculiarities which distinguished
it from the other provincial cities of the empire. The privileges transmitted
from the time when Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius treated Athens as a free city,
were long respected by the Christian emperors. Some Hellenic pride was still
nourished at Athens, from the tradition of its having been long an ally and not
a subject of Rome. A trace of this memory of the past seems discernible in the
speech of the Empress Eudocia to the people of Antioch, as she was on her
pilgrimage to Jerusalem. It closed with a boast of their common Hellenic
origin. The spirit of emulation between the votaries of the Gospel and the
schools undoubtedly tended to improve the morality of Athens. Paganism, after
it had been driven from the mind, survived in the manners, of the people in
most of the great cities of the empire. But at Athens the philosophers
distinguished themselves by purity of morals; and the Christians would have
been ashamed in their presence of the exhibitions of tumult and simony which
disgraced the ecclesiastical elections at Rome, Alexandria, and Constantinople.
In the meantime, the civilization of the ancient world was not extinct, though
many of its vices were banished. Public hotels for strangers existed on the
model which the Mohammedans have gained so much honour by imitating;
alms-houses for the destitute, and hospitals for the sick, were to be found in
due proportion to the population, or the want would have been justly recorded
to the disgrace of the wealthy pagans. The truth is, that the spirit of
Christianity had penetrated into heathenism, which had become virtuous and
unobtrusive, as well as mild and timid. The habits of Athenian society were
soft and humane; the wealthy lived in palaces, and purchased libraries. Many
philosophers, like Proclus, enjoyed ample revenues, and perhaps, like him,
received rich legacies. Ladies wore dresses of silk embroidered with gold. Both
sexes delighted in boots of thick silk ornamented with tassels of gold fringe.
The luxurious drank wine of Rhodes, Cnidos and
Thasos, as we find attested by the inscribed handles of broken amphorae still
scattered in the fields round the modern city. The luxury and folly against
which Chrysostom declaimed at Constantinople were perhaps not unknown at
Athens, but, as there was less wealth, they could not exhibit themselves so
shamelessly in the philosophic as in the orthodox city. It is not probable that
the Bishop of Athens found it necessary to preach against ladies swimming in
public cisterns, which excited the indignation of the saint at Constantinople,
and which continued to be a favourite amusement of the fair sex for several
generations, until Justinian suppressed it by admitting it as a ground of
divorce.
Theodosius I, Arcadius, and Theodosius II passed many
laws prohibiting the ceremonies of paganism, and ordering the persecution of
its votaries. It appears that many of the aristocracy, and even some men in
high official employment, long adhered to its delusions. Optatus,
the prefect of Constantinople in 404, was a heathen. Isokasios,
quaestor of Antioch, was accused of the same crime in 467; and Tribonian, the celebrated jurist of Justinian, who died in
545, was supposed to be attached to philosophic opinions hostile to
Christianity, though he made no scruple in conforming outwardly to the
established religion. His want of religious principle caused him to be called
an atheist. The philosophers were at last persecuted with great cruelty, and
anecdotes are related of their martyrdom in the reign of Zeno. Phocas, a
patrician, poisoned himself in the reign of Justinian to avoid being compelled
to embrace Christianity, or suffer death as a criminal. Yet the most celebrated
historians of this period were heathens. Of Eunapius
and Zosimus there is no doubt, and the general opinion refuses to regard
Procopius as a Christian.
At last, in the year 529, Justinian confiscated all
the funds devoted to philosophic instructions at Athens, closed the schools,
and seized the endowments of the academy of Plato, which had maintained an
uninterrupted succession of teachers for nearly nine hundred years. The last
teacher enjoyed an annual revenue of one thousand gold solidi, but it is
probable that he wandered in a deserted grove, and lectured in an empty hall.
Seven Athenian philosophers are celebrated for exiling themselves to Persia,
where they were sure of escaping the persecutions of Justinian, and where they
perhaps hoped to find disciples. But they met with no sympathy among the
followers of Zoroaster, and they were soon happy to avail themselves of the
favour of Chosroes, who obtained for them permission to return and spend their
lives in peace in the Roman Empire. Toleration rendered their declining
influence utterly insignificant, and the last heathen fancies of the
philosophic schools disappeared from the conservative aristocracy, where they
had found their last asylum.
CHAPTER IV
From the Death of Justinian to the Restoration of
Roman Power in the East by Heraclius.
A.D.565-633
Sect. I
The Reign of
Justin II
The history of the Roman empire assumes a new aspect
during the period which elapsed between the deaths of Justinian and Heraclius.
The mighty nation, which the union of the Macedonians and Greeks had formed in
the greater part of the East, was rapidly declining, and in many provinces
hastening to extinction. Even the Hellenic race in Europe, which had for many
centuries displayed the appearance of a people closely united by feelings,
language, and religion, was in many districts driven from its ancient seats by
the emigration of a rude Sclavonian population.
Hellenic civilization, and all the fruits of the policy of Alexander the Great,
at last succumbed to Roman oppression. The people of Hellas directed their
exclusive attention to their own local institutions. They expected no benefits
from the imperial government; and the emperor and the administration of the
empire could now give but little attention to any provincial business, not
directly connected with the all-absorbing topic of the fiscal exigencies of the
State.
The inhabitants of the various provinces of the Roman
Empire were everywhere forming associations, independent of the general
government, and striving to recur as rarely as possible to the central
administration at Constantinople. National feelings daily exerted additional
force in separating the subjects of the empire into communities, where language
and religious opinions operated with more power on society than the political
allegiance enforced by the emperor. This separation of the interests and
feelings soon put an end to every prospect of regenerating the empire, and even
presented momentary views of new political, religious, and national
combinations, which seemed to threaten the immediate dissolution of the Eastern
Empire. The history of the West offered the counterpart of the fate which
threatened the East; and, according to all human calculations, Armenia, Syria,
Egypt, Africa, and Hellas, were on the point of becoming independent states.
But the inexorable principle of Roman centralization possessed an inherent
energy of existence very different from the unsettled republicanism of Greece,
or the personality of the Macedonian monarchies. The Roman empire never relaxed
its authority over its own subjects, nor did it ever cease to dispense to them
an equal administration of justice, in every case in which its own fiscal
demands were not directly concerned, and even then it invoked laws to authorize
its acts of injustice. It never permitted its subjects to bear arms, unless
those arms were received from the State, and directed by the emperor’s
officers; and when the imperial forces were defeated by the Avars and the
Persians, its policy was unaltered. The emperors displayed the same spirit when
the enemy was encamped before Constantinople as the senate had shown when
Hannibal marched from the field of Cannae to the walls of Rome.
Events which no human sagacity could foresee, against
which no political wisdom could contend, and which the philosopher can only
explain by attributing them to the dispensation of that Providence who
exhibits, in the history of the world, the education of the whole human
species, at last put an end to the existence of the Roman domination in a large
part of its dominions in the East. Yet the inhabitants of the countries freed
from the Roman yoke, instead of finding a freer range for the improvement of
their individual and national advantages, found that the religion of Mahomet,
and the victories of his followers, strengthened the power of despotism and
bigotry; and several of the nations which had been enslaved by the Macedonians,
and oppressed by the Romans, were exterminated by the Saracens.
The Roman emperors of the East appear to have believed
that the strict administration of justice in civil and criminal affairs
superseded the necessity of carefully watching the ordinary proceedings of the
administrative department, forgetting that the legal establishment could only
take cognizance of the exceptional cases, and that the well-being of the people
depended on the daily conduct of their civil governors. It soon became apparent
that Justinian’s reforms in the legislation of the empire had produced no
improvement in the civil administration. That portion of the population of the
capital, and of the empire, which arrogated to itself the title of Romans,
turned the privileges conferred by their rank in the imperial service into a
means of living at the expense of the people. The central administration lost
some of its former control over the people; and Justin II showed some desire to
make concessions tending to revive the feeling that civil order, and security
of property, flowed, as a natural result, from the mere existence of the
imperial government, — a feeling which had long contributed powerfully to
support the throne of the emperors.
The want of a fixed order of succession in the Roman
empire was an evil severely felt, and the enactment of precise rules for the
hereditary transmission of the imperial dignity would have been a wise and
useful addition to the lex regia or constitution of the State. This
constitution was supposed to have delegated the legislative power to the
emperor; for the theory, that the Roman people was the legitimate source of all
authority, still floated in public opinion. Justinian, however, was
sufficiently versed both in the laws and constitutional forms of the empire, to
dread any precise qualification of this vague and perhaps imaginary law; though
the interests of the empire imperiously required that measures should be
adopted to prevent the throne from becoming an object of civil war. A successor
is apt to be a rival, and a regency in the Roman Empire would have revived the
power of the senate, and might have converted the government into an
oligarchical aristocracy. Justinian, as he was childless, naturally felt
unwilling to circumscribe his own power by any positive law, lest he should
create a claim which the authority of the senate and people of Constantinople
might have found the means of enforcing, and thus a legal control over the arbitrary
exercise of the imperial power would have been established. A doubtful
succession was also an event viewed with satisfaction by most of the leading
men of the senate, the palace, and the army, as they might expect to advance
their private fortunes, during the period of intrigue and uncertainty
inseparable from such a contingency. The partisans of a fixed succession would
only be found among the lawyers of the capital, the clergy, and the civil and
financial administrators in the provinces; for the Roman citizens and nobility,
forming a privileged class, were generally averse to the project, as tending to
diminish their importance. The abolition of the ceremony attending the sanction
of the emperor’s election by the senate and the people, would have been viewed
as an arbitrary change in the constitution, and as an attempt to rob the
inhabitants of the Eastern Empire of the boast that they lived under a legal
monarch, and not under a hereditary despot like the Persians,— a boast which
they still uttered with pride.
The death of Justinian so long threatened the empire
with civil war, that all parties were anxious to avert the catastrophe; and
Justin, one of his nephews, who held the office of master of the palace, was
peaceably installed as his uncle’s successor. The energy of his personal
character enabled him to turn to his advantage the traces of ancient forms that
still survived in the Roman state; and the momentary political importance thus
given to these forms, proves that the Roman government was even then very far
from a pure despotism. The phrase, ‘the senate and the Roman people’, still
exerted so much influence over public opinion, that Justin considered their
formal election as constituting his legal title to the throne. The senate was
instructed by his partisans to solicit him to accept the imperial dignity,
though he had already secured both the troops and the treasury; and the people
were assembled in the hippodrome, in order to enable the new emperor to deliver
an oration, in which he assured them that their happiness, and not his own
repose, should always be the chief object of his government. The character of
Justin II was honourable, but it is said to have been capricious; he was,
however, neither destitute of personal abilities nor energy. Disease, and
temporary fits of insanity, compelled him at last to resign the direction of
public business to others, and in this critical conjuncture his choice
displayed both judgment and patriotism. He passed over his own brothers and his
son-in-law, in order to select the man who appeared alone capable of
re-establishing the fortunes of the Roman Empire by his talents. This man was
Tiberius II.
The commencement of Justin’s reign was marked by
vigour, perhaps even by rashness. He considered the annual subsidies paid by
Justinian to the Persians and the Avars in the light of a disgraceful tribute,
and, as he refused to make any farther payments, he was involved in war with
both these powerful enemies at the same time. Yet, so inconsistent was the
Roman administration that the Lombards, by no means a powerful or numerous
people, were allowed to conquer the greater part of Italy almost unopposed. As
this conquest was the first military transaction that occurred during his
reign, and as the Lombards occupy an important place in the history of European
civilization, the loss of Italy has been usually selected as a convincing proof
of the weakness and incapacity of Justin.
The country occupied by the Lombards on the Danube was
exhausted by their oppressive rule; and they found great difficulty in
maintaining their position, in consequence of the neighbourhood of the Avars,
the growing strength of the Sclavonians, and the
perpetual hostility of the Gepids. The diminished
population and increasing poverty of the surrounding countries no longer
supplied the means of supporting a numerous body of warriors in that contempt
for every useful occupation which was essential to the preservation of the
national superiority of the Gothic race. The Sclavonic
neighbours and subjects of the Gothic tribes were gradually becoming as well
armed as their masters; and as many of those neighbours combined the pursuits
of agriculture with their pastoral and predatory habits, they were slowly
rising to a national equality. Pressed by these circumstances, Alboin, king of
the Lombards, resolved to emigrate, and to effect a settlement in Italy, the
richest and most populous country in his neighbourhood. To secure himself
during the expedition, he proposed to the Avars to unite their forces and
destroy the kingdom of the Gepids, agreeing to
abandon all claims to the conquered country, and to remain satisfied with half
the movable spoil.
This singular alliance was successful: the united
forces of the Lombards and Avars overpowered the Gepids,
and destroyed their kingdom in Pannonia, which had existed for one hundred and
fifty years. The Lombards immediately commenced their emigration. The Heruls had already quitted this desolated country, and thus
the last remains of the Gothic race, which had lingered on the confines of the
Eastern Empire, abandoned their possessions to the Hunnic tribes, which they
had long successfully opposed, and to the Sclavonians,
whom they had for ages ruled.
The historians of this period, on the authority of
Paul the Deacon, a Lombard chronicler, have asserted that Narses invited the
Lombards into Italy in order to avenge an insulting message with which the
empress Sophia had accompanied an order of her husband Justin for the recall of
the old eunuch to Constantinople. The court was dissatisfied with the expense
of Narses in the administration of Italy, and required that a larger sum should
be annually remitted to the imperial treasury. The Italians, on the other hand,
complained of the military severity and fiscal oppression of his government.
The last acts of the life of Narses are, however, quite incompatible with
treasonable designs; and probably the knowledge which the emperor Justin and
his cabinet must have possessed of the impossibility of deriving any surplus revenue
from the agricultural districts of Italy, offers the simplest explanation of
the indifference manifested at Constantinople to the Lombard invasion. It would
be apparently nearer the truth to affirm that the Lombards entered Italy with
the tacit sanction of the empire, than that Narses acted as a traitor.
As soon as Narses received the order of recall, he
proceeded to Naples, on his way to Constantinople; but the advance of the
Lombards alarmed the Italians to such a degree, that they despatched a
deputation to beg him to resume the government. The Bishop of Rome repaired to
Naples, to persuade Narses of the sincere repentance of the provincials, who
perceived the danger of losing a ruler of talent at such a crisis. No
suspicion, therefore, could have then prevailed amongst the Italians of any
communications between Narses and the Lombards, nor could they have suspected
that an experienced courtier, a wise statesman, and an able general, would, in
his extreme old age, allow revenge to get the better of his reason, else they
would have trembled at his return to power, and dreaded his vengeance instead
of confiding in his talents. And even in examining history at this distance of
time, we ought to weigh the conduct and character of a long public life against
a dramatic tale, even when it is repeated by a great historian. The story that
the empress Sophia sent a distaff and spindle to the ablest soldier in the
empire, and that the veteran should have declared in his passion that he would
spin her a thread which she should not easily unravel, seems a fable, which bears
a character of fancy and of simplicity of ideas, marking its origin in a ruder
state of society than that which reigned at the court of Justin II. A Gothic or
Lombard origin of the fable is farther supported by the fact, that it must have
produced no ordinary sensation among the Germanic nations, to see an eunuch
invested with the highest commands in the army and the State, and the sensation
could not fail to give rise to many idle tales. The story of Narses’s treason
may have arisen at the time of his death; but it is remarkable that no Greek
author mentions it before the tenth century; and this fact countenances the
inference that the Lombard conquest received at least a tacit approval on the
part of the emperor. Narses really accepted the invitation of the Italians to
return to Rome, where he commenced the necessary preparations for resisting the
Lombards, but his death occurred before their arrival in Italy.
The historians of Justin's reign are full of
complaints of the abuses which had infected the administration of justice, yet
the facts which they record tend distinctly to exculpate the emperor from any
fault, and prove incontestably that the corruption had its seat in the vices of
the whole system of the civil government of the empire. The most remarkable
anecdote selected to illustrate the corruption of the judicial department,
indicates that the real cause of the disorder lay in the increasing power of
the official aristocracy connected with the civil administration. A man of
rank, on being cited before the prefect of the city for an act of injustice,
ridiculed the summons, and excused himself from appearing to answer it, as he
was engaged to attend an entertainment given by the emperor. In consideration
of this circumstance, the prefect did not venture to arrest him; but he
proceeded immediately to the palace, entered the state apartments, and
addressing Justin, declared that, as a judge, he was ready to execute every law
for the strict administration of justice, but since the emperor honoured criminals,
by admitting them to the imperial table, where his authority was of no avail,
he begged to be allowed to resign his office. Justin, without hesitation,
asserted that he would never defend any act of injustice, and that even should
he himself be the person accused, he would submit to be punished. The prefect,
thus authorized, seized the accused, and carried him to his court for trial.
The emperor applauded the conduct of his judge; but this act of energy is said
to have so stupefied the inhabitants of Constantinople, that, for thirty days,
no accusation was brought before the prefect. This effect of the impartial
administration of justice on the people seems strange, if the historians of the
period are correct in their complaints of the general injustice. The anecdote
is, however, valuable, as it reveals the real cause of the duration of the
Eastern Empire, and shows that the crumbling political edifice was sustained by
the judicial administration. Justin also relieved his subjects from the burden
which the arrears of the public taxes were always accumulating, without
enriching the treasury.
If Justin engaged rashly in a quarrel with Persia, he
omitted no means of strengthening himself during the contest. He formed
alliances with the Turks of central Asia, and with the Ethiopians who occupied
a part of Arabia; but, in spite of his allies, the arms of the empire were
unsuccessful in the East. A long series of predatory excursions were carried on
by the Romans and the Persians, and many provinces of both empires were reduced
to a state of desolation by this barbarous species of warfare. Chosroes
succeeded in capturing Dara, the bulwark of Mesopotamia, and in devastating
Syria in the most terrible manner; half a million of the inhabitants of this
flourishing province were carried away as slaves into Persia. In the meantime
the Avars consolidated their empire on the Danube, by compelling the Huns,
Bulgarians, Sclavonians, and the remains of the
Goths, to submit to their authority. Justin vainly attempted to arrest their
career, by encouraging the Franks of Austrasia to attack them. The Avars
continued their war with the empire, and defeated the Roman army under Tiberius
the future emperor.
The misfortunes which assailed the empire on every
side, and the increasing difficulties of the internal administration, demanded
exertions, of which the health of Justin rendered him incapable. Tiberius
seemed the only man competent to guide the vessel of the State through the
storm, and Justin had the magnanimity to name him his successor, with the
dignity of Caesar, and the sense to commit to him the entire control over the
public administration. The conduct of the Caesar soon changed the fortune of
war in the East, though the European provinces were still abandoned to the
ravages of the Sclavonians. Chosroes was defeated in
Melitene, though he commanded his army in person, and the Romans, pursuing
their success, penetrated into Babylonia, and plundered all the provinces of
Persia to the very shores of the Caspian Sea.
It is surprising that we find no mention of the Greek
people, nor of Greece itself, in the memorials of the reign of Justin.
Justinian plundered Greece of as large a portion of her revenues as he could;
Justin and his successors utterly neglected her defence against the Sclavonian incursions, yet it appears that the Greeks
contrived still to retain so much of their ancient spirit of independence and
their exclusive nationality, as to awaken a feeling of jealousy amongst that
more aristocratic portion of their nation which assumed the Roman name. That
the imperial government overlooked no trace of nationality among any section of
its subjects, is evident from a law which Justin passed to enforce the
conversion of the Samaritans to Christianity, and which apparently was
successful in exterminating that people, as, though they previously occupied
almost as important a place in the history of the Eastern Empire as the Jews,
they cease to be mentioned from the time of Justin’s law.
Sect. II
Disorganization of all Political and National
Influence during the Reigns of Tiberius II and
Maurice.
A vague feeling of terror pervaded society throughout
the Roman Empire after the death of Justinian. The cement of the imperial
edifice was crumbling into sand and the whole fabric threatened to fall in
shapeless fragments. Nor was the alarm unwarranted, though it arose from
popular instinct lather than political foresight. There is perhaps no period of
history in which society was so universally in a state of demoralization, nor
in which all the nations known to the Greeks and Romans were so utterly
destitute of energy and virtue, as during the period which elapsed from the
death of Justinian to the appearance of Mahomet. Theophylactus
Simocatta, the contemporary historian of the reign of
Maurice, mentions a curious proof of the general conviction that a great
revolution was impending in the Roman Empire. He recounts that an angel
appeared to the emperor Tiberius II in a dream, and announced to him that on
account of his virtues the days of anarchy should not commence during his
reign.
The reigns of Tiberius and Maurice present the
remarkable spectacle of two princes, of no ordinary talents, devoting all their
energies to improve the condition of their country, without being able to
arrest its decline, though that decline evidently proceeded from internal
causes. Great evils arose in the Roman Empire from the discord existing between
the government and almost every class of its subjects. A powerful army still
kept the field, the administration was perfectly arranged, the finances were
not in a state of disorder, and every exertion was made to enforce the
strictest administration of justice; yet, with so many elements of good
government, the government was bad, unpopular, and oppressive. No feeling of
patriotism existed in any class; no bond of union united the monarch and his
subjects; and no ties of common interest rendered their public conduct amenable
to the same laws. No fundamental institution of a national character enforced
the duties of a citizen by the bonds of morality and religion; and thus the
emperors could only apply administrative reforms as a cure for an universal
political palsy. Great hopes of improvement were, however, entertained when Tiberius
mounted the throne; for his prudence, justice, and talents were the theme of
general admiration. He opposed the enemies of the empire with vigour, but as he
saw that the internal ills of the State were infinitely more dangerous than the
Persians and the Avars, he made peace the great object of his exertions, in
order that he might devote his exclusive attention to the reform of the civil
and military administration. But he solicited peace from Hormisdas, the son of
Chosroes, in vain. When he found all reasonable terms of accommodation rejected
by the Persian, he attempted, by a desperate effort, to terminate the war. The
whole disposable military force of the empire was collected in Asia Minor, and
an army of one hundred and fifty thousand men was, by this means, assembled.
The Avars were allowed to seize Sirmium, and the emperor consented to conclude
with them an inglorious and disadvantageous peace, so important did it appear
to him to secure success in the struggle with Persia. The war commenced with some
advantage, but the death of Tiberius interrupted all his plans. He died after a
short reign of four years, with the reputation of being the best sovereign who
had ever ruled the Eastern Empire, and he bequeathed to his son-in-law Maurice
the difficult task of carrying into execution his extensive schemes of reform.
Maurice was personally acquainted with every branch of
the public administration — he possessed all the qualities of an excellent
minister — he was a humane and an honourable man, — but he wanted the great
sagacity necessary to rule the Roman Empire in the difficult times in which he
reigned. His private character merited all the eulogies of the Greek
historians, for he was a good man and a true Christian. When the people of
Constantinople and their bigoted patriarch determined to burn an unfortunate
individual as a magician, he made every effort, though in vain, to save the
persecuted man. He gave a feeling proof of the sincerity of his faith after his
dethronement; for when the child of another was offered to the executioners
instead of his own, he himself revealed the error, lest an innocent person
should perish by his act. He was orthodox in his religion, and economical in
his expenditure, virtues which his subjects were well qualified to appreciate,
and much inclined to admire. The one ought to have endeared him to the people,
and the other to the clergy; but unfortunately, his want of success in war was
connected with his parsimony, and his humanity was regarded as less orthodox
than Christian. The impression of his virtues was thus neutralized, and he
could never secure to his government the great political advantages which he
might have derived from popularity. As soon as his reign proved unfortunate he
was called a miser and a Marcionite. (The Marcionites held, that an
intermediate deity of a mixed nature, neither perfectly good nor perfectly
evil, is the creator of the world. Mosheim’s Ecclesiastical History)
By supporting the Bishop of Constantinople in his
assumption of the title of oecumenical patriarch, Maurice excited the violent
animosity of Pope Gregory I; and the great reputation of that sagacious pontiff
has induced Western historians to examine all the actions of the Eastern
emperor through a veil of ecclesiastical prejudice. Gregory, in his letters,
accuses Maurice of supporting the venality of the public administration, and
even of selling the high office of exarch. These accusations are doubtless
correct enough when applied to the system of the Byzantine court; but no prince
seems to have felt more deeply than Maurice the evil effects of that system, or
made sincerer efforts to reform it. That personal avarice was not the cause of
the financial errors of his administration, is attested by numerous instances
of his liberality recorded in history, and by the fact that even during his
turbulent reign he was intent on reducing the public burdens of his subjects,
and actually succeeded in his plans to a considerable extent. The flatteries
heaped by Gregory the Great on the worthless tyrant Phocas, show clearly enough
that policy, not justice, regulated the measure of the pope’s praise and
censure.
Maurice had been selected by Tiberius as his
confidential agent in the reform of the army; and much of the new emperor’s
misfortune originated from attempting to carry into execution plans which
required the calm judgment and the elevation of character of their author, in
order to create throughout the empire the feeling that their adoption was
necessary for the salvation of the Roman power. The enormous expense of the
army, and the independent existence which it maintained, now compromised the
safety of the government, as much as it had done before the reforms of
Constantine. Tiberius began cautiously to lay the foundation of a new system, by
adding to his household troops a corps of fifteen thousand heathen slaves, whom
he purchased and disciplined. He placed this little army under the immediate
command of Maurice, who had already displayed an attachment to military
reforms, by attempting to restore the ancient mode of encamping Roman armies.
This revival of the old Roman castrametation caused great dissatisfaction in
the army, and there seems every reason to ascribe the unsuccessful operations
of Maurice on the Iberian frontier, in the year 580, to the discontent of the
soldiers. That he was a military pedant, may be inferred from the fact that he
found time to write a work on military tactics, without succeeding in acquiring
a great military reputation; and it is certain that he was suspected by the
soldiers of being an enemy to the privileges and pretensions of the army, and
that by them all his actions were scanned with a jealous eye. During the
Persian war, he rashly attempted to diminish the pay and rations of the troops,
and this ill-timed measure caused a sedition, which was suppressed with the
greatest difficulty, but which left feelings of ill-will in the minds of the
emperor and the army, and laid the foundation of the ruin of both.
Fortune, however, proved eminently favourable to Maurice
in his contest with Persia, and he obtained that peace which neither the
prudence nor the military exertions of Tiberius had succeeded in concluding. A
civil war rendered Chosroes II, the son of Hormisdas, an exile, and compelled
him to solicit the protection of the Romans. (Chosroes II succeeded Hormisdas
III in A.D. 590, and reigned 37 years. Chosroes II was dethroned by his son Siroes in A.D. 628). Maurice received Chosroes II with
humanity, and, acting according to the dictates of a just and generous policy,
aided him to recover his paternal throne. When reinstated on the throne of
Persia, Chosroes concluded a peace with the Roman Empire, which promised to
prove lasting; for Maurice wisely sought to secure its stability, by demanding
no concession injurious to the honour or political interests of Persia. Dara
and Nisibis were restored to the Romans, and a strong and defensible frontier
formed by the cession, on the part of Chosroes, of a portion of Pers-Armenia.
Sect. III
Maurice causes a revolution by attempting to
re-establish the ancient authority of the Imperial Administration.
As soon as Maurice had established tranquillity in the
Asiatic provinces, he directed his whole force against the Avars, in order to
restrain the ravages which they were annually committing in the country between
the Danube and the coast of the Mediterranean. The Avar kingdom now embraced
all that portion of Europe which extends from the Carnian
Alps to the Black Sea; and the Huns, Sclavonians, and
Bulgarians, who had previously lived under independent governments, were either
united with their conquerors, or submitted, if not as subjects, at least as
vassals, to the Avar monarch. After the conclusion of peace with Persia, the
sovereign of the Avars was the only dangerous enemy to the Roman power; but the
Avars, in spite of their rapid and extensive conquests, were unable to assemble
an army capable of encountering the regular forces of the empire in the open
field. Maurice, confident in the superiority of Roman discipline, resolved to
conduct a campaign against the barbarians in person; and there appeared no
doubt of its proving successful. His conduct, on this important occasion, is
marked by singular vacillation of purpose. He quitted Constantinople apparently
with the firm determination to place himself at the head of the army; yet, when
a deputation from the court and senate followed him, and entreated that he
would take care of his sacred person, he made this solicitation a pretext for
an immediate return to his capital. His courage was very naturally called in
question, and both his friends and enemies attributed his alarm to sinister
omens. It seems, however, not improbable, that his firmness was really shaken
by more alarming proofs of his unpopularity, and by the conviction that he
would have to encounter far greater difficulties than he had previously
expected, in enforcing his projects of reform among the troops. As very often
happens to weak and obstinate men, he became distrustful of the success of his
measures after he had committed himself to attempt their execution; and he
shrank from attempting to perform the task in person, though he must have
doubted whether an undertaking requiring so rare a combination of military
skill and political sagacity could ever succeed, unless conducted under the
eye, and supported by the personal influence and prompt authority, of the
emperor. His conduct excited the contempt of the soldiers; and whether he
trembled at omens, or shrank from responsibility, he was laughed at in the army
for his timidity: so that even had nothing occurred to awaken the suspicion or
rouse the hatred of the troops employed against the Avars, their scorn for
their sovereign would have brought them to the very verge of rebellion.
Though the Roman army gained several battles, and
displayed considerable skill, and much of the ancient military superiority in
the campaigns against the Avars, still the inhabitants of Moesia, Illyria,
Dardania, Thrace, Macedonia, and even Greece, were exposed to annual incursions
of hostile hordes, who crossed the Danube to plunder the cultivators of the
soil, so that, at last, whole provinces remained almost entirely depopulated.
The imperial armies were generally ill commanded, for the generals were usually
selected, either from among the relations of the emperor, or from among the
court aristocracy. The spirit of opposition which had arisen between the camp
and the court, made it unsafe to intrust the chief command of large bodies of
troops to soldiers of fortune, and the most experienced of the Roman officers,
who had been bred to the profession of arms, were only employed in secondary
posts. (The court generals of the time were Maurice himself, his brother Peter,
his son-in-law Philippicus, Heraclius, the father of the emperor of that name,
Comentiolus, and prolmbly Priscus, who appears to be
the same person as Crispus. The professional soldiers who attained high
commands were Droctulf, a Sueve,
Apsich, a Hun, and Ilifred,
whose name proves his Gothic or Germanic origin)
Priscus, one of the ablest and most influential of the
Roman generals, carried on the war with some success, and invaded the country
of the Avars and Sclavonians; but his successes
appear to have excited the jealousy of the emperor, who, fearing his army more
than the forces of his enemies, removed Priscus from the command, in order to
intrust it to his own brother. The first duty of the new general was to remodel
the organization of the army, to prepare for the reception of the emperor’s
ulterior measures of reform. The commencement of a campaign was most unwisely
selected as the time for carrying this plan into execution, and a sedition
among the soldiery was the consequence. The troops being now engaged in
continual disputes with the emperor and the civil administration, selected from
among their officers the leaders whom they considered most attached to their
own views, and these leaders began to negotiate with the government, and
consequently all discipline was destroyed. The mutinous army was soon defeated
by the Avars, and Maurice was constrained to conclude a treaty of peace. The
provisions of this treaty were the immediate cause of the ruin of Maurice. The
Avars who had taken prisoners about twelve thousand
of the Roman soldiers, offered to ransom their captives for twelve thousand
pieces of gold. Maurice refused to pay this sum, and it was said, that they
reduced their demand, and asked only four pieces of silver for each captive;
but the emperor, though he consented to add twenty thousand pieces of gold to
the former subsidy, refused to pay anything in order to ransom the Roman
prisoners.
By this treaty, the Danube was declared the frontier
of the empire, and the Roman officers were allowed to cross the river, in order
to punish any ravages which the Sclavonians might
commit within the Roman territory — a fact which seems to indicate the declining
power of the Avar monarch, and the virtual independence of the Sclavonic tribes, to whom this provision applied. It may be
inferred also from these terms, that Maurice could easily have delivered the
captive Roman soldiers had he wished to do so; and it is natural to conclude
that he left them in captivity to punish them for their mutinous behaviour, to
which he attributed both their captivity and the misfortunes of the empire. It
was commonly reported, however, at the time, that the emperor’s avarice induced
him to refuse to ransom the soldiers, though it is impossible to suppose that
Maurice would have committed an act of inhumanity for the paltry saving which
thereby accrued to the imperial treasury. The Avars, with singular, and
probably unexpected barbarity, put all their prisoners to death. Maurice
certainly never contemplated the possibility of their acting with such cruelty,
or he would have felt all the impolicy of his conduct, even if it be supposed
that passion had, for a time, extinguished the usual humanity of his
disposition. The murder of these soldiers was universally ascribed to the
avarice of the emperor; and the aversion which the army had long entertained to
his government was changed into a deep-rooted hatred of his person; while the
people participated in the feeling from a natural dislike to an economical and
unsuccessful reformer.
The peace with the Avars was of short duration.
Priscus was again intrusted with the command of the army, and again restored
the honour of the Roman arms. He carried hostilities beyond the Danube; and
affairs were proceeding prosperously, when Maurice, with that perseverance in
an unpopular course which weak princes generally consider a proof of strength
of character, renewed his attempts to enforce his schemes for restoring the
severest discipline. His brother was despatched to the army as
commander-in-chief, with orders to place the troops in winter quarters in the
enemy’s country, and compel them to forage for their subsistence. A sedition
was the consequence: and the soldiers, already supplied with leaders, broke out
into rebellion, and raised Phocas, one of the officers who had risen to
distinction in the previous seditions, to the chief command. Phocas led the
army directly to Constantinople, where, having found a powerful party
dissatisfied with Maurice, he lost no time in mounting the throne. The
injudicious system of reform pursued by Maurice had rendered him not only
hateful to the army, whose abuses he endeavoured to eradicate, but also unpopular
among the people, whose burdens he wished to alleviate. Yet the emperor’s
confidence in the rectitude of his intentions supported him in the most
desperate circumstances; and when abandoned by all his subjects, and convinced
that the termination both of his reign and his life was approaching, he showed
no signs of cowardice. As his plan of reform had been directed to the increase
of his own power as the centre of the whole administration, and as he had shown
too clearly that his increased authority was to be directed against more than
one section of the government agents, he lost all influence from the moment he
lost his power; and when he found it necessary to abandon Constantinople, he
was deserted by every follower. He was soon captured by the agents of Phocas,
who ordered him to be immediately executed with his whole family. The conduct
of Maurice at his death proves that his private virtues could not be too highly
eulogized. He died with fortitude and resignation, after witnessing the
execution of his children; and when an attempt, which has been already alluded
to, was made to substitute the infant of a nurse instead of his youngest child,
he himself revealed the deceit, in order to prevent the death of an innocent
person.
The sedition which put an end to the reign of Maurice,
though it originated in the camp, became, as the army advanced towards the
capital, a popular as well as a military movement. Many causes had long
threatened a conflict between official power and popular feeling, for the
people hated the administration, and the discordant elements of society in the
East had latterly been gaining strength. The central government had found great
difficulty in repressing religious disputes and ecclesiastical party feuds. The
factions of the amphitheatre, and the national hatred of various classes in the
empire, frequently broke out in acts of bloodshed. Monks, charioteers, and
usurers, could all raise themselves above the law; and the interests of
particular bodies of men proved often more powerful to produce disorder than
the provincial government to enforce tranquillity. The administrative
institutions were everywhere too weak to replace the declining strength of the
executive government. A persuasion arose that it was absolutely necessary to
infuse new strength into the administration in order to escape from anarchy:
but the power of a rapacious aristocracy, and the corruption of an idle
populace in the capital, fed by the State, presented insuperable obstacles to
the tranquil adoption of any reasonable plan of political reformation. The
provincials were too poor and ignorant to originate any scheme of amelioration,
and it was dangerous even for an emperor to attempt the task, as no national
institutions enabled the sovereign to unite any powerful body of his subjects
in a systematic opposition to the venality of the aristocracy, the corruption
of the capital, and the license of the army. Those national feelings which
began to acquire force in some provinces, and in a few municipalities where the
attacks of Justinian had proved ineffectual, tended more to awaken a longing
for independence than a wish for reform or a desire to support the emperor in
any attempt to improve the administration.
The arbitrary and illegal conduct of the imperial
officers, while it rendered sedition venial, very often insured its partial
success and complete impunity. The measures of reform proposed by Maurice
appear to have been directed, like the reforms of most absolute monarchs,
rather to increase his own authority than to establish a system of
administration on a legal basis, more powerful than the despotic will of the
emperor himself. To confine the absolute power of the emperor to the executive
administration, to make the law supreme, and to vest the legislative authority
in some responsible body or senate, were not projects suitable to the age of
Maurice, and perhaps hardly possible in the state of society. Maurice resolved
that his first step in the career of improvement should be to render the army,
long a licentious and turbulent check on the imperial power, a well-disciplined
and efficient instrument of his will; and he hoped in this manner to repress
the tyranny of the official aristocracy, restrain the license of the military
chiefs, prevent the sects of Nestorians and Eutychians from forming separate
states, and render the authority of the central government supreme in all the
distant provinces and isolated cities of the empire. In his struggle to obtain
this result he was compelled to make use of the existing administration; and,
consequently, he appears in the history of the empire as the supporter and
protector of a detested aristocracy, equally unpopular with the army and the
people; while his ulterior plans for the improvement of the civil condition of
his subjects were never fully made known, and perhaps never clearly framed even
by himself, though it is evident that many of them ought to have preceded his
military changes. This view of the political position of Maurice, as it could
not escape the observation of his contemporaries, is alluded to in the quaint
expression of Evagrius, that Maurice expelled from
his mind the democracy of the passions, and established the aristocracy of
reason, though the ecclesiastical historian, a cautious courtier, either could
not or would not express himself with a more precise application, or in a
clearer manner.
Sect, IV
Phocas was the representative of a Revolution, not of
a National Party
Though Phocas ascended the throne as leader of the
rebellious army, he was universally regarded as the representative of the
popular hostility to the existing order of administration, to the ruling
Aristocracy, and to the government party in the church. A great portion of the
Roman world expected improvement as a consequence of any change, but the change
produced by the election of Phocas was followed by a series of misfortunes
almost unparalleled in the history of revolutions. The ties which connected the
social and political institutions of the Eastern Empire were severed, and
circumstances which may have appeared to contemporaries only as the prelude of
a passing storm tending to purify the moral horizon, soon created a whirlwind
which tore up the very roots of the Roman power, and prepared the minds of men
to receive new Impressions.
The government of Phocas convinced the majority of his
subjects that the rebellion of a licentious army, and the sedition of a
pampered populace, were not the proper instruments for ameliorating the
Condition of the empire. In spite of the hopes of his followers, of the
eulogium on the column which still exists in the Roman forum, and of the
praises of Pope Gregory the Great, it was quickly discovered that Phocas was a
worse sovereign than his predecessor. Even as a soldier he was inferior to
Maurice, and the glory of the Roman arms was stained by his cowardice or
incapacity. Chosroes, the king of Persia, moved, as he asserted, by gratitude,
and the respect due to the memory of his benefactor Maurice, declared war
against the murderer. A war commenced between the Persian and Roman empires,
which proved the last and bloodiest of their numerous struggles; and its
violence and strange vicissitudes contributed in a great degree to the
dissolution of both these ancient monarchies. The empire of the Sassanides, after bringing the Roman empire to the verge of
ruin, received a mortal wound from Heraclius and was soon after destroyed by
the followers of Mahomet. The Roman empire escaped destruction, after
witnessing Persian armies encamped on the Bosphorus and Arabian armies
besieging Constantinople, but it lost many of its richest provinces, and both
its institutions and political character underwent a change. It is customary to
call the Roman empire, after this modification in its external and internal
form was completed, the Byzantine empire. The victories of Chosroes compelled
Phocas to conclude an immediate peace with the Avars, in order to secure
himself from being attacked in Constantinople. The treaty is of great
importance in the history of the Greek population in Europe, but,
unfortunately, we are ignorant of its tenor and can only trace it in its
effects at a later period. The whole of the agricultural districts of the
empire in Europe were virtually abandoned to the ravages of the northern
nations, and, from the Danube to the Peloponnesus, the Sclavonian
tribes ravaged the country with impunity, or settled in the depopulated
provinces. Phocas availed himself of the treaty to transport into Asia the
whole military force which he could collect, but the Roman armies, having lost
their discipline, were everywhere defeated. Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine,
Phoenicia, Cappadocia, Galatia, and Paphlagonia, were laid waste; and nothing
appears to have saved the Roman empire from complete conquest by the Persians,
but the wars carried on at the time by Chosroes with the Armenians and the
Turks, which prevented his concentrating his whole force against
Constantinople. The tyranny and incapacity of Phocas rapidly increased the
disorders in the civil and military administration; seditions broke out in the
army, and rebellions in the provinces. The emperor, either because he partook
of the bigotry of his age, or because he desired to secure the support of the
clergy and the applause of the populace, determined to prove his orthodoxy by
ordering all the Jews in the empire to be baptized. The Jews, who formed a
wealthy and powerful class in many of the cities of the East, resisted this act
of oppression, and caused bloody seditions which contributed much to the
progress of the Persian arms.
Various districts and provinces in the distant parts
of the empire, observing the confusion which reigned in the central
administration, and the increasing weakness of the imperial power, availed
themselves of the opportunity to extend the authority of their municipal
institutions. The dawn of the temporal power of the Popes, and of the liberty
of the Italian cities, may be traced to this period, though still hardly
perceptible. Pope Gregory the Great only cavilled at the conduct of Maurice,
who allowed the Bishop of Constantinople to assume the title of oecumenical
patriarch, and he eulogized the virtues of Phocas, who compelled the patriarch
to lay aside the irritating epithet. Phocas at last exhausted the patience even
of the timid aristocracy of Constantinople, and all classes directed their
attention to find a successor to the tyrant. Heraclius, the exarch of Africa,
had long governed that province, in which his family possessed great influence,
almost as an independent sovereign. He had distinguished himself in the command
of a Roman army during the Persian wars. To him the leading men at
Constantinople addressed their complaints, inviting him to deliver the empire
from ruin, and dethrone the reigning tyrant.
The exarch of Africa soon collected a considerable
army and a numerous fleet. The command of this expedition was given to his son
Heraclius; and as the possession of Egypt, which supplied Constantinople with
provisions for its idle populace, was necessary to secure tranquillity after
conquest, Nicetas, the nephew of the exarch, was Sent
with an army to support his cousin, and occupy both Egypt and Syria. Heraclius
proceeded directly to Constantinople, and the fate of Phocas was decided in a
single naval engagement, fought within sight of his palace. The disorder which
reigned in every branch of the administration, in consequence of the folly and
incapacity of the ignorant soldier who ruled the empire, was so great, that no
measures had been adopted for offering a vigorous resistance to the African
expedition. Phocas was taken prisoner, stripped of the imperial robes, covered
with a black cloak, and carried on board the ship of Heraclius with his hands
tied behind his back. The young conqueror indignantly addressed him: “Wretch!
in what manner have you governed the empire?” The dethroned tyrant, roused by
the tone which seemed to proclaim that his successor would prove as cruel as he
had been himself, and perhaps feeling the difficulties of the task to be
insurmountable, answered with a sneer, “You will govern it better!” Heraclius
lost his temper at the advantage which his predecessor had gained in this
verbal contest; and showed that it was very questionable whether he himself
would prove either a wiser sovereign or a better man than Phocas, by striking
the dethroned emperor and ordering his hands and feet to be cut off on the deck
of the vessel before he was decapitated. His head and mutilated members were then
sent on shore to be dragged through the streets by the populace of
Constantinople. All the leading partisans of Phocas were executed, as if to
afford evidence that the cruelty of that tyrant had been as much a national as
a personal vice. Since his death, he has been fortunate enough to find
defenders, who consider that his alliance with Pope Gregory, and his leaning
towards the Latin party in the church, are signs of virtue, and proofs of a
capacity for government.
Sect. V
The Empire
under Heraclius
The young Heraclius became Emperor of the East, and
his father continued to rule Africa, which the family appear to have regarded
as a hereditary domain. For several years the government of the new emperor was
quite as unsuccessful as that of his predecessor, though it was more popular
and less tyrannical. There are reasons, however, for believing that this period
of apparent misgovernment and general misfortune was not one of complete
neglect. Though defeats and disgraces followed one another with rapidity, the
causes of these disasters had grown up during the preceding reigns; and
Heraclius was compelled to labour silently in clearing away many petty abuses,
and in forming a new corps of civil and military officers, before he could
venture on any important act. His chief attention was of necessity devoted to
prepare for the great struggle of restoring the Roman empire to some portion of
its ancient strength and power; and he had enough of the Roman spirit to
resolve, that, if he could not succeed, he would risk his own life and fortune
in the attempt, and perish amidst the ruins of civilized society. History has
preserved few records of the measures adopted by Heraclius during the early
years of his reign; but their effect in restoring the strength of the empire,
and in reviving the energy of the imperial administration, is testified by the
great changes which mark the subsequent period.
The reign of Heraclius is one of the most remarkable
epochs both in the history of the empire and in the annals of mankind. It
warded off the almost inevitable destruction of the Roman government; it laid
the foundation of that policy which prolonged the existence of the imperial
power at Constantinople under a new modification, as the Byzantine monarchy;
and it was contemporary with the commencement of the great moral change in the
condition of the people which transformed the language and manners of the
ancient world into those of modem nations. The Eastern Empire was indebted to
the talents of Heraclius for its escape from those ages of barbarism which, for
many centuries, prevailed in all western Europe. No period of society could
offer a field for instructive study more likely to present practical results to
the highly-civilized political communities of modern Europe; yet there is no
time of which the existing memorials of the constitution and frame of society
are so imperfect and unsatisfactory. A few important historical facts and
single events can alone be gleaned, from which an outline of the administration
of Heraclius may be drawn, and an attempt made to describe the situation of his
Greek subjects.
The loss of many extensive provinces, and the
destruction of numerous large armies since the death of Justinian, had given
rise to a persuasion that the end of the Roman empire was approaching; and the
events of the earlier part of the reign of Heraclius were not calculated to
remove this impression. Fanaticism and avidity were the prominent social
features of the time. The civil government became more oppressive in the capital
as the revenues of the provinces conquered by the Persians were lost. The
military power of the empire declined to such a degree, from the poverty of the
imperial government, and the aversion of the people to military service, that
the Roman armies were nowhere able to keep the field. Heraclius found the
treasury empty, the civil administration demoralized, the agricultural classes
ruined, the army disorganized, the soldiers deserting their standards to become
monks, and the richest provinces occupied by his enemies. A review of the
position of the empire at his accession attests the extraordinary talents of
the man who could emerge from the accumulated disadvantages of this situation,
and achieve a career of glory and conquest almost unrivalled. It proves also
the wonderful perfection of the system of administration which admitted of
reconstructing the fabric of the civil government, when the very organization
of civil society had been completely shattered. The ancient supremacy of the
Roman empire could not be restored by human genius; the progress of mankind
down the stream of time had rendered a return to the past condition of the
world impracticable; but yet the speed of the vessel of the State in descending
the torrent was moderated, and it was saved from being dashed to pieces on the
rocks. Heraclius delivered the empire and the imperial city of Constantinople
from almost certain destruction by the Persians and the Avars; and though his
fortune sank before the first fury of Mahomet’s enthusiastic votaries, his
sagacious administration prepared those powerful means of resistance which
enabled the Greeks to check the Saracen armies almost at the threshold of their
dominions; and the caliphs, while extending their successful conquests to the
Indian Ocean and the Atlantic, were for centuries compelled to wage a doubtful
war on the northern frontiers of Syria.
It was perhaps a misfortune for mankind that Heraclius
was by birth a Roman rather than a Greek, as his views were from that accident
directed to the maintenance of the imperial dominion, without any reference to
the national organization of his people. His civilization, like that of the
ruling class in the Eastern Empire, was too far removed from the state of
ignorance into which the mass of the population had fallen, for the one to be
influenced by the feelings of the other, or for both to act together with the
energy conferred by unity of purpose. Heraclius, being by birth and family
connections an African noble, regarded himself as of pure Roman blood, superior
to all national prejudices, and bound by duty and policy to repress the
domineering spirit of the Greek aristocracy in the State, and of the Greek
hierarchy in the Church. Language and manners began to give to national
feelings almost as much power in forming men into distinct societies as
political arrangements. The influence of the clergy followed the divisions
established by language, rather than the political organization adopted by the
government: and as the clergy formed the most popular and the ablest portion of
society, the church exerted more influence over the minds of the people than
the civil administration and the imperial power, even though the emperor was
the acknowledged sovereign and master of the patriarchs and the pope. It is
necessary to observe here, that the established church of the empire had ceased
to be the universal Christian church. The Greeks had rendered themselves the
depositaries of its power and influence; they had already corrupted
Christianity into the Greek church; and other nations were rapidly forming
separate ecclesiastical societies to supply their own spiritual wants. The
Armenians, Syrians, and Egyptians, were induced by national aversion to the
ecclesiastical tyranny of the Greeks, as well as by spiritual preference of the
doctrines of Nestorius and Eutyches, to oppose the established church. At the
time Heraclius ascended the throne, these national and religious feelings
already exercised their power of modifying the operations of the Roman
government, and of enabling mankind to advance one step towards the
establishment of individual liberty and intellectual independence.
Circumstances, which will be subsequently noticed, prevented society from
making any progress in this career of improvement, and effectually arrested its
advance for many centuries. In western Europe, this struggle never entirely
lost its important characteristic of a moral contest for the enjoyment of
personal rights and the exercise of individual opinion; and as no central
government succeeded in maintaining itself permanently independent of all
national feelings, a check on the formation of absolute authority always
existed, both in the Church and State. Heraclius, in his desire to restore the
power of the empire, strove to destroy these sentiments of religious liberty.
He persecuted all who opposed his political power in ecclesiastical matters; he
drove the Nestorians from the great church of Edessa, and gave it to the
orthodox. He banished the Jews from Jerusalem, and forbade them to approach
within three thousand paces of the Holy City. His plans of coercion would
evidently have failed as completely with the Nestorians, Eutychians, and Jacobites, as they did with the Jews; but the contest with
Mohammedanism closed the struggle, and concentrated the whole strength of the
unconquered population of the empire in support of the Greek church and
Constantinopolitan government.
In order fully to comprehend the lamentable state of
weakness to which the empire was reduced, it is necessary to take a cursory
view of the condition of the different provinces. The continual ravages of the
barbarians who occupied the country beyond the Danube had extended as far as
the southern shores of the Peloponnesus. The agricultural population was almost
exterminated, except where it was protected by the immediate vicinity of
fortified towns, or secured by the fastnesses of the mountains. The inhabitants
of all the countries between the Archipelago and the Adriatic had been greatly
diminished, and fertile provinces remained everywhere desolate, ready to
receive new occupants. As great part of these countries yielded very little
revenue to the government, they were considered by the court of Constantinople
as of hardly any value, except in so far as they covered the capital from
hostile attacks, or commanded the commercial routes to the west of Europe. At
this time the Indian and Chinese trade had in part been forced round the north
of the Caspian Sea, in consequence of the Persian conquests in Syria and Egypt,
and the disturbed state of the country immediately to the east of Persia. The
rich produce transported by the caravans, which reached the northern shores of
the Black Sea, was then transported to Constantinople, and from thence
distributed through western Europe. Under these circumstances, Thessalonica and
Dyrrachium became points of great consequence to the empire, and were
successfully defended by the emperor amidst all his calamities. These two
cities commanded the extremities of the usual road between Constantinople and
Ravenna, and connected the towns on the Archipelago with the Adriatic and with
Rome. The open country was abandoned to the Avars and Sclavonians,
who were allowed to effect permanent settlements even to the south of the Via Egnatia; but none of these settlements were suffered to
interfere with the lines of communication, without which the imperial influence
in Italy would have been soon annihilated, and the trade of the West lost to
the Greeks. The ambition of the barbarians prompted them to make daring
attempts to share the wealth of the Eastern Empire, and they tried to establish
a system of maritime depredations in the Archipelago; but Heraclius was able to
frustrate their schemes, though it is probable that he owed his success more to
the exertions of the mercantile population of the Greek cities, than to the
exploits of his own troops.
When disorder reigned in the territory nearest to the
seat of government, it cannot be supposed that the administration of the
distant provinces was conducted with greater prudence or success. The Gothic
kingdom of Spain was, at this time, ruled by Sisebut, an able and enlightened monarch, whose policy
was directed to gain over the Roman provincials by peaceful measures, and whose
arms were employed to conquer the territories of the empire in the Peninsula.
He soon reduced the imperial possessions to a small extent of coast on the
ocean, embracing the modern province of Algarve, and a few towns on the shores
of the Mediterranean. He likewise interrupted the communications between the
Roman troops and Spain and Africa, by building a fleet, and conquering Tangiers
and the neighbouring country. Heraclius concluded a treaty with Sisebut, in the year 614, and the Romans were thus enabled
to retain their Spanish territories until the reign of Suintilla,
who, while Heraclius was engaged in his Persian campaigns, finally expelled the
Romans (or the Greeks, as they were generally termed in the West) from the
Spanish continent. Seventy-nine years had elapsed since the Roman authority had
been re-established in the south of Spain by the conquests of Justinian. Even
under the disadvantages to which the imperial power was exposed, the commercial
superiority of the Greeks still enabled them to retain possession of the Balearic
Islands until a later period.
National distinctions and religious interests tended
to divide the population, and to balance political power, much more in Italy
than in the other countries of Europe. The influence of the church in
protecting the people, the weakness of the Lombard sovereigns, from the small
numerical strength of the Lombard population, and the oppressive fiscal
government of the Roman exarchs, gave the Italians the means of creating a
national existence, amidst the conflicts of their masters. Yet so imperfect was
the unity of interests, or so great were the difficulties of communication
between the people of various parts of Italy, that the imperial authority not
only defended its own dominions with success against foreign enemies, but also
repressed with ease the ambitious or patriotic attempts of the popes to acquire
political power, and punished equally the seditions of the people and the
rebellions of the chiefs, who, like John Compsa of
Naples and the exarch Eleutherinus, aspired at
independence.
Africa alone, of all the provinces of the empire,
continued to use the Latin language in ordinary life; and its inhabitants
regarded themselves, with some reason, as the purest descendants of the Romans.
After the victories of John the Patrician, it had enjoyed a long period of
tranquillity, and its prosperity was undisturbed by any spirit of nationality
adverse to the supremacy of the empire, or by schismatic opinions hostile to
the church. The barbarous tribes to the south were feeble enemies, and no
foreign State possessed a naval force capable of troubling its repose or
interrupting its commerce. Under the able and fortunate administration of
Heraclius and Gregoras, the father and uncle of the
emperor,
Africa formed the most flourishing portion of the
empire. Its prosperous condition, and the wars raging in other countries, threw
great part of the commerce of the Mediterranean into the hands of the Africans.
Wealth and population increased to such a decree, that the naval expedition of
the emperor Heraclius, and the army of his cousin Nicetas,
were fitted out from the resources of Africa alone. Another strong proof of the
prosperity of the province, of its importance to the empire, and of its
attachment to the interests of the Heraclian family,
is afforded by the resolution which the emperor adopted, in the ninth year of
his reign, of transferring the imperial residence from Constantinople to
Carthage.
The immense population of Constantinople gave great inquietude to the government. Constantine the Great, in
order to favour the increase of his new capital, granted daily allowances of
bread to the possessors of houses. Succeeding emperors, for the purpose of
caressing the populace, had largely increased the numbers of those entitled to
this gratuity. In 618, the Persians overran Egypt, and by their conquest
stopped the annual supplies of grain destined for these public distributions.
Heraclius, ruined in his finances, but fearing to announce the discontinuance
of allowances, so necessary to keep the population of Constantinople in good
humour, engaged to continue the supply, on receiving a payment of three pieces
of gold from each claimant. His necessities, however, very soon became so
great, that he ceased to continue the distributions, and thus defrauded those
citizens of their money whom the fortune of war had deprived of their bread.
The danger of his position must have been greatly increased by this bankruptcy,
and the dishonour must have rendered his residence among the people whom he had
deceived galling to his mind. Shame, therefore, may possibly have suggested to
Heraclius the idea of quitting Constantinople; but his selection of Carthage,
as the city to which he wished to transfer the seat of government, must have
been determined by the wealth, population, and security of the African
province. Carthage offered military resources for recovering possession of
Egypt and Syria, of which we can only now estimate the extent by taking into
consideration the expedition that placed Heraclius himself on the throne. Many
reasons connected with the constitution of the civil government of the empire,
might likewise be adduced as tending to influence the preference.
In Constantinople, an immense body of idle inhabitants
had been collected, a mass that had long formed a burden on the State, and
acquired a right to a portion of its resources. A numerous nobility, and a
permanent imperial household, conceived that they formed a portion of the Roman
government, from the prominent part which they acted in the ceremonial that
connected the emperor with the people. Thus, the great natural advantages of
the geographical position of the capital were neutralized by moral and
political causes; while the desolate state of the European provinces, and the
vicinity of the northern frontier, began to expose it to frequent sieges. As a
fortress and place of arms, it might have still formed the bulwark of the
empire in Europe; but while it remained the capital, its immense unproductive
population required that too large a part of the resources of the State should
be devoted to supplying it with provisions, to guarding against the factions
and the seditions of its populace, and to maintaining in it a powerful
garrison. The luxury of the Roman court had, during ages of unbounded wealth
and unlimited power, assembled round the emperor an infinity of courtly
offices, and caused an enormous expenditure, which it was extremely dangerous
to suppress and impossible to continue.
No national feelings or particular line of policy
connected Heraclius with Constantinople, and his frequent absence during the
active years of his life indicates that, as long as his personal energy and
health allowed him to direct the public administration, he considered the
constant residence of the emperor in that city injurious to the general
interests of the State. On the other hand Carthage was, at this time,
peculiarly a Roman city; and in actual wealth, in the numbers of its
independent citizens, and in the activity of its whole population, was probably
inferior to no city in the empire. It is not surprising, therefore, that
Heraclius, when compelled to suppress the public distributions of bread in the
capital, to retrench the expenditure of his court and make many reforms in his
civil government, should have wished to place the imperial treasury and his own
resources in a place of greater security, before he engaged in his desperate
struggle with Persia. The wish, therefore, to make Carthage the capital of the
Roman Empire may, with far greater probability, be connected with the gallant
project of his Eastern campaigns, than with the cowardly or selfish motives
attributed to him by Byzantine writers.
When the project of Heraclius to remove to Carthage
was generally known, the Greek patriarch, the Graeco-Roman aristocracy, and the
Byzantine people became alarmed at the loss of power, wealth, public shows, and
largesses consequent on the departure of the court,
and were eager to change his resolution. As far as Heraclius was personally
concerned, the anxiety displayed by every class to retain him, may have
relieved his mind from the shame caused by his financial fraud; and as want of
personal courage was certainly not one of his defects, he may have abandoned a
wise resolution without much regret, if he had thought the enthusiasm which he
witnessed likely to aid his military plans. The Patriarch and the people,
hearing that he had shipped his treasures, and was prepared to follow with all
the imperial family, assembled tumultuously, and induced the emperor to swear
in the church of St Sophia, that he would defend the empire to his death, and
regard the people of Constantinople as peculiarly the children of his throne.
Egypt, from its wonderful natural resources, and its
numerous and industrious population, had long been the most valuable province
of the empire. It poured a great portion of its produce into the imperial
treasury; for its agricultural population, being destitute of all political
power and influence, were compelled to pay, not only their regular taxes in
money like other provincials, but also a tribute in grain, which was viewed as
a rent for the soil. At this time, however, the wealth of Egypt was on the
decline. The circumstances which had driven the trade of India to the north,
had caused a great decrease in the demand for the grain of Egypt on the shores
of the Red Sea, and for its manufactures in Arabia and Ethiopia. The canal
between the Nile and the Red Sea, whose existence is intimately connected with
the prosperity of these countries, had been neglected during the government of
Phocas. A large portion of the Greek population of Alexandria had been ruined,
because an end had been put to the public distributions of grain in that city.
Poverty had invaded the fertile land of Egypt. John the Almsgiver, who was
patriarch and imperial prefect in the reign of Heraclius, did everything in his
power to alleviate this misery. He established hospitals, and devoted the
revenues of his See to charity; but he was an enemy to heresy, and consequently
he was hardly looked on as a friend by the native population. National
feelings, religious opinions, and local interests, had always nourished, in the
minds of the native Egyptians, a deep-rooted hatred of the Roman administration
and of the Greek Church; and this feeling of hostility only became more
concentrated after the union of the offices of prefect and patriarch by
Justinian. A complete line of separation existed between the Greek colony of
Alexandria and the native population, who during the decline of the Greeks and
Jews of Alexandria intruded themselves into political business, and gained some
degree of official importance. The cause of the emperor was now connected with
the commercial interests of the Greek and Melchite parties, but these ruling
classes were regarded by the agricultural population of the rest of the
province as interlopers on their sacred Jacobite soil. John the Almsgiver,
though a Greek patriarch, and an imperial prefect, was not perfectly free from
the charge of heresy, nor, perhaps, of employing the revenues under his control
with more attention to charity than to public policy. The exigencies of
Heraclius were so great that he sent his cousin, the patrician Nicetas, to Egypt, to seize the immense wealth which the
patriarch John was said to possess. In the following year the Persians invaded
the province; and the patrician and patriarch, unable to defend even the city
of Alexandria, fled to Cyprus, while the enemy was allowed to subdue the valley
of the Nile to the borders of Libya and Ethiopia, without meeting any opposition
from the imperial forces, and apparently with the good wishes of the Egyptians.
The plunder obtained from public property and slaves was immense; and as the
power of the Greeks was annihilated, the native Egyptians availed themselves of
the opportunity to acquire a dominant influence in the administration of their
country.
(The Melchites were those Christians in Syria and
Egypt who, though not Greeks, followed the doctrines of the Greek church. They
were called Melchites (royalists, from Melcha, Syriac,
a king) by their adversaries, on account of their implicit obedience to the
edict of Marcian in favour of the Council of Chalcedon. Jacob Baradaeus, or Zanzalus, bishop of
Edessa, the great heterodox apostle of the East, blended the various sects of
Eutychians and Monophysites into a powerful church, whose followers were
generally called, after his death. Jacobites. He died
A.D. 578. Mosheim’s Ecelesiastical History
For ten years the province owned allegiance to Persia,
though it enjoyed a certain degree of doubtful independence under the immediate
government of a native intendant-general of the land revenues, named Mokaukas, who subsequently, at the time of the Saracen
conquest, acted a conspicuous part in the history of his county. During the
Persian supremacy, he became so influential in the administration, that he is
styled by several writers the Prince of Egypt, Mokaukas,
under the Roman government, had conformed to the established church, in order
to hold an official situation, but he was, like most of his countrymen, at
heart a Monophysite, and consequently inclined to oppose the imperial
administration, both from religious and political motives. Yet, it appears that
a portion of the Monophysite clergy steadily refused to submit to the Persian
government; and Benjamin, their patriarch, retired from his residence at
Alexandria when that city fell into the hands of the Persians, and did not
return until Heraclius recovered possession of Egypt. Mokaukas
established himself in the city of Babylon, or Misr,
which had grown up, on the decline of Memphis, to be the native capital of the
province, and the chief city in the interior. The moment appears to have been
extremely favourable for the establishment of an independent state by the
Monophysite Egyptians, since, amidst the conflicts of the Persian and Roman
empires, the immense revenues and supplies of grain formerly paid to the
emperor might have been devoted to the defence of the country. But the native
population appears, from the conduct of the patriarch Benjamin, not to have
been united in its views; and probably the agricultural classes, though
numerous, living in abundance, and firm in their Monophysite tenets, had not
the knowledge necessary to aspire at national independence, the strength of
character required to achieve it, or the command of the precious metals
necessary to purchase the service of mercenary troops and provide the materials
of war. They had been so long deprived of arms and of all political rights,
that they had probably adopted the opinion prevalent among the subjects of
despotic governments, that public functionaries are invariably knaves, and that
the oppression of the native is more grievous than the yoke of a stranger.
Moral defects therefore quite as much as political obstacles, in all
probability, prevented the establishment of an independent Egyptian and
Jacobite state at this favourable conjuncture.
In Syria and Palestine, the different races who
peopled the country were then, as in our own day, extremely divided; and their
separation, by language, manners, interests, and religion, rendered it
impossible for them to unite for the purpose of gaining any object opposed by
the imperial government. The Persians penetrated into Palestine, plundered
Jerusalem, burned the church of the holy sepulchre, and carried off the holy
cross with the patriarch Zacharias into Persia in the year 614. The native
Syrians, though they retained their language and literature, and showed the
strength of their national character by their opposition to the Greek Church,
seemed not to have constituted the majority of the inhabitants of the province.
They were farther divided by their religious opinions ; for, though generally
Monophysites, a part was attached to the Nestorian church. The Greeks appear to
have formed the most numerous class of the population, though they were almost
entirely confined within the walls of the cities. Many were, doubtless, the
direct descendants of the colonies which prospered under the domination of the Seleucidae. The protection and patronage of the civil and
ecclesiastical administration of the Eastern Empire had preserved these Greek
colonies separate from the natives, and supported them by a continual influx of
Greeks engaged in the service of the Church and State. But though the Greeks
probably formed the most numerous body of the population, yet the circumstance
of their composing the ruling class, united all the other classes in opposition
to their authority. Being, consequently, deprived of the support of the
agricultural population, and unable to recruit their numbers by an influx from
their rural neighbours, they became more and more aliens in the country, and
were alone incapable of offering a long and steady resistance to any foreign
enemy, without the constant support of the imperial treasury and armies.
The Jews, whose religion and nationality have always
supported one another, had, for more than a century, been increasing very remarkably,
both in numbers and wealth, in every part of the civilized world. The wars and
rivalry of the various nations of conquerors, and of conquered people, in the
south of Europe, had opened to the Jews a freedom of commercial intercourse
with all parties, which each nation, moved by national jealousy, refused to its
own neighbours, and only conceded to a foreign people, of whom no political
jealousy could be entertained. This circumstance explains the extraordinary
increase in the number of the Jews, which becomes apparent, in the seventh
century, in Greece, Africa, Spain, and Arabia, by referring it to the ordinary
laws of the multiplication of the human species, when facilities are found for
acquiring augmented supplies of the means of subsistence, without inducing us
to suppose that the Jews succeeded, during this period, in making more
proselytes than they had done at other times. This increase of their numbers
and wealth soon roused the bigotry and jealousy of the Christians; while the
deplorable condition of the Roman Empire, and of the Christian population in
the East, inspired the Jews with some expectations of soon re-establishing
their national independence under the expected Messiah. It must be confessed
that the desire of availing themselves of the misfortunes of the Roman Empire,
and of the dissensions of the Christian church, was the natural consequence of
the oppression to which they had long been subjected, but it not unnaturally
tended to increase the hatred with which they were viewed, and added to their
persecutions.
It is said that about this time a prophecy was
current, which declared that the Roman Empire would be overthrown by a
circumcised people. This report may have been spread by the Jews, in order to
excite their own ardour, and assist their projects of rebellion; but the
prophecy was saved from oblivion by the subsequent conquests of the Saracens,
which could never have been foreseen by its authors. The conduct of the Jews
excited the bigotry, as it may have awakened the fears, of the imperial
government, and both Phocas and Heraclius attempted to exterminate the Jewish
religion, and if possible to put an end to the national existence. Heraclius
not only practised every species of cruelty himself to effect this object
within the bounds of his own dominions, but he even made the forced conversion
or banishment of the Jews a prominent feature in his diplomacy. He consoled
himself for the loss of most of the Roman possessions in Spain, by inducing Sisebut to insert an article in the treaty of peace
concluded in 614, engaging the Gothic monarch to force baptism on the Jews; and
he considered, that even though he failed in persuading the Franks to cooperate
with him against the Avars, in the year 620, he rendered the empire and Christianity
some service by inducing Dagobert to join in the project of exterminating the
unfortunate Jews.
The other portions of the Syrian population aspired at
independence, though they did not openly venture to assert it; and during the
Persian conquest, the coast of Phoenicia successfully defended itself under the
command of its native chiefs. At a later period, when the Mohammedans invaded
the province, many chiefs existed who had attained a considerable degree of
local power, and exercised an almost independent authority in their districts.
As the Roman administration grew weaker in Syria, and
the Persian invasions became more frequent, the Arabs gradually acquired many
permanent settlements amidst the rest of the inhabitants; and from the
commencement of the seventh century, they must be reckoned as an important
class of the population. Their power within the Roman provinces was increased
by the existence of the two independent Arab kingdoms of Ghassan and Hira,
which had been formed in part from territories gained from the Roman and
Persian empires. Of these kingdoms, Ghassan was the constant ally or vassal of
the Romans; and Hira was equally attached to, or dependent on, Persia. Both
were Christian states, though the conversion of Hira took place not very long
before the reign of Heraclius, and the greater part of the inhabitants were Jacobites, mixed with some Nestorians. It may be remarked
that the Arabs had been advancing in civilization during the sixth century, and
that their religious ideas had undergone a very great change. The decline of
their powerful neighbours allowed them to increase their commerce, and its
extension gave them more enlarged views of their own importance, and suggested
ideas of national unity which they had not previously entertained. These causes
had produced powerful effects on the whole of the Arab population during the
century which preceded the accession of Heraclius; and it must not be
overlooked that Mahomet himself was born during the reign of Justin II, and
that he was educated under the influence of this national excitement.
The country between Syria and Armenia, or that part of
ancient Chaldea which was subject to the Romans, had been so repeatedly laid
waste during the Persian wars, that the agricultural population was nearly
exterminated, or had retired into the Persian provinces. The inhabitants of no
portion of the empire were so eager to throw off their allegiance as the
Chaldaic Christians, called by the Greeks Nestorians, who formed the majority
of the population of this country. They had clung firmly to the doctrine of the
two natures of Christ, after its condemnation by the council of Ephesus (A.D.
449), and when they found themselves unable to contend against the temporal
power and spiritual influence of the Greeks, they had established an
independent church, which directed its attention, with great zeal, to the
spiritual guidance of those Christians who dwelt beyond the limits of the Roman
empire. The history of their missions, by which churches were established in
India and China, is an extremely interesting portion of the annals of
Christianity. Their zealous exertions, and their connection with the Christian
inhabitants of Persia, induced the Roman emperors to persecute them with great
cruelty, from political as well as religious motives; and this persecution
often insured them the favour of the Persian monarchs. Though they did not
always escape the bigotry and jealousy of the Persians, still they usually
enjoyed equitable protection, and became active enemies both of the Greek
church and the Roman empire, though the geographical position and physical
configuration of their country afforded them little hope of being able to gain
political independence.
(The Chaldaic Christians considered, and still
consider, theirs the real apostolic church, though, like all other Christian
churches, it partook largely of a national character. They used the Syriac
language in public worship. Their patriarch resided at Seleucia, in Persia. He
now resides at a monastery near Mosul. They had many bishops in Syria and
Armenia, as well as in Mesopotamia. They were charged with confounding the
divine and human natures of Christ, and they wished the Virgin Mary to be
called the mother of Christ, not, as was then usual, the mother of God. They
worshipped no images, and they venerated Nestorius.Whether
Nestorius did or did not hold the views which his opponents ascribed to him,
the doctrine for which he was condemned by the council of Ephesus was that of
.the existence of two persons in Christ. The charge of confounding the divine
and human natures in Christ was brought, not against the Nestorians, but
against the Eutychians).
Armenia was favourably situated for maintaining its
independence, as soon as the Persian and Roman empires began to decline. Though
the country was divided by these rival governments, the people preserved their
national character, manners, language, and literature, in as great a degree of
purity as the Greeks themselves; and as their higher classes had retained more
of wealth, military enterprise, and political independence, than the nobility
of the other nations of the East, their services were very highly estimated by
their neighbours. Their reputation for fidelity and military skill induced the
Roman emperors, from the time of Justinian, to raise them to the highest
offices in the empire. Though the Armenians were unable to defend their
political independence against the Romans and Persians, they maintained their
national existence unaltered; and, amidst all the convulsions which have swept
over the face of Asia, they have continued to exist as a distinct people, and
succeeded in preserving their language and literature. Their national spirit
placed them in opposition to the Greek church, and they adopted the opinions of
the Monophysites, though under modifications which gave to their church a
national character, and separated it from that of the Jacobites.
Their history is worthy of a more attentive examination than it has yet met
with in English literature. Armenia was the first country in which Christianity
became the established religion of the land; and the people, under the greatest
difficulties, long maintained their independence with the most determined
courage; and after the loss of their political power, they preserved their
manners, language, religion, and national character alike under the government
of the Persians, Greeks, Saracens, and Turks.
Asia Minor became the chief seat of the Roman power in
the time of Heraclius, and it was the only portion in which the majority of the
population was attached to the imperial government and to the Greek Church.
Before the reign of Phocas, it had escaped any extensive devastation, so that
it still retained much of its ancient wealth and splendour ; and the social life
of the people was still modelled on the institutions and usages of preceding
ages. A considerable internal trade was carried on; and the great roads, being
kept in a tolerable state of repair, served as arteries for the circulation of
commerce and civilization. That it had, nevertheless, suffered very severely in
the general decline caused by over-taxation, and by reduced commerce, neglected
agriculture, and diminished population, is attested by the magnificent ruins of
cities which had already fallen to decay, and which never again recovered their
ancient prosperity.
The power of the central administration over its
immediate officers was almost as completely destroyed in Asia Minor as in the
more distant provinces of the empire. A remarkable proof of this general
disorganization is found in the history of the early years of the reign of
Heraclius; and one deserving particular attention from its illustrating both
his personal character and the state of the empire. Crispus, the son-in-law of
Phocas, had assisted Heraclius in obtaining the throne; and as a recompense, he
was entrusted with the administration of Cappadocia, one of the richest
provinces of the empire, along with the chief command of the troops in his
government. Crispus, a man of influence, and of a daring, heedless character,
soon ventured to act, not only with independence, but even with insolence,
towards the emperor. He neglected the defence of his province; and when
Heraclius visited Caesarea to examine into its state and prepare the means of
carrying on the war against Persia in person, Crispus displayed a spirit of
insubordination and an assumption of importance which amounted to treason.
Heraclius, who was prudent enough to restrain his fiery temperament, visited
the too powerful officer in his bed, which he kept under a slight or affected
illness, and persuaded him to visit Constantinople'. On his appearance in the
senate, he was arrested, and compelled to become a monk. His authority and
position rendered it absolutely necessary for Heraclius to punish his
presumption, before he could advance with safety against the Persians. Many
less important personages, in various parts of the empire, acted with equal
independence, without the emperor's considering that it was either necessary to
observe, or prudent to punish, their ambition. The decline of the power of the
central government, the increasing ignorance of the people, the augmented
difficulties in the way of communication, and the general insecurity of
property and life, effected extensive changes in the state of society, and
threw political influence into the hands of the local governors, the municipal
and provincial chiefs, and the whole body of the clergy.
Sect. VI
Change in the
position of the Greek population which was produced by the Sclavonic
establishments in Dalmatia
A.D. 565-633
Heraclius endeavoured to form a permanent barrier in
Europe against the encroachments of the Avars and Sclavonians.
For the furtherance of this project, it was evident that he could derive no
assistance from the inhabitants of the provinces to the south of the Danube.
The imperial armies, too, which, in the time of Maurice, had waged an active
war in Illyricum and Thrace, and frequently invaded the territories of the
Avars, had melted away during the reign of Phocas. The loss was irreparable:
for, in Europe, no agricultural population remained to supply the recruits
required to form a new army. The only feasible plan for circumscribing the
ravages of the northern enemies of the empire which presented itself, was the
establishment of powerful colonies of tribes hostile to the Avars and their Sclavonian allies, in the deserted provinces of Dalmatia
and Illyricum. To accomplish this object, Heraclius induced the Serbs, or
western Sclavonians, who occupied the country about
the Carpathian Mountains, and who had successfully opposed the extension of the
Avar empire in that direction, to abandon their ancient seats, and move down to
the South into the provinces between the Adriatic and the Danube. The Roman and
Greek population of these provinces had been driven towards the sea-coast by
the continual incursions of the northern tribes, and the desolate plains of the
interior had been occupied by a few Sclavonian
subjects and vassals of the Avars. The most important of the western Sclavonian tribes who moved southward at the invitation of
Heraclius were the Servians and Croatians, who
settled in the countries still peopled by their descendants. Their original
settlements were formed in consequence of friendly arrangements, and,
doubtless, under the sanction of an express treaty; for the Sclavonian
people of Illyricum and Dalmatia long regarded themselves as bound to pay a
certain degree of territorial allegiance to the Eastern Empire.
The measures of Heraclius were carried into execution
with skill and vigour. From the borders of Istria to the territory of
Dyrrachium, the whole country was occupied by a variety of tribes of Servian or
western Sclavonic origin, hostile to the Avars. These
colonies, unlike the earlier invaders of the empire, were composed of
agricultural communities; and to the facility which this circumstance afforded
them of adopting into their political system any remnant of the old Sclavonic population of their conquests, it seems just to
attribute the permanency and prosperity of their settlements. Unlike the
military races of Goths, Huns, and Avars, who had preceded them, the Servian
nations increased and flourished in the lands which they had colonized ; and by
the absorption of every relic of the ancient population, they formed political
communities and independent states, which offered a firm barrier to the Avars
and other hostile nations.
It may here be observed, that if the original
population of the countries colonized by the Servian nations had at an earlier
period been relieved from the weight of the imperial taxes, which encroached on
their capital, and from the jealous oppression of the Roman government, which
prevented their bearing arms; in short, if they had been allowed to enjoy all
the advantages which Heraclius was compelled to concede to the Servians, we may reasonably suppose that they could have
successfully defended their country. But after the most destructive ravages of
the Goths, Huns, and Avars, the imperial tax-gatherers had never failed to
enforce payment of the tribute as long as anything remained undestroyed,
though, according to the rules of justice, the Roman government had really
forfeited its right to levy the taxes, as soon as it failed to perform its duty
in defending the population.
The modem history of the eastern shores of the
Adriatic commences with the establishment of the Sclavonian
colonies in Dalmatia. Though, in a territorial point of view, vassals of the
court of Constantinople, these colonies always preserved the most complete
national independence, and formed their own political governments, according to
the exigencies of their situation. The states which they constituted were of
considerable weight in the history of Europe; and the kingdoms or bannats of Croatia, Servia, Bosnia, Rascia,
and Dalmatia, occupied for some centuries a political position very similar to
that now held by the secondary monarchical states of the present day. The people
of Narenta, who enjoyed a republican form of
government, once disputed the sway of the Adriatic with the Venetians; and, for
some time, it appeared probable that these Servian colonies established by
Heraclius were likely to take a prominent part in advancing the progress of
European civilization.
But, although the ancient provinces of Dalmatia,
Illyricum, and Moesia, received a new race of inhabitants, and new geographical
divisions and names, still several fortified towns on the Adriatic continued to
maintain their immediate connection with the imperial government, and preserved
their original population, augmented by numbers of Roman citizens whose wealth
enabled them to escape from the Avar invasions and gain the coast. These towns
long supported their municipal independence by means of the commerce which they
carried on with Italy, and defended themselves against their Servian neighbours
by the advantages which they derived from the vicinity of the numerous islands
on the Dalmatian coast. For two centuries and a half they continued, though
surrounded by Servian tribes, to preserve their direct allegiance to the throne
of Constantinople, until at length, in the reign of the Emperor Basil I, they
were compelled to become tributary to their Sclavonic
neighbours. Ragusa alone ultimately obtained and secured its Independence,
which it preserved amidst all the vicissitudes of the surrounding countries,
until its liberty was finally destroyed by the French, when the conquests of
Napoleon annihilated the existence of most of the smaller European republics.
It seems hardly possible that the western Sclavonians, who entered Dalmatia under the various names
of Servians, Croatians, Narentins,
Zachloumians, Terbounians, Diocleans, and Decatrians,
constituted the whole stock of the population. Their numbers could hardly be
sufficient to form more than the dominant race at the time of their arrival;
and, depopulated as the country was, they probably found some remains of a
primitive Sclavonian people who had inhabited the
same countries from an earlier period. The remnant of these ancient
inhabitants, even if reduced to the condition of agricultural-serfs or slaves,
would survive the miseries which exterminated their masters; and doubtless
mingled with the invaders of a kindred race from the northern banks of the
Danube, who, ever since the reign of Justinian, had pushed their incursions
into the empire. With these people the ruling class of Servian Sclavonians would easily unite without violating any
national prejudice. The consequence was natural; the various branches of the
population were soon confounded, and their numbers rapidly increased as they
melted into one people. The Romans, who at one period had formed a large
portion of the inhabitants of these countries, gradually died out, while the
Illyrians, who were the neighbours of these colonies to the south, were
ultimately pushed down on that part of the continent occupied by the Greeks.
From the settlement of the Servian Sclavonians
within the bounds of the empire, we may therefore venture to date the earliest
encroachments of the Illyrian or Albanian race on the Hellenic population. The
Albanians or Arnauts, who are called by themselves Shkipetars,
are supposed to be a tribe of the great Thracian race which, under various
names, and more particularly as Paeonians, Epirots,
and Macedonians, take an important part in early Grecian history. No distinct
trace of the period at which they began to be co-proprietors of Greece with the
Hellenic race can be found in history; but it is evident that, at whatever time
it occurred, the earliest Illyrian or Albanian colonists who settled among the
Greeks did so as members of the same political state, and of the same church;
that they were influenced by precisely the same feelings and interests, and,
what is even more remarkable, that their intrusion occurred under such
circumstances that no national prejudices or local jealousies were excited in
the susceptible minds of the Greeks. A common calamity of no ordinary magnitude
must have produced these wonderful effects; and it seems very difficult to
trace back the history of the Greek nation, without suspecting that the germs
of their modern condition, like those of their neighbours, are to be sought in
the singular events which occurred in the reign of Heraclius.
The power of the Avar monarchy had already declined,
but the prince or great chagan was still acknowledged
as suzerain, from the frontiers of Bavaria to the Dacian Alps, which bound
Transylvania and the Bannat, and as far as the shores
of the Black Sea, about the mouth of the Danube. The Sclavonian,
Bulgarian, and Hunnish tribes, which occupied the
country between the Danube and the Volga, and who had been the earliest
subjects of the Avars in Europe, had re-asserted their independence. The actual
numerical strength of the Avar nation had never been very great, and their
barbarous government everywhere thinned the original population of the lands
which they conquered. The remnant of the old inhabitants, driven by poverty and
desperation to abandon all industrious pursuits, soon formed bands of robbers,
and quickly became as warlike and as numerous as the Avar troops stationed to
awe their districts. In a succession of skirmishes and desultory engagements,
the Avars soon ceased to maintain their superiority, and the Avar monarchy fell
to pieces with nearly as great rapidity as it had arisen. Yet, in the reign of
Heraclius, the chagan could still assemble a variety
of tribes under his standard whenever he proposed to make a plundering
expedition into the provinces of the empire.
It seems impossible to decide, from any historical
evidence, whether the measures adopted by Heraclius to circumscribe the Avar
power, by the settlement of the Servian Sclavonians
in Illyricum, preceded or followed a remarkable act of treachery attempted by
the Avar monarch against the emperor. If Heraclius had then succeeded in
terminating his arrangements with the Servians, the
dread of having their power reduced may have appeared to the Avars some apology
for an attempt at treachery, too base even for the ordinary latitude of savage
revenge and avidity, but which we find repeated by a Byzantine emperor against
a king of Bulgaria two centuries later. In the year 619, the Avars made a
terrible incursion into the heart of the empire. They advanced so far into
Thrace, that when Heraclius proposed a personal meeting with their sovereign,
in order to arrange the terms of peace, Heraclea (Perinthus),
on the Sea of Marmora, was selected as a convenient spot for the interview. The
emperor advanced as far as Selymbria, accompanied by
a brilliant train of attendants; and preparations were made to amuse the
barbarians with a theatrical festival. The avarice of the Avars was excited,
and their sovereign, thinking that any act by which so dangerous an enemy as
Heraclius could be removed was pardonable, determined to seize the person of
the emperor while his troops plundered the imperial escort. The great wall was
so carelessly guarded, that large bodies of Avar soldiers passed it unnoticed
or unheeded; but their movements at last awakened the suspicion of the court,
and Heraclius was compelled to fly in disguise to Constantinople, leaving his
tents, his theatre, and his household establishment, to be pillaged by his
treacherous enemies. The followers of the emperor were pursued to the very
walls of the capital, and the crowd assembled to grace the festival became the
slaves of the Avars; who carried off an immense booty, and two hundred and
seventy thousand prisoners. The weakness of the empire was such, that Heraclius
considered it politic to overlook even this insult, and instead of attempting
to efface the stain on his reputation, which his ridiculous flight could not
fail to produce, he allowed the affair to pass unnoticed. He continued his
preparations for attacking Persia, as it was evident that the fate of the Roman
empire depended on the success of the war in Asia. To secure himself as much as
possible from any diversion in Europe, he condescended to renew his
negotiations with the Avars, and by making many sacrifices, he succeeded in
concluding a peace on what he vainly hoped might be a lasting basis.
Several years later, however, when Heraclius was
absent on the frontiers of Persia, the Avars considered the moment favourable
for renewing hostilities, and formed the project of attempting the conquest of
Constantinople, in conjunction with a Persian army, which advanced to the
Asiatic shore of the Bosphorus. The chagan of the
Avars, with a powerful army of his own subjects, aided by bands of Sclavonians, Bulgarians, and Huns, attacked the capital by
land, while the Persian army afforded him every possible assistance by
investing the Asiatic suburb and cutting off all supplies on that side. Their
combined attacks were defeated by the garrison of Constantinople, without Heraclius
considering it necessary to retrace his steps, or turn back from his career of
conquest in the East. The naval superiority of the Roman government prevented
the junction of its enemies, and the Avars were at last compelled to effect a
precipitate retreat. This siege of Constantinople is the last memorable exploit
of the Avar nation recorded by the Byzantine historians; their power rapidly
declined, and the people soon became so completely lost amidst the Sclavonian and Bulgarian inhabitants of their dominions,
that an impenetrable veil is now cast over the history of their race and
language. The Bulgarians who had already acquired some degree of power, began
to render themselves the ruling people among the nations between the Danube and
the Don; and, from this time, they appear in history as the most dangerous
enemies of the Roman Empire on its northern frontier.
Before Heraclius induced the western Sclavonians to settle in Illiyricum,
numerous bodies of the Avars and their Sclavonic
subjects had already penetrated into Greece, and established themselves even as
far south as the Peloponnesus. No precise evidence of the extent to which the
Avars succeeded in pushing their conquests in Greece can now be obtained; but
there are testimonies which establish with certainty that their Sclavonic subjects retained possession of these conquests
for many centuries. The political and social condition of these Sclavonic colonies on the Hellenic soil utterly escapes the
research of the historian; but their power and influence was, for a long time,
very great. The passages of the Greek writers which refer to these conquests
are so scanty, and so vague in expression, that it becomes the duty of the
modern historian to pass them in review, particularly since they have been
employed with much ability by a German writer, to prove that the Hellenic race
in Europe has been exterminated, and that the modern Greeks are a mixed race
composed of the descendants of Roman slaves and Sclavonian
colonists. This opinion, it is true, has been combated with great learning by
one of his countrymen, who asserts that the ingenious dissertation of his
predecessor is nothing more than a plausible theory. We must therefore examine
for ourselves the scanty records of historical truth during this dark period.
The earliest mention of the Avar conquests in Greece
occurs in the Ecclesiastical History of Evagrius of Epiphania, in Coele-Syria, who
wrote at the end of the sixth century. He mentions that, while the forces of
the Emperor Maurice were engaged in the East, the Avars advanced to the great
wall before Constantinople, captured Singidon
(Belgrade), Anchialus, and all Greece, and laid waste everything with fire and
sword. These incursions took place in the years 588 and 589, but no inference could
be drawn from this vague and incidental notice of an Avar plundering incursion,
so casually mentioned, in favour of the permanent settlement of Sclavonian colonies in Greece, had this passage not
received considerable importance from later authorities. The testimony of Evagrius is confirmed in a very remarkable manner by a
letter of the patriarch of Constantinople, Nicolaus, to the emperor Alexius
Comnenus in the year 1081. The patriarch mentions that the emperor Nicephorus
(A.D. 802-811) granted various concessions to the episcopal see of Patrae, in consequence of the miraculous aid which St.
Andrew afforded that city in destroying the Avars, who held possession of the
greater part of the Peloponnesus for two hundred and eighteen years, and had so
completely separated their conquests from the Roman empire that no Roman (that
is to say Greek connected with the imperial administration) dared to enter the
country. Now this siege of Patrae is mentioned by
Constantine Porphyrogenitus, and its date is fixed in the year 807;
consequently, these Avars, who had conquered the Peloponnesus two hundred and
eighteen years before that event, must have arrived precisely in the year 589,
at the very period indicated by Evagrius. The emperor
Constantine Porphyrogenitus mentions the Sclavonian
colonies in the Peloponnesus more than once, though he never affords any
accurate information concerning the period at which they entered the country.
In his work on the provinces of the empire — he informs us that the whole
country was subdued and rendered barbarous after the great plague in the reign
of Constantine Copronymus, an observation which
implies that the complete extermination of the rural population of Hellenic
race, and the establishment of the political power of the Sclavonic
colonies, and their assumption of total independence in Greece, dated from that
period. It is evident that they acquired great power, and became an object of
alarm to the emperors, a few years later. In the reign of Constantine VI, an
expedition was sent against them at a time when they possessed great part of
the country from the frontiers of Macedonia to the southern limits of the
Peloponnesus. Indeed the fortified towns alone appear to have remained in the
possession of the Greeks.
It seems surprising that no detailed account of the
important change in the condition and fortunes of the Greek race, which these
facts imply, is contained in the Byzantine historians. Yet, when we reflect
that these Sclavonic colonies never united into one
state, nor pursued any fixed line of policy in their attacks on the empire; and
when we recall to mind also that the Byzantine historians occupied themselves
so little with the real history of mankind as to pass over the Lombard invasion
of Italy without notice, our wonder must cease. All the Greek writers who
mention this period of history were men connected either with the
Constantinopolitan government, or with the orthodox church; and they were
consequently destitute of every feeling of Greek nationality, and viewed the
agricultural population of ancient Hellas as a rude and degenerate race of
semi-barbarians, little superior to the Sclavonians,
with whom they were carrying on a desultory warfare. As comparatively little
revenue could, in the time of Heraclius, be drawn from Greece, that emperor
never seems to have occupied himself about its fate; and the Greeks escaped the
extermination with which they were threatened by their Avar and Sclavonian invaders, through the neglect, and not in
consequence of the assistance, of the imperial government. The Avars made
considerable exertions to complete the conquest of Greece by carrying their
predatory expeditions into the Archipelago. They attacked the eastern coast,
which had hitherto been secure from their invasions, and, to execute this
design, they obtained shipbuilders from the Lombards, and launched a fleet of
plundering barks in the Aegean Sea. The general danger of the islands and
commercial cities of Greece roused the spirit of the inhabitants, who united
for the defence of their property, and the plans of the Avars proved .
unsuccessful. The Greeks, however, were -long exposed to the plundering Sclavonians on one side, and to the rapacity of the
imperial government on the other ; and their success in preserving some portion
of their commercial wealth and political influence is to be attributed to the
efficacy of their municipal organization, and to the weakness of the central
government, which could no longer prevent their bearing arms for their own
defence.
Sect. VII
The Campaigns of Heraclius in the East
The personal character of Heraclius exercised great
influence on the events of his reign. Unfortunately, the historians of his age
have not conveyed to posterity any very accurate picture of the peculiar traits
of his mind. His conduct shows that he possessed judgment, activity, and
courage; and, though he was sometimes imprudent and rash, at others he
displayed an equanimity and force of character in repressing his passion, which
mark him as a really great man. (His cruelty to Phocas only proves that he partook
of the barbarous feelings of his age. A religious strain runs through his
letters, which are preserved in the Paschal Chronicle, and in the speeches
reported by Theophanes, which have an air of authenticity. It is true that this
style may have been the official language of an emperor, who felt himself so
peculiarly the head of the Christian church, and the champion of the orthodox
faith. Persia was his ecclesiastical as well as his political enemy). In the
opinion of his contemporaries, his fame was sullied by two indelible stains.
His marriage with his niece Martina was regarded as incestuous, and the
religious edicts, by which he proposed to regulate the faith of his subjects,
were branded as heretical. Both were serious errors of policy in a prince who
was so dependent on public opinion for support in his great scheme of restoring
the lost power of the Roman Empire; yet the constancy of his affection for his
wife, and the immense importance of reconciling all the adverse sects of
Christians within the empire in common measures of defence against external
enemies, may form some apology for these errors. The patriarch of
Constantinople remonstrated against his marriage with his niece; but the power
of the emperor was still absolute over the persons of the ecclesiastical
functionaries of the empire; and Heraclius, though he allowed the bishop to
satisfy his conscience by stating his objections, commanded him to practise his
civil duties, and celebrate the marriage of his sovereign. The pretensions of
papal Rome had not yet arisen in the Christian church. (The power of Gregory
the Great was so small that he durst not consecrate a bishop without the
consent of his enemy the emperor Maurice; and he was forced to obey the edict
forbidding all persons to quit public employments in order to become monks, and
prohibiting soldiers during the period of their service from being received
into monasteries).The Patriarch Sergius does not
appear to have been deficient in zeal or courage, and Heraclius was not free
from the religious bigotry of his age. Both knew that the established church
was a part of the State, and that though in matters of doctrine the general
councils put limits to the imperial authority, yet, in the executive direction
of the clergy, the emperor was nearly absolute, and possessed full power to
remove the patriarch had he ventured to disobey his orders. As the marriage of
Heraclius with Martina was within the prohibited degrees, it was an act of
unlawful compliance on the part of Sergius to
celebrate the nuptials, for the duty of the Patriarch as a Christian priest was
surely, in such a case, of more importance than his obedience as a Roman
subject.
The early part of the reign of Heraclius was devoted
to reforming the administration and recruiting the army. He tried every means
of obtaining peace with Persia in vain, and even allowed the senate to make an
independent attempt to enter into negotiations with Chosroes. For twelve years,
the Persian armies ravaged the empire from the banks of the Nile to the shores
of the Bosphorus almost without encountering any opposition. It is impossible
to explain in what manner Heraclius employed his time during this interval, but
it is evident that he was engaged by many cares besides those of preparing for
his war with Persia. The independent negotiation which the senate attempted
with Persia, seems to indicate that the Roman aristocracy had succeeded in
encroaching on the emperor’s authority during the general confusion which
reigned in the administration after the fall of Maurice, and that he may have
been occupied with political contests at home, before he could attend to the
exigencies of the Persian war. As no civil hostilities appear to have broken
out, we possess no records of his difficulties in the meagre chronicles of his
reign. Perhaps this random conjecture ought not to find a place in a historical
work; but when the state of the Roman administration at the close of the reign
of Heraclius is compared with the confusion in which he found it at his
accession, it is evident, that he effected a great political change, and
infused new vigour into the weakened fabric of the government.
When Heraclius had settled the internal affairs of his
empire, filled his military chest, and re-established the discipline of the
Roman armies, he commenced a series of campaigns, which entitle him to rank as
one of the greatest military commanders whose deeds are recorded in history.
The object of his first campaign was to render himself master of a line of
communications extending from the shores of the Black Sea to those of the
Mediterranean, and resting on positions in Pontus and Cilicia. The Persian
armies, which had advanced into Asia Minor and occupied Ancyra, would, by this
manoeuvre, be separated from the supplies and reinforcements on their own
frontiers, and Heraclius would have it in his power to attack their troops in
detail. He landed at a pass called ‘the gates’, from whence he advanced into
the interior and reached the frontiers of Armenia. The rapidity of his movements
rendered his plan successful; the Persians, compelled to fight in the positions
chosen by Heraclius, were completely defeated, and at the commencement of
winter the Roman army took up its quarters in the regions of Pontus. In the
second campaign, the emperor pushed forward into the heart of Persia from his
camp in Pontus. Ganzaca was captured; Thebarmes, the birthplace of Zoroaster, with its temple and
fire-altars, was destroyed; and after laying waste the northern part of Media,
Heraclius retired to Albania, where he placed his army in winter quarters. This
campaign proved to the world that the Persian Empire was in the same state of
internal weakness as the Roman, and equally incapable of offering any national
resistance to an active and enterprising enemy. The third and fourth campaigns
were occupied in laborious marches and severe battles, in which Heraclius
proved himself both a brave soldier and an able general. Under his guidance,
the Roman troops recovered their ancient superiority in war. At the end of the
third campaign, he established his winter quarters in the Persian dominions,
and at the conclusion of the fourth he led his army back into Asia Minor, to
winter behind the Halys, that he might be able to
watch the movements concerted between the Persians and the Avars, for the siege
of Constantinople. The fifth campaign was at first suspended by the presence of
the Persian army on the shores of the Bosphorus, where it endeavoured to assist
the Avars in an attack on Constantinople. Heraclius, having divided his forces
into three armies, sent one to the relief of Constantinople ; the second, which
he placed under the command of his brother Theodore, defeated the Persians in a
great battle; and with the third he took up a position in Iberia, where he waited
to hear that the Khazars had invaded Persia. As soon as he was informed that
his Turkish allies had passed the Caspian gates, and was assured that the
attempt on his capital had failed, he hastened forward into the very heart of
the Persian Empire, and sought his rival in his palace. The sixth campaign
opened with the Roman army in the plains of Assyria; and, after laying waste
some of the richest provinces of the Persian Empire, Heraclius marched through
the country to the east of the Tigris, and captured the palace of Dastagerd, where the Persian monarchs had accumulated the
greatest part of their enormous treasures, in a position always regarded as
secure from any foreign enemy. Chosroes fled at the approach of the Roman army,
and his flight became a signal for the rebellion of his generals. Heraclius
pushed forward to within a few miles of Ctesiphon, but then found that his
success would be more certain by watching the civil dissensions of the
Persians, than by risking an attack on the populous capital of their empire
with his diminished army. The emperor therefore led his army back to Ganzaca in the month of March, and the seventh spring
terminated the war. Chosroes was seized and murdered by his rebellious son Siroes, and a treaty of peace was concluded with the Roman
emperor. The ancient frontiers of the two empires were re-established, and the
holy cross, which the Persians had carried off from Jerusalem, was restored to
Heraclius, with the seals of the case which contained it unbroken.
Heraclius had repeatedly declared that he did not
desire to make any conquest of Persian territory. His conduct when success had
crowned his exertions, and when his enemy was ready to purchase his retreat at
any price, proves the sincerity and justice of his policy. His empire required
not only a lasting peace to recover from the miseries of the late war, but also
many reforms in the civil and religious administration, which could only be
completed during such a peace, in order to restore the vigour of the government.
Twenty-four years of a war, which had proved, in turns, unsuccessful to every
nation engaged in it, had impoverished and diminished the population of a great
part of Europe and Asia. Public institutions, buildings, roads, ports, and
commerce, had fallen into decay; the physical power of governments had
declined; and the utility of a central political authority became less and less
apparent to mankind. Even the religious opinions of the subjects of the Roman
and Persian empires had been shaken by the misfortunes which had happened to
what each sect regarded as the talisman of its faith. The ignorant Christians
viewed the capture of Jerusalem, and the loss of the holy cross, as indicating
the wrath of heaven and the downfall of religion; they remembered that in the
last days perilous times shall come. The fire-worshippers considered the
destruction of Thebarmes, and the extinction of the
sacred fire, as ominous of the annihilation of every good principle on earth.
Both the Persians and the Christians had so long regarded their faith as a
portion of the State, and reckoned political and military power as the
inseparable allies of their ecclesiastical establishments, that they considered
their misfortunes a proof of divine reprobation. Both orthodox Magians and
orthodox Christians saw the abomination of desolation in their holy places, and
their traditions and their prophets told them that this was the sign which was
to herald the approach of the last great and terrible day.
The fame of Heraclius would have rivalled that of
Alexander, Hannibal, or Caesar, had he expired at Jerusalem, after the
successful termination of the Persian war. He had established peace throughout
the empire, restored the strength of the Roman government, revived the power of
Christianity in the East, and replanted the holy cross on Mount Calvary. His
glory admitted of no addition. Unfortunately, the succeeding years of his reign
have, in the general opinion, tarnished his fame. Yet these years were devoted
to many arduous labours; and it is to the wisdom with which he restored the
strength of his government during this time of peace that we must attribute the
energy of the Asiatic Greeks who arrested the great tide of Mohammedan conquest
at the foot of Mount Taurus. Though the military glory of Heraclius was
obscured by the brilliant victories of the Saracens, still his civil
administration ought to receive its meed of praise,
when we compare the resistance made by the empire which he reorganized with the
facility which the followers of Mahomet found in extending their conquests over
every other land from India to Spain.
The policy of Heraclius was directed to the
establishment of a bond of union, which should connect all the provinces of his
empire into one body, and he hoped to replace the want of national unity by
identity of religious belief. The church was closely connected with the people,
and the emperor, as political head of the church, hoped to direct a
well-organized body of churchmen. But Heraclius engaged in the impracticable task
of imposing a rule of faith on all his subjects, without assuming the character
of a saint or the authority of a prophet. His measures, consequently, like most
religious reforms which are adopted solely from political motives, only
produced additional discussions and difficulties. In the year 630, he
propounded the doctrine that in Christ, after the union of the two natures,
there was but one will and one operation. Without gaining over any great body
of the schismatics whom he wished to restore to the communion of the
established church, by his new rule of faith, he was himself generally
stigmatized as a heretic. The epithet monothelite was
applied to him and his doctrine, to show that neither was orthodox. In the hope
of putting an end to the disputes which he had rashly awakened, he again, in
639, attempted to legislate for the church, and published his celebrated Ecthesis, which attempts to remedy the effects of his prior
proceedings, by forbidding all controversy on the question of the single or
double operation of the will in Christ, but which nevertheless includes a
declaration in favour of unity. The bishop of Rome, who directed the
proceedings of the Latin clergy, and who aspired at increasing his spiritual
authority, though he did not contemplate assuming political independence,
entered actively into the opposition excited by the publication of the Ecthesis, and was supported by a considerable party in the
Extern church.
It cannot appear surprising that Heraclius should have
endeavoured to reunite the Nestorians, Eutychians, and Jacobites,
to the established church, when we remember how closely the influence of the
church was connected with the administration of the State, and how completely
religious passions replaced national feelings in these secondary ages of
Christianity. The union was an indispensable step to the re-establishment of
the imperial power in the provinces of Egypt, Syria, Mesopotamia, and Armenia;
and it must not be overlooked that the theological speculations and
ecclesiastical reforms of Heraclius were approved of by the wisest councillors
whom he had been able to select to aid him in the government of the empire. The
state of society required some strong remedy, and Heraclius only erred in
adopting the plan which had always been pursued by absolute monarchs, namely,
that of making the sovereign’s opinion the rule of conduct for his subjects. We
can hardly suppose that Heraclius would have succeeded better, had he assumed
the character or deserved the veneration due to a saint. The marked difference
which existed between the higher and educated classes in the East, and the
ignorant and superstitious populace, rendered it next to impossible that any
line of conduct could secure the judgment of the learned, and awaken the
fanaticism of the people. As a farther apology for Heraclius, it may be noticed
that his acknowledged power over the orthodox clergy was much greater than that
which was possessed by the Byzantine emperors at a later period, or that which
was admitted by the Latin Church after its separation. In spite of all the
advantages which he possessed, his attempt ended in a signal failure; yet no
experience could ever induce his successors to avoid his error. His effort to
strengthen his power, by establishing a principle of unity, aggravated all the
evils which he intended to cure; for while the Monophysites and the Greeks were
as little disposed to unite as ever, the authority of the Eastern Church, as a
body, was weakened by the creation of a new schism, and the incipient divisions
between the Greeks and the Latins, assuming a national character, began to
prepare the way for the separation of the two churches.
The hope of attaining unity is one of the inveterate
delusions of mankind. While Heraclius was endeavouring to restore the strength
of the empire in the East, by enforcing unity of religious views, Mahomet, by a
juster application of the aspirations of mankind
after unity, succeeded in uniting Arabia into one state by persuading it to
adopt one religion. The first attacks of the followers of Mahomet on the
Christians were directed against those provinces of the Roman Empire which
Heraclius had been anxiously endeavouring to reunite in spirit to his
government. The difficulties of their administration had compelled the emperor
to fix his residence for some years in Syria, and he was well aware of the
uncertainty of their allegiance, before the Saracens commenced their invasion.
The successes of the Mohammedan arms, and the retreat of the emperor, carrying
off with him the holy cross from Jerusalem, have induced historians to suppose
that his later years were spent in sloth, and marked by weakness. His health,
however, was in so precarious a state, that he could no longer direct the
operations of his army in person; at times, indeed, he was incapable of all
bodily exertion ^ Yet the resistance which the Saracens encountered in Syria
presents a strong contrast to the ease with which it had yielded to the
Persians at the commencement of the emperor's reign, and attests that his
administration had not been without fruit. Many of his reforms could only have
been effected after the conclusion of the Persian war, when he recovered
possession of Syria and Egypt. He seems, indeed, never to have omitted an
opportunity of strengthening his position; and when a chief of the Huns or
Bulgarians threw off his allegiance to the Avars, Heraclius is recorded to have
immediately availed himself of the opportunity to form an alliance, in order to
circumscribe the power of his dangerous northern enemy. Unfortunately, few
traces can be gleaned from the Byzantine writers of the precise acts by which
he effected his reforms; and the most remarkable facts, illustrating the
political history of the time, must be collected from incidental notices, preserved
in the treatise of the emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus, concerning the
administration of the empire, written for the instruction of his son Romanus,
in the middle of the tenth century.
Though Heraclius failed in gaining over the Syrians
and Egyptians, yet he succeeded completely in reuniting the Greeks of Asia
Minor to his government, and in attaching them to the empire. The moment the
Mohammedan armies were compelled to rely solely on their military skill and
religious enthusiasm, and ceased to derive any aid from the hostile feeling of
the inhabitants to the imperial government, their career of conquest was
checked; and almost a century before Charles Martel stopped their progress in
the west of Europe, the Greeks had arrested their conquests in the East, by the
steady resistance which they offered in Asia Minor.
The difficulties of Heraclius were very great. The
Roman armies were still composed of a rebellious soldiery collected from many
discordant nations; and the only leaders whom the emperor could trust with
important military commands were his immediate relations, like his brother
Theodore, and his son Heraclius Constantine, or soldiers of fortune who could
not aspire to the imperial dignity. The apostasy and treachery of a
considerable number of Roman officers in Syria, warranted Heraclius in
regarding the defence of that province as utterly hopeless; but the meagre
historians of his reign can hardly be received as conclusive authorities, to
prove that on his retreat he displayed an unseemly despair, or a criminal
indifference. The fact that he carried the holy cross, which he had restored to
Jerusalem, along with him to Constantinople, attests that he had lost all
expectation of defending the Holy City; but his exclamation of ‘Farewell, Syria!’
was doubtless uttered in the bitterness of his heart, on seeing a great part of
the labours of his life for the restoration of the Roman empire utterly vain.
The disease which had long undermined his constitution, put an end to his life
about five years after his return to Constantinople. He died in March 641,
after one of the most remarkable reigns recorded in history; a reign chequered
by the greatest successes and reverses, during which the social condition of
mankind underwent a mighty revolution. Yet there is, unfortunately, no period
of man's annals covered with greater obscurity.
CHAPTER V
From the Mohammedan Invasion of Syria to the
Extinction of the Roman Power in the East
A.D. 633-716.
Sect. I
The Roman Empire gradually changed into the Byzantine.
The precise date at which the Eastern Empire lost its
Roman character has been variously fixed. Gibbon remarks, that Tiberius by the
Arabs, and Maurice by the Italians, are distinguished as the first of the Greek
Caesars, as the founders of a new dynasty and empire. But if manners, language,
and religion are to decide concerning the commencement of the Byzantine empire,
the preceding pages have shown that its origin must be carried back to an
earlier period; while, if the administrative peculiarities in the form of
government be taken as the ground of decision, the Roman Empire may be
considered as indefinitely prolonged with the existence of the title of emperor
of the Romans, which the sovereigns of Constantinople continued to retain as
long as Constantinople was ruled by Christian princes. The privileges and the
prejudices of the governing classes, both in Church and State, kept them
completely separated from every race of subjects, and rendered the imperial
administration, and the people of the empire, two distinct bodies, with
different, and frequently adverse views and interests. Even when the conquests
of the Othoman Turks had reduced the Greek empire to
a narrow strip of territory in the vicinity of Constantinople, some traditions
of the Roman Empire continued to animate the government, and guide the councils
of the emperor. The period, therefore, at which the Roman empire of the East
terminated, is decided by the events which confined the authority of the
imperial government to those provinces where the Greeks formed the majority of
the population; and it is marked by the adoption of Greek as the language of
the government, by the prevalence of Greek civilization, and by the
identification of the nationality of the people and the policy of the emperors with
the Greek church. This occurred when the Saracen conquests severed from the
empire all those provinces which possessed a native population distinct from
the Greeks by language, literature, and religion. The central government of
Constantinople was then compelled to fall back on the interests and passions of
the remaining inhabitants, who were chiefly Greeks; and though Roman principles
of administration continued to exercise a powerful influence in separating the
aristocracy, both in Church and State, from the body of the people, still
public opinion among the educated classes began to exert some influence on the
administration, and that public opinion was in its character entirely Greek.
Yet, as it was by no means identified with the interests and feelings of the
native inhabitants of Hellas, it is correctly termed Byzantine, and the empire
is, consequently, justly called the Byzantine Empire. Alexander the Great,
during his short and brilliant career, implanted some habits and institutions
in the lands he subdued, which outlived the authority of the Romans, though
they ruled many of his conquests for 700 years, and at last the Eastern Empire
identified itself with the feelings and interests of that portion of the Greek
nation which owed its political existence to the Macedonian conquests. On the
numbers, wealth, and power of this class the emperor and the Orthodox Church
were, after the commencement of the eighth century, compelled to depend for the
defence of the government and the Christian religion.
The difficulty of fixing the precise moment which
marks the end of the Roman empire, arises from the slow transformation it
underwent in changing its Latin for its Greek character, and because the change
resulted rather from the internal evils nourished in its political
organization, than from the attacks of its external enemies. The termination of
the Roman power was consequently nothing more than the reform of a corrupt and
antiquated government, and its transformation into a new state by the power of
time and circumstance was feebly aided by the intellects and acts of
superstitious and servile statesmen. The Goths, Huns, Avars, Persians, and
Saracens, all failed as completely in overthrowing the Roman Empire, as the
Mohammedans did in destroying the Christian religion. Even the final loss of
Egypt, Syria, and Africa only reveals the transformation of the Roman Empire,
when the consequences resulting from their loss produced visible effects on the
internal government The Roman Empire seems, therefore, really to have
terminated with the anarchy which followed the murder of Justinian II, the last
sovereign of the family of Heraclius; and Leo III, or the Isaurian, who
identified the imperial administration with ecclesiastical forms and questions,
must be ranked as the first of the Byzantine monarchs, though neither the
emperor, the clergy, nor the people perceived the change in their position,
which makes the establishment of this new era historically correct.
Under the sway of the Heraclian
family, the extent of the empire was circumscribed nearly within the bounds
which it continued to occupy during many subsequent centuries. As this
diminution of territory was chiefly caused by the separation of provinces,
inhabited by people of different races, manners, and opinions, and placed, by a
concurrence of circumstances, in opposition to the central government, it is
not improbable that the empire was strengthened by the loss. The connection
between the court and the Greek nation became closer; and though this connection,
in so far as it affected the people, was chiefly based on religious feelings,
and operated with greater force on the inhabitants of the cities than on the
whole body of the population, still its effect was extremely beneficial to the
imperial government.
While the Roman and Persian empires, ruined by their
devastating wars, rapidly declined in wealth, power, and population, two
nations, which had previously exercised no influence on civilization, suddenly
became so powerful as to become the arbiters of the fate of mankind. The Turks
in the north of Asia, and the Arabs in the south, were now placed in immediate
contact with the civilized portion of mankind. The Turkish power of this time,
however, never came into direct military relations with the Roman Empire, nor
did the conquests of this race immediately affect the political and social
condition of the Greeks, until some centuries later. With the Arabs, or
Saracens, the case was very different. As they were placed on the confines of
Syria, Egypt, and Persia, the wars of Heraclius and Chosroes threw a
considerable portion of the rich trade with Ethiopia, Southern Africa, and
India, into their hands. The long hostilities between the two empires gave a
constant occupation to the warlike population of Arabia, and directed the
attention of the Arabs to views of extended national policy. The natural
advantages of their unrivalled cavalry were augmented by habits of order and
discipline, which they could never have acquired in their native deserts, but
which they learned as mercenaries in the Roman service. The Saracens in the
service of the empire are spoken of with praise by Heraclius in his last
campaign, when they accompanied him into the heart of Persia. The increase of
their commercial and military enterprise doubtless caused an increase of
population. The edict of Justinian, which prohibited the exportation of grain
from every port of Egypt except Alexandria, closed the canal of Suez, and put
an end to the trade on the Red Sea, or at least threw
whatever trade remained into the hands of the Arabians. Their intimate
connection with the Roman and Persian armies revealed to them the weakness of
the two empires; yet the extraordinary power and conquests of the Arabs must be
attributed rather to the moral strength which the nation acquired by the
influence of their prophet Mahomet, than to the extent of their improvement in
military or political knowledge. The difference in the social circumstances of
a declining and an advancing population must not be lost sight of in weighing
the relative strength of nations, which appear the most dissimilar in wealth
and population, and even in the extent of their military establishments.
Nations which, like the inhabitants of the Roman and Persian empires in the
seventh century, expend their whole revenues, public and private, in the course
of the year, though composed of numerous and wealthy subjects, may prove weak
when a sudden emergency requires extraordinary exertion; while a people with
scanty revenues and small resources may, from its frugal habits and constant
activity, command a larger revenue for great public works or military
enterprises. In one case it may be impossible to assemble more than
one-twentieth of the population under arms; in the other, it may be possible to
take the field with one-fifth.
Sect. II
Conquest of the Southern Provinces of the Empire of
which the majority of the population was not Greek nor orthodox.
Strange as were the vicissitudes in the fortunes of
the Persian and Roman empires during the reigns of Chosroes and Heraclius,
every event in their records sinks into insignificance when compared with the
mighty influence which Mahomet, the prophet of Arabia, exercised on the
political, moral, and religious condition of the countries whose possession
these sovereigns so eagerly disputed. Historians are apt to be enticed from
their immediate subject, in order to contemplate the personal history of a man
who obtained so marvellous a dominion over the minds and actions of his
followers; and whose talents laid the foundations of a political and religious
system, which has ever since continued to govern millions of mankind, of
various races and dissimilar manners. The success of Mahomet as a law-giver,
among the most ancient nations of Asia, and the stability of his institutions
during a long series of generations, and in every condition of social polity, proves that this extraordinary man was formed by a
rare combination of the qualities both of a Lycurgus and an Alexander, But
still, in order to appreciate with perfect justness the influence of Mahomet on
his own times, it is safer to examine the history of his contemporaries with
reference to his conduct, and to fix our attention exclusively on his actions
and opinions, than to trace from them the exploits of his followers, and
attribute to them the rapid propagation of his religion. Even though it be
admitted that Mahomet laid the foundations of his laws in the strongest
principles of human nature, and prepared the fabric of his empire with the
profoundest wisdom, still there can be no doubt that no human intelligence
could, during his lifetime, have foreseen, and no combinations on the part of
one individual could have insured, the extraordinary success of his followers.
The laws which govern the moral world insure permanent success, even to the
greatest minds, only as long as they form types of the mental feelings of their
fellow-creatures. The circumstances of the age in which Mahomet lived, were
indeed favourable to his career; they formed the mind of this wonderful man,
who has left their impress, as well as that of his own character, on succeeding
generations. He was born at a period of visible intellectual decline amongst
the aristocratic and governing classes throughout the civilized world.
Aspirations after something better than the then social condition of the bulk
of mankind, had rendered the inhabitants of almost every country dissatisfied
with the existing order of things. A better religion than the paganism of the
Arabs was felt to be necessary in Arabia; and, at the same time, even the
people of Persia, Syria, and Egypt, required something more satisfactory to
their religious feelings than the disputed doctrines which the Magi, Jews, and
Christians inculcated as the most important features of their respective
religions, merely because they presented the points of greatest dissimilarity.
The great success of Mani in propagating a new religion (for Manichaeism cannot
properly be called a heresy) is a strong testimony of this feeling. The fate,
too, of the Manichaeans would probably have foreshadowed that of the
Mohammedans, had the religion of Mahomet not presented to foreign nations a
national cause as well as an universal creed. Had Mahomet himself met with the
fate of Mani, it is not probable that his religion would have been more
successful than that of his predecessor. But he found a whole nation in the
full tide of rapid improvement, eagerly in search of knowledge and power. The
excitement in the public mind of Arabia, which produced the mission of Mahomet,
induced many other prophets to make their appearance during his lifetime. His
superior talents, and his clearer perception of justice, and we may say, truth,
destroyed all their schemes.
The misfortunes of the times created in the East a
belief that unity was the thing principally wanting to cure existing evils, and
secure the permanent happiness of mankind. This vague desire of unity is indeed
no uncommon delusion of the human intellect Mahomet seized the idea; his creed,
‘there is but one God’, was a truth that insured universal assent; the
addition, ‘and Mahomet is the prophet of God’, was a simple fact, which, if
doubted, admitted of an appeal to the sword, an argument that, even to the
minds of the Christian world, was long considered as an appeal to God. The
principle of unity was soon embodied in the frame of Arabic society; the unity
of God, the national unity of the Arabs, and the unity of the religious, civil,
judicial, and military administration, in one organ on earth, entitled the
Mohammedans to assume, with justice, the name of Unitarians, a title in which
they particularly gloried. Such sentiments, joined to the declaration made and
long kept by the Saracens, that liberty of conscience was granted to all who
put themselves under the protection of Islam, were enough to secure the
goodwill of that numerous body of the population of both the Persian and the
Roman empires which was opposed to the state religion, and which was
continually exposed to persecution by these two bigoted governments. In Persia,
Chosroes persecuted orthodox Christians with as much cruelty as Heraclius
tormented Jews and heretics within the bounds of the empire. The ability with
which Mahomet put forward his creed removed it entirely from the schools of
theology, and secured among the people a secret feeling in favour of its
justice, particularly when its votaries appeared as offering a refuge to the
oppressed, and a protection against religious persecution.
As this work only proposes to notice the influence of
Mohammedanism on the fortunes and condition of the Greek nation, it is not
necessary to narrate in detail the progress of the Arab conquests in the Roman
Empire. The first hostilities between the followers of Mahomet and the Roman
troops occurred while Heraclius was at Jerusalem, engaged in celebrating the
restoration of the holy cross, bearing it on his own shoulders up Mount
Calvary, and persecuting the Jews by driving them out of their native city.
(The holy cross was replaced in the Church of the Resurrection on the 14th of
September, 629. In the month of Djoumadi I, in the
eighth year of the Hegira, September, 629, war broke out between the Christian
subjects of the empire and the Saracens, followers of Mahomet). In his desire
to obtain the favour of Heaven by purifying the Holy City, he overlooked the
danger which his authority might incur from the hatred and despair of his
persecuted subjects. The first military operations of the Arabs excited little
alarm in the minds of the emperor and his officers in Syria; the Roman forces
had always been accustomed to repel the incursions of the Saracens with ease;
the irregular cavalry of the desert, though often successful in plundering
incursions, had hitherto proved ineffective against the regularly disciplined
and completely armed troops of the empire. But a new spirit was now infused
into the Arabian armies; and the implicit obedience which the troops of the
Prophet paid to his commands, rendered their discipline as superior to that of
the imperial forces, as their tactics and their arms were inferior.
Mahomet did not live to profit by the experience which
his followers gained in their first struggle with the Romans. A long series of
wars in Arabia ended in the destruction of many rival prophets, and at last
united the Arabs into one great nation under the spiritual rule of Mahomet. But
Aboubekr, who succeeded to his power as chief of the
true believers, was compelled, during the first year of his government, to
renew the contest, in consequence of fresh rebellions and insurrections of
false prophets, who expected to profit by the death of Mahomet. When
tranquillity was established in Arabia, Aboubekr
commenced those wars for the propagation of Mohammedanism, which destroyed the
Persian empire of the Sassanides, and eclipsed the
power of Rome. The Christian Arabs who owned allegiance to Heraclius were first
attacked in order to complete the unity of Arabia, by forcing them to embrace
the religion of Mahomet. In the year 633 the Mohammedans invaded Syria, where
their progress was rapid, although Heraclius himself generally resided at Emesa or Antioch, in order to devote his constant attention
to restoring Syria to a state of order and obedience. The imperial troops made
considerable efforts to support the military renown of the Roman armies, but
were almost universally unsuccessful. The emperor did not neglect his duty; he
assembled all the troops that he could collect, and intrusted the command of
the army to his brother Theodore, who had distinguished himself in the Persian
wars by gaining an important victory in very critical circumstances. Vartan,
who commanded after Theodore, had also distinguished himself in the last glorious
campaign in Persia. Unfortunately the health of Heraclius prevented his taking
the field in person. The absence of all moral checks in the Roman
administration, and the total want of patriotism in the officers and troops at
this period, rendered the personal influence of the emperor necessary at the
head of the imperial armies, in order to preserve due subordination, and
enforce union among the leading men in the empire, as each individual was
always more occupied in intriguing to gain some advantage over his colleagues
than in striving to advance the service of the State. The ready obedience and
devoted patriotism of the Saracens formed a sad contrast to the insubordination
and treachery of the Romans, and would fully explain the success of the Mohammedan
arms, without the assistance of any very extraordinary impulse of religious
zeal, with which, however, there can be no doubt the Arabs were deeply imbued.
The easy conquest of Syria by the Arabs is by no means so wonderful as the
facility with which they governed it when conquered, and the tranquillity of
the population under their government.
Towards the end of the year 633, the troops of Aboubekr laid siege to Bostra, a
strong frontier town of Syria, which was surrendered early in the following
year by the treachery of its governor. During the campaign of 634 the Roman
armies were defeated at Adjnadin, in the south of
Palestine, and at a bloody and decisive battle on the banks of the river Yermouk, in which it is said that the imperial troops were
commanded by the emperor’s brother Theodore. Theodore was replaced by Vartan,
but the rebellion of Vartan’s army and another defeat terminated this general's
career. In the third year of the war the Saracens gained possession of Damascus
by capitulation, and they guaranteed to the inhabitants the full exercise of
their municipal privileges, allowed them to use their local mint, and left the
orthodox in possession of the great church of St. John. About the same time,
Heraclius quitted Edessa and returned to Constantinople, carrying with him the
holy cross, which he had recovered from the Persians, and deposited at
Jerusalem with great solemnity only six years before, but which he now
considered it necessary to remove into Europe for greater safety. His son,
Heraclius Constantine, who had received the imperial title when an infant,
remained in Syria to supply his place and direct the military operations for
the defence of the province. The events of this campaign illustrate the
feelings of the Syrian population. The Arabs plundered a great fair at the
monastery of Abilkodos, about thirty miles from
Damascus; and the Syrian towns, alarmed for their wealth, and indifferent to
the cause of their rulers, began to negotiate separate truces with the Arabs.
Indeed, wherever the imperial garrison was not sufficient to overawe the
inhabitants, the native Syrians sought to make any arrangement with the Arabs
which would insure their towns from plunder, feeling satisfied that the Arab
authorities could not use their power with greater rapacity and cruelty than
the imperial officers. The garrison of Emesa defended
itself for a year in the vain hope of being relieved by the Roman army, and
they obtained favourable terms from the Saracens, even after this long defence.
Arethusa (Restan), Epiphanea
(Hama), Larissa (Schizar), and Heliopolis (Baalbec), all entered into treaties, which led to their
becoming tributary to the Saracen. Chalcis (Kinesrin)
alone was plundered as a punishment for its tardy submission, or for some
violation of a truce. No general arrangements, either for defence or
submission, were adopted by the Christians, whose ideas of political union had
been utterly extinguished by the Roman power, and who were now satisfied if
they could preserve their lives and properties, without seeking any guarantee
for the future. The Romans retained some hope of reconquering Syria, until the
loss of another decisive battle in the year 636 compelled them to abandon the
province. In the following year, A.D. 637, the Arabs advanced to Jerusalem, and
the surrender of the holy city was accompanied by some particular arrangements between
the patriarch Sophronius and the caliph Omar, who
repaired in person to Palestine to take possession of so distinguished a
conquest. The Christian patriarch looked rather to the protection of his own
bishopric than to his duty to his country and his sovereign. The facility with
which the Greek patriarch of Jerusalem, Sophronius,
at this time, and the patriarch of Constantinople, Gennadius,
at the time of the conquest of the Byzantine empire by Mohammed II (A.D. 1453),
became the ministers of their Mohammedan conquerors, shows the slight hold
which national feelings retained over the minds of the orthodox Greek clergy.
It appears strange that Sophronius, who was the head
of a Greek and Melchite congregation, living in the midst of a numerous and
hostile Jacobite population, should have so readily consented to abandon his
connection with the Greek empire and the orthodox church, when both religion
and policy seemed so strongly to demand greater firmness; and on this very
account, his conduct must be admitted to afford evidence of the humanity and
good faith with which the early Mohammedans fulfilled their promises. The state
of society in the Roman provinces rendered it impossible to replace the great
losses which the armies had suffered in the Syrian campaigns; and the financial
resources of the empire forbade any attempt to raise a mercenary force among
the northern nations sufficiently powerful to meet the Saracens in the field.
Yet the exertions of Heraclius were so great that he concentrated an army at Amida (Diarbekr) in the year 638,
which made a bold attempt to regain possession of the north of Syria. Emesa was besieged; but the Saracens soon assembled an
overwhelming force; the Romans were defeated, the conquest of Syria was
completed, and Mesopotamia was invaded. The subjection of Syria and Palestine
was not effected by the Saracens until they had
laboured through five vigorous campaigns, and fought several bloody battles.
The contest affords conclusive testimony that the reforms of Heraclius had already
restored the discipline and courage of the Roman armies; but, at the same time,
the indifference of the native population to the result of the wars testifies
with equal certainty that he had made comparatively small progress in his civil
and financial improvements.
The Arab conquest not only put an end to the political
power of the Romans, which had lasted seven hundred years, but it also soon
rooted out every trace of the Greek civilisation introduced by the conquests of
Alexander the Great, which had flourished in the country for upwards of nine
centuries. A considerable number of native Syrians endeavoured to preserve
their independence, and retreated into the fastnesses of Mount Lebanon, where
they continued to defend themselves. Under the name of Mardaltes,
they soon became formidable to the Mohammedans, and for some time checked the
power of the caliphs in Syria, and by the diversions which they made whenever
the arms of the Arabs were employed in Asia Minor, they contributed to arrest
their progress. The year after Syria was subdued, Mesopotamia was invaded, and
proved an easy conquest, as its imperial governors and the inhabitants of the
cities readily entered into treaties with the Mohammedans.
As soon as the Arabs had completed the conquest of
Syria, they invaded Egypt. The national and religious hostility which prevailed
between the native population and the Greek colonists, insured the Mohammedans
a welcome from the Egyptians; but at the same time, this very circumstance
excited the Greeks to make the most determined resistance. The patriarch Cyrus
had adopted the Monothelite opinions of his sovereign, and this rendered his
position uneasy amidst the orthodox Greeks of Alexandria. Anxious to avert any
disturbance in the province, he conceived the idea of purchasing peace for
Egypt from the Saracens, by paying them an annual tribute; and he entered into
negotiations for this purpose, in which Mokaukas, who
remained at the head of the fiscal department, joined him. The Emperor
Heraclius, informed of this intrigue, sent an Armenian governor, Manuel, with a
body of troops, to defend the province, and ordered the negotiations to be
broken off. The fortune of the Arabs again prevailed, and the Roman army was
defeated. Amrou, the Saracen general, having taken Pelusium, laid siege to Misr, or
Babylon, the chief native city of Egypt, and the seat of the provincial
administration. The treachery or patriotism of Mokaukas,
for his position warrants either supposition, induced him to join the Arabs,
and assist them in capturing the town. A capitulation was concluded, by which
the native Egyptians retained possession of all their property, and enjoyed the
free exercise of their religion as Jacobites, on
paying a tribute of two pieces of gold for every male inhabitant. If the
accounts of historians can be relied on, it would seem that the population
suffered less from vicious administration in Egypt than in any other part of
the Roman empire; for about the time of its conquest by the Romans it contained
seven millions and a half, exclusive of Alexandria, and its population was now
estimated at six millions. This is by no means impossible, for the most active
cause of the depopulation of the Roman empire arose from the neglect of all
those accessories of civilization which facilitate the distribution and
circulation as well as the production of the necessaries of life. From neglect
of this kind Egypt had suffered comparatively little, as the natural advantages
of the soil, and the physical conformation of the country, intersected by one
mighty river, had compensated for the supineness of its rulers. The Nile was
the great road of the province, and nature kept it constantly available for
transport at the cheapest rate, for the current enabled the heaviest laden boats,
and even the rudest rafts, to descend the river with their cargoes rapidly and
securely; while the north wind, blowing steadily for almost nine months in the
year, enabled every boat that could hoist a sail to stem the current, and reach
the limits of the province with as much certainty, if not with such rapidity,
as a modem steam-boat. And when the waters of the Nile were separated over the
Delta, they became a valuable property to corporations and individuals, whose
rights the Roman law respected, and whose interests and wealth were sufficient
to keep in repair the canals of irrigation; so that the vested capital of Egypt
suffered little diminution, while war and oppression annihilated the
accumulations of ages over the rest of the world. The immense wealth and
importance of Alexandria, the only port which Egypt possessed for communicating
with the empire, still made it one of the first cities in the world for riches
and population, though it suffered severely by the Persian conquest.
The canal which connected the Nile with the Red Sea
furnished the means of transporting the agricultural produce of the rich valley
of Egypt to the arid coast of Arabia, and created and nourished a trade which
added considerably to the wealth and population of both countries. This canal,
in its most improved state, commenced at Babylon, and ended at Arsinoe (Suez).
It fertilized a large district on its banks, which has again relapsed into the
same condition as the rest of the desert, and it created an oasis of verdure on
the shore of the Red Sea. Arsinoe flourished amidst groves of palm-trees and
sycamores, with a branch of the Nile flowing beneath its walls, where Suez now
withers in a dreary waste, destitute alike of vegetables and of potable water,
which are transported from Cairo for the use of the travellers who arrive from
India. This canal was anciently used for the transport of large and bulky
commodities, for which land carriage would have proved either impracticable or
too expensive. By means of it, Trajan transported from the quarries on the Red
Sea to the shores of the Mediterranean the columns and vases of porphyry with
which he adorned Rome. It may have been neglected during the troubles in the
reigns of Phocas and Heraclius, while the Persians occupied the country; but it
was in such a state of preservation as to require but slight repairs from the
earlier caliphs. A year after Amrou completed the
conquest of Egypt, he established the water communication between the Nile and
the Red Sea; and the large supplies of grain which he transported to the Red
Sea by the canal of Suez, enabled him to relieve the inhabitants of Mecca, who
were suffering from famine. After more than one interruption from neglect, it
was allowed to become nearly useless for navigation by the policy of the
caliphs of Bagdad, and was finally closed by Almanzor A. D. 762-767.
As soon as the Arabs had settled the affairs of the
native population, they laid siege to Alexandria. This city made a vigorous
defence, and Heraclius exerted himself to succour it; but, though it held out
for several months, it was taken by the Arabs, when the troubles which occurred
at Constantinople after the death of Heraclius prevented the Roman government
from sending reinforcements to the garrison. The confidence of the Saracens
induced them to leave a feeble garrison for its defence; and the Roman troops,
watching an opportunity for renewing the war, recovered the city, and massacred
the Mohammedans, but were soon compelled to retire to their ships, and make
their escape. The conquest of Alexandria is said to have cost the Arabs
twenty-three thousand men; and they are accused of using their victory like
rude barbarians, because they destroyed the libraries and works of art of the
Greeks, though a Mohammedan historian might appeal to the permanence of their
power, and the increase in the numbers of the votaries of the Prophet, as a
proof of the profound policy and statesman-like views of the men who rooted out
every trace of an adverse civilization and a hostile race. The professed object
of the Saracens was to replace Greek persecution by Mohammedan toleration.
Political sagacity convinced the Arabs that it was necessary to exterminate
Greek civilization in order to destroy Greek influence. The Goths, who sought
only to plunder the Roman Empire, might spare the libraries of the Greeks, but
the Mohammedans, whose object was to convert as well as subdue, considered it a
duty to root out everything that presented any obstacle to the ultimate success
of their schemes for the advent of Mohammedan civilization. In less than five
years (A. D. 646), a Roman army, sent by the emperor Constans under the command
of Manuel, again recovered possession of Alexandria, by the assistance of the
Greek inhabitants who had remained in the place; but the Mohammedans soon
appeared before the city, and, with the assistance of the Egyptians, compelled
the imperial troops to abandon their conquest. The walls of Alexandria were
thrown down, the Greek population driven out, and the commercial importance of
the city destroyed. Thus perished one of the most remarkable colonies of the
Greek nation, and one of the most renowned seats of that Greek civilization of
which Alexander the Great laid the foundations in the East, after having
flourished in the highest degree of prosperity for nearly a thousand years.
(Alexandria was founded B.C. 332. After the conquest of Egypt by the Saracens,
the Egyptian or Coptic language began to give way to the Arabic, because the
number of the Copts was gradually reduced by the oppressive government of their
new masters. Amrou, the conqueror of Egypt, who
governed it several years, is said to have left at his death a sum equal to
eight millions sterling, accumulated by his extortions. The caliph Othman is
said to have left only seven millions in the Arabian treasury at his death. The
officers soon became richer than the State).
The conquest of Cyrenaica followed the subjugation of
Egypt as an immediate consequence. The Greeks are said to have planted their
first colonies in this country six hundred and thirty-one years before the
Christian era and twelve centuries of uninterrupted possession appeared to have
constituted them the perpetual tenants of the soil; but the Arabs were very
different masters from the Romans, and under their domination the Greek race
soon became extinct in Africa. It is not necessary here to follow the Saracens
in their conquests westward. The dominant people with whom they had to contend
in the western provinces, was Latin, and not Greek. The ruling classes were
attached to the Roman government, though often rendered discontented by the
tyranny of the emperors; they defended themselves with far more courage and
obstinacy than the Syrians and Egyptians. The war was marked by considerable
vicissitudes, and it was not till the year 698 that Carthage fell permanently
into the hands of the Saracens, who, according to their usual policy, threw
down the walls and ruined the public buildings, in order to destroy every trace
of the Roman government in Africa. The Saracens were singularly successful in
all their projects of destruction; in a short time both Latin and Greek
civilization was exterminated on the southern shores of the Mediterranean.
The success of the Mohammedan religion, under the
earlier caliphs, did not keep pace with the progress of the Arab arms. Of all
the native populations of the countries subdued, the Arabs of Syria alone
appear to have immediately adopted the new religion of their co-national race;
but the great mass of the native races in Syria, Mesopotamia, Egypt, Cyrenaica,
and Africa, clung firmly to their faith, and the decline of Christianity in all
these countries is to be attributed rather to the extermination than to the
conversion of the Christian inhabitants. The decrease in the number of the
Christians was invariably attended by a decrease in the numbers of the
inhabitants, and arose evidently from the oppressive treatment which they
suffered under the Mohammedan rulers of these countries, — a system of tyranny
which was at last carried so far as to reduce whole provinces to unpeopled
deserts, ready to receive an Arab population, almost in a nomad state, as the
successors of the exterminated Christians. It was only when Mohammedanism
presented its system of unity, in opposition to the evident falsity of
idolatry, or to the unintelligible discussions of an incomprehensible theology,
that the human mind was easily led away by its religious doctrines, which
addressed the passions of mankind rather too palpably to be secure of commanding
their reason. The earliest Mohammedan conversions of foreign races were made
among the subjects of Persia, who mingled native or provincial superstitions
with the Magian faith, and among the Christians of Nubia and the interior of
Africa, whose religion may have departed very far from the pure doctrines of
Christianity. The success of the Mohammedans was generally confined to
barbarous and ignorant converts; and the more civilized people retained their
faith as long as they could secure their national existence. This fact
contrasts remarkably with the progress of Christianity. In one case success was
obtained solely by moral influence; in the other principally by material power.
The peculiar causes which enabled the Christians of the seventh and eighth centuries,
in the debased mental condition into which they had fallen, to resist
Mohammedanism, and to prefer extinction to apostasy, deserve a more accurate
investigation than they have yet met with from historians.
The construction of the political government of the
Saracen Empire was far more imperfect than the creed of the Mohammedans, and
shows that Mahomet neither contemplated extensive foreign conquests, nor
devoted the energies of his powerful mind to the consideration of the questions
of administration which would arise out of the difficult task of ruling a
numerous and wealthy population possessed of property but deprived of civil
rights. No attempt was made to arrange any systematic form of political
government, and the whole power of the State was vested in the hands of the
chief priest of the religion, who was only answerable for the due exercise of
this extraordinary power to God, his own conscience, and his subjects'
patience. The moment, therefore, that the responsibility created by national
feelings, military companionship, and exalted enthusiasm, ceased to operate on
the minds of the caliphs, their administration became far more oppressive than
that of the Roman emperors. No local magistrates elected by the people, and no
parish priests, connected by their feelings and interests both with their
superiors and inferiors, bound society together by common ties; and no system
of legal administration, independent of the military and financial authorities,
preserved the property of the people from the rapacity of the government.
Socially and politically the Saracen Empire was little better than the Gothic, Hunnish, and Avar monarchies; and that it proved more
durable, is to be attributed to the powerful enthusiasm of Mahomet’s religion,
which tempered for some time its avarice and tyranny.
Even the military successes of the Arabs are to be
ascribed in some measure to accidental causes, over which they themselves
exercised no control. The number of disciplined and veteran troops who had
served in the Roman and Persian armies could not have been matched by the
Arabian armies. But no inconsiderable part of the followers of Mahomet had been
trained in the Persian war, and the religious zeal of neophytes, who regarded
war as a sacred duty, enabled the youngest recruits to perform the service of
veterans. The enthusiasm of the Arabians was more powerful than the discipline
of the Roman troops, and their strict obedience to their leaders compensated in
a great degree for their inferiority in arms and tactics. But a long war proved
that the military qualities of the Roman armies were more lasting than those of
the Arabs. The important and rapid conquests of the Mohammedans were assisted
by the religious dissensions and national antipathies which placed the great bulk
of the people of Syria, Mesopotamia, and Egypt in hostility to the Roman
government, and neutralized many of the advantages which they might have
derived from their military skill and discipline amidst a favourable
population. The Roman government had to encounter the excited energies of the
Arabs, at a moment, too, when its resources were exhausted and its strength was
weakened by a long war with Persia, which had for years paralyzed the influence
of the central executive administration, and enabled numerous chiefs to acquire
an independent authority. These chiefs were generally destitute of every
feeling of patriotism; nor can this excite our wonder, for the feeling of
patriotism was then an unknown sentiment in every rank of society throughout
the Eastern Empire ; their conduct was entirely directed by ambition and
interest, and they sought only to retain possession of the districts which they
governed. The example of Mokaukas in Egypt, and of Youkinna at Aleppo, are remarkable instances of the power
and treasonable disposition of many of these imperial officers. But almost
every governor in Syria displayed equal faithlessness. Yet in spite of the
treason of some officers, and the submission of others, the defence of Syria
does not appear to have been on the whole disgraceful to the Roman army, and
the Arabs purchased their conquest by severe fighting and at the cost of much
blood. An anecdote mentioned in the History of the Saracens shows that the
importance of order and discipline was not overlooked by Khaled, the Sword of
God, as he was styled by his admiring countrymen; and that his great success
was owing to military skill, as well as religious enthusiasm and fiery valour.
‘Mead’, says the historian, encouraged the Saracens with the hopes of Paradise,
and the enjoyment of everlasting life, if they fought for the cause of God and
religion. “Softly”, said Khaled; “let me get them into good order before you
set them upon fighting”. Under all the disadvantages mentioned, it is not
surprising that the hostile feelings of a numerous, wealthy, and heretical
portion of the Syrian community, willing to purchase peace and toleration at
any reasonable sacrifice, should have turned the scale against the Romans. The
struggle became doubtful from the moment that the people of Damascus concluded
an advantageous truce with the Arabs. Emesa and other
cities could then venture to follow the example, merely for the purpose of
securing their own property, without any reference to the general interests of
the province, or the military plans of defence of the Roman government. Yet one
of the chiefs, who held a portion of the coast of Phoenicia, succeeded in
maintaining his independence against the whole power of the Saracens, and
formed in the mountains of Lebanon a small Christian principality, of which the
town of Byblos (Djebail) was the capital. Round this
nucleus some native Syrians, called Mardaltes,
rallied in considerable force.
The great influence exercised by the patriarchs of
Jerusalem and Alexandria tended also to weaken and distract the measures
adopted for the defence of Syria and Egypt, Their willingness to negotiate with
the Arabs, who were resolved only to be satisfied with conquest, placed the
Roman armies and government in a disadvantageous position. Where the chances of
war are nearly balanced, the good will of the people will eventually decide the
contest in favour of the party that they espouse. Now there is strong reason to
believe, that even a majority of the orthodox subjects of the Roman empire, in
the provinces which were conquered during the reign of Heraclius, were the
well-wishers of the Arab; that they regarded the emperor with aversion as a
heretic; and that they fancied they were sufficiently guaranteed against the
oppression of their new masters, by the rigid observance of justice which
characterized their earlier acts. A temporary diminution of tribute, or escape
from some oppressive act of administration, induced them to compromise their
religious position and their national independence. The fault is too natural to
be severely blamed. They feared that Heraclius might commence a persecution in
order to enforce conformity with his monothelite
opinions, for of religious liberty the age had no just conception; and the
Syrians and Egyptians had been slaves for far too many centuries to be
impressed with any idea of the sacrifices which a nation ought to make in order
to secure its independence. The moral tone adopted by the Caliph Aboubekr, in his instructions to the Syrian army, was also
so unlike the principles of the Roman government, that it must have commanded
profound attention from a subject people. “Be just”, said the proclamation of Aboubekr, “the unjust never prosper; be valiant, die rather
than yield; be merciful, slay neither old men, children, nor women. Destroy
neither fruit-trees, grain, nor cattle; keep your word, even to your enemies;
molest not those men who live retired from the world, but compel the rest of
mankind to become Mussulmans, or to pay us tribute, — if they refuse these terms,
slay them”. Such a proclamation announced to Jews and Christians sentiments of
justice and principles of toleration which neither Roman emperors nor orthodox
bishops had ever adopted as the rule of their conduct. This remarkable document
must have made a deep impression on the minds of an oppressed and persecuted
people. Its effect was soon increased by the wonderful spectacle of the Caliph
Omar riding into Jerusalem on the camel which carried all the baggage and
provisions which he required for his journey from Mecca. The contrast thus
offered between the rude simplicity of a great conqueror and the extravagant
pomp of the provincial representatives of a defeated emperor must have
embittered the hatred already strong in an oppressed people against a rapacious
government. Had the Saracens been able to unite a system of judicial
legislation and administration, and of elective local and municipal governments
for their conquered subjects, with the vigour of their own central power and
the religious monarchy of their own national government, it is difficult to
conceive that any limits could ultimately have been opposed to their authority
by the then existing states into which the world was divided.
But the political system of the Saracens was of itself
utterly barbarous, and it only caught a passing gleam of justice, while worldly
prudence tempered the religious feelings of their prophet’s doctrines. A
remarkable feature of the policy by which they maintained their power over the
provinces which they conquered, ought not to be overlooked, as it illustrates
both their confidence in their military superiority and the low state of their
social civilization. They generally destroyed the walls of the cities which
they subdued, whenever the fortifications offered peculiar facilities for
defence, or contained a native population active and bold enough to threaten
danger from rebellion. Many celebrated Roman cities were destroyed, and the
Saracen administration was transferred to new capitals, founded where a
convenient military station for overawing the country could be safely
established. Thus Alexandria, Babylon or Misr,
Carthage, Ctesiphon, and Babylon were destroyed, and Fostat,
Kairowan, Cufa, Bussora, and Bagdad rose to supplant them.
Sect. III
Constans II. A.D. 641-668.
After the death of Heraclius, the short reigns of his
sons, Constantine III, or Heraclius Constantine, and Heracleonas,
were disturbed by court intrigues and the disorders which result from the want
of a settled law of succession. In such conjunctures, the people and the
courtiers learn alike to traffic in sedition. Before the termination of the
year in which Heraclius died, his grandson, Constans II, mounted the imperial
throne at the age of eleven, in consequence of the death of his father Constantine
and the dethronement of his uncle Heracleonas. An
oration made by the young prince to the senate after his accession, in which he
invoked the aid of that body, and spoke of their power in terms of reverence,
warrants the conclusion that the official aristocracy had again recovered its
influence over the imperial administration; and that, though the emperor's
authority was still held to be absolute by the constitution of the empire, it
was really cotrolled by the influence of the
patricians and other great officers in the state.
Constans grew up to be a man of considerable abilities
and of an energetic character, but possessed of violent passions, and destitute
of all the amiable feelings of humanity. The early part of his reign was marked
by the loss of several portions of the empire. The Lombards extended their
conquests in Italy from the maritime Alps to the frontiers of Tuscany; and the
exarch of Ravenna was defeated with considerable loss near Modena; but still
they were unable to make any serious impression on the exarchate. Armenia was
compelled to pay tribute to the Saracens. Cyprus was rendered tributary to the
caliph, though the amount of the tribute imposed was only seven thousand two
hundred pieces of gold, which is said to have been half the amount previously
paid to the emperor. But this trifling sum can have hardly amounted to the
moiety of the surplus usually paid into the imperial treasury after the
expenses of the local government were defrayed, and cannot have borne any
relation to the amount of taxation levied by the Roman emperors in the island.
It contrasts strangely with the large payments made by single cities for a
year’s truce in Syria, and the immense wealth collected by the Arabs in Syria,
Egypt, Persia, and Africa. The commercial town of Aradus,
in Syria, which had hitherto resisted the Saracens from the strength of its
insular position, was now taken and destroyed. In a subsequent expedition, Cos
was taken by the treachery of its bishop, and the city plundered and laid waste.
Rhodes was then conquered, and its conquest is memorable for the destruction of
the celebrated Colossus, which, though it fell about fifty-six years after its
erection, had been, even in its prostrate condition, regarded as one of the
wonders of the world. The admiration of the Greeks and Romans had protected it
from destruction for nine centuries. The Arabs, to whom works of art possessed
no value, broke it in pieces, and sold the bronze of which it was composed. The
metal is said to have loaded nine hundred and eighty camels.
As soon as Constans was old enough to assume the
direction of public business, the two great objects of his policy were the
establishment of the absolute power of the emperor over the Orthodox Church,
and the recovery of the lost provinces of the empire. With the view of securing
a perfect control over the ecclesiastical affairs of his dominions, he
published an edict, called the Type, in the year 648, when he was only eighteen
years old. It was prepared by Paul, the patriarch of Constantinople, and was
intended to terminate the disputes produced by the Ecthesis
of Heraclius. All parties were commanded by the Type to observe a profound
silence on the previous quarrels concerning the operation of the will in
Christ. Liberty of conscience was an idea almost unknown to any but the
Mohammedans, so that Constans never thought of appealing to any such right; and
no party in the Christian church was inclined to waive its orthodox authority
of enforcing its own opinions upon others. The Latin church, led by the Bishop
of Rome, was always ready to oppose the Greek clergy, who enjoyed the favour of
the imperial court, and this jealousy engaged the pope in violent opposition to
the Type. But the bishop of Rome was not then so powerful as directly to
question the authority of the emperor in regulating such matters. Perhaps it
appeared to him hardly prudent to rouse the passions of a young prince of
eighteen, who might prove not very bigoted in his attachment to any party, as,
indeed, the provisions of the Type seemed to indicate. The pope Theodore,
therefore, directed the whole of his ecclesiastical fury against the Patriarch
of Constantinople, whom he excommunicated with circumstances of singular and
impressive violence. He descended with his clergy into the dark tomb of St.
Peter in the Vatican, now under the centre of the dome in the vault of the
great Cathedral of Christendom, where he consecrated the sacred cup, and,
having dipped his pen in the blood of Christ, signed an act of excommunication,
condemning a brother bishop to the pains of hell. To this indecent proceeding
Paul the Patriarch replied by persuading the emperor to persecute the clergy
who adhered to the pope’s opinion, in a more regular and legal manner, by
depriving them of their temporalities, and condemning them to banishment. The
pope was supported by nearly the whole body of the Latin clergy, and even by a
considerable party in the East; yet, when Martin, the successor of Theodore,
ventured to anathematize the Ecthesis and the Type,
he was seized by order of Constans, conveyed to Constantinople, tried, and
condemned on a charge of having supported the rebellion of the Exarch Olympius, and of having remitted money to the Saracens. The
emperor, at the intercession of the Patriarch Paul, commuted his punishment to
exile, and the pope died in banishment at Cherson. Though Constans did not
succeed in inculcating his doctrines on the clergy, he succeeded in enforcing
public obedience to his decrees in the church, and the fullest acknowledgment
of his supreme power over the persons of the clergy. These disputes between the
heads of the ecclesiastical administration of the Greek and Latin churches
afforded an excellent pretext for extending the breach, which had its real
origin in national feelings and clerical interests, and which was only widened
by the not very intelligible distinctions of monothelitism.
Constans himself, by his vigour and personal activity in this struggle,
incurred the bitter hatred of a large portion of the clergy, and his conduct
has been unquestionably the object of much misrepresentation and calumny.
The attention of Constans to ecclesiastical affairs
induced him to visit Armenia, where his attempts to unite the people to his
government by regulating the affairs of their church were as unsuccessful as
his religious interference elsewhere. Dissensions were increased; one of the
imperial officers of high rank rebelled; and the Saracens availed themselves of
this state of things to invade both Armenia and Cappadocia, and succeeded in
rendering several districts tributary. The increasing power of Moawyah, the Arab general, induced him to form a project
for the conquest of Constantinople, and he began to fit out a great naval
expedition at Tripoli in Syria. A daring enterprise of two brothers, Christian
inhabitants of the place, rendered the expedition abortive. These two
Tripolitans and their partisans broke open the prisons in which the Roman
captives were confined, and, placing themselves at the head of an armed band
which they had hastily formed, seized the city, slew the governor, and burnt
the fleet. A second armament was at length prepared by the energy of Moawyah, and as it was reported to be directed against
Constantinople, the Emperor Constans took upon himself the command of his own
fleet. He met the Saracen expedition off Mount Phoenix in Lycia, and attacked
it with great vigour. The Roman fleet was utterly destroyed and twenty thousand
Romans are said to have perished in the battle. The emperor himself owed his
safety to the valour of one of the Tripolitan brothers, whose gallant defence
of the imperial galley enabled the emperor to escape before its valiant
defender was slain and the vessel fell into the hands of the Saracens. Constans
retired to Constantinople, but the hostile fleet had suffered too much to
attempt any farther operations, and the expedition was abandoned for that year.
The death of Othman, and the pretensions of Moawyah
to the caliphate, withdrew the attention of the Arabs from the empire for a
short time, and Constans turned his forces against the Sclavonians,
in order to deliver the European provinces from their ravages. They were
totally defeated, numbers were carried off as slaves, and many were compelled
to submit to the imperial authority. No certain grounds exist for determining
whether this expedition was directed against the Sclavonians
who had established themselves between the Danube and Mount Haemus, or against
those who had settled in Macedonia. The name of no town is mentioned in the
accounts of the campaign.
When the affairs of the European provinces were
tranquillized Constans again prepared to engage the Arabs; and Moawyah, having need of all the forces he could command for
his contest with All, the son-in-law of Mahomet, consented to make peace, on
terms which contrast strangely with the perpetual defeats which Constans is
represented by the orthodox historians of the empire to have suffered. The
Saracens engaged to confine their forces within Syria and Mesopotamia, and Moawyah consented to pay Constans, for the cessation of
hostilities, the sum of a thousand pieces of silver, and to furnish him with a
slave and a horse for every day during which the peace should continue. A. D.
659.
During the subsequent year, Constans condemned to
death his brother Theodosius, whom he had previously compelled to enter the
priesthood. The cause of this crime, or the pretext for it, is not mentioned.
From this brother’s hand the emperor had often received the sacrament; and this
fratricide is supposed to have rendered a residence at Constantinople
insupportable to the criminal, who was reported nightly to behold the spectre
of his brother offering him the consecrated cup, filled with human blood, and exclaiming,
“Drink, brother!”. Certain it is, that two years after his brother’s death,
Constans quitted his capital, with the intention of never returning; and he was
only prevented, by an insurrection of the people, from carrying off the empress
and his children. He meditated the reconquest of Italy from the Lombards, and
proposed rendering Rome again the seat of empire. On his way to Italy the
emperor stopped at Athens, where he assembled a considerable body of troops.
This casual mention of Athens by Latin writers affords strong evidence of the
tranquil, flourishing, and populous condition of the city and country around.
The Sclavonian colonies in Greece must, at this time,
have owned perfect allegiance to the imperial power, or Constans would
certainly have employed his army in reducing them to subjection. From Athens,
the emperor sailed to Italy; he landed with his forces at Tarentum, and
attempted to take Beneventum, the chief seat of the Lombard power in the south
of Italy. His troops were twice defeated, and he then abandoned his projects of
conquest.
The emperor himself visited Rome, where he remained
only a fortnight According to the writers who describe the event, he
consecrated twelve days to religious ceremonies and processions, and the
remaining two he devoted to plundering the wealth of the church. His personal
acquaintance with the affairs of Italy and the state of Rome soon convinced him
that the eternal city was ill adapted for the capital of the empire, and he
quitted it for Sicily, where he fixed on Syracuse for his future residence. Grimoald, the able monarch of the Lombards, and his son
Romuald, the Duke of Beneventum, continued the war in Italy with vigour. Brundusium and Tarentum were captured, and the Romans were
expelled from Calabria, so that Otranto and Gallipoli were the only towns on
the eastern coast of which Constans retained possession.
When residing in Sicily, Constans directed his
attention to the state of Africa. His measures are not detailed with precision,
but were evidently distinguished by the usual energy and caprice which marked
his whole conduct. He recovered possession of Carthage, and of several cities
which the Arabs had rendered tributary; but he displeased the inhabitants of
the province, by compelling them to pay to himself the same amount of tribute
as they had agreed by treaty to pay to the Saracens; and as Constans could not
expel the Saracen forces from the province, the amount of the public taxes of
the Africans was thus often doubled, — since both parties were able to levy the
contributions which they demanded. Moawyah sent an
army from Syria, and Constans one from Sicily, to decide who should become sole
master of the country. A battle was fought near Tripoli; and the army of
Constans, consisting of thirty thousand men, was completely defeated. Yet the
victorious Saracens were unable to take the small town of Geloula
(Usula), until the accidental fall of a portion of
the ramparts laid it open to their assault; and this trifling conquest was
followed by no farther success. In the East, the empire was exposed to greater
danger, yet the enemies of Constans were eventually unsuccessful in their
projects. In consequence of the rebellion of the Armenian troops, whose
commander, Sapor, assumed the title of emperor, the Saracens made a successful
incursion into Asia Minor, captured the city of Amorium,
in Phrygia, and placed in it a garrison of five thousand men; but the imperial
general appointed by Constans soon drove out this powerful garrison, and
recovered the place.
It appears, therefore, that in spite of all the
defeats which Constans is reported to have suffered, the empire underwent no
very sensible diminution of its territory during his reign, and he certainly
left its military forces in a more efficient condition than he found them. He
was assassinated at Syracuse, by an officer of his household, in the year 668,
at the age of thirty-eight, after a reign of twenty-seven years. The fact of
his having been murdered by one of his own household, joined to the capricious
violence that marked many of his public acts, warrants the supposition that his
character was of the unamiable and unsteady nature, which rendered the
accusation of fratricide, so readily believed by his contemporaries, by no
means improbable. It must, however, be admitted, that the occurrences of his
reign afford irrefragable testimony that his heretical opinions have induced
orthodox historians to give an erroneous colouring to many circumstances, since
the undoubted results do not correspond with their narrative of the passing
events.
Sect. IV
Constantine IV, yielded to the popular ecclesiastical
party among the Greeks.
Constantine IV, called Pogonatus,
or the Bearded, has been regarded by posterity with a high degree of favour.
Yet his merit seems to have consisted in his superior orthodoxy, rather than in
his superior talents as emperor. The concessions which he made to the see of
Rome, and the moderation that he displayed in all ecclesiastical affairs,
placed his conduct in strong contrast with the stern energy with which his
father had enforced the subjection of the orthodox ecclesiastics to the civil
power, and gained for him the praise of the priesthood, whose eulogies have
exerted no inconsiderable influence on all historians. Constantine, however,
was certainly an intelligent and just prince, who, though he did not possess
the stubborn determination and talents of his father, was destitute also of his
violent passions and imprudent character.
As soon as Constantine was informed of the murder of
his father, and that a rebel had assumed the purple in Sicily, he hastened
thither in person to avenge his death and extinguish the rebellion. To satisfy
his vengeance, the patrician Justinian, a man of high character, compromised in
the rebellion, was treated with great severity, and his son Germanos
with a degree of inhumanity that would have been recorded by the clergy against
Constans as an instance of the grossest barbarity. (This Germanos,
notwithstanding his mutilation by Constantine, became bishop of Cyzicus, and
joined the Monothelites in the reign of Philippicus. He retracted, and was made
patriarch of Constantinople by Anastasius II,and
figured as an active defender of images against Leo III the Isaurian). The
return of the emperor to Constantinople was signalized by a singular sedition
of the troops in Asia Minor. They marched towards the capital, and having
encamped on the Asiatic shores of the Bosphorus, demanded that Constantine
should admit his two brothers, on whom he had conferred the rank of Augustus,
to an equal share in the public administration, in order that the Holy Trinity
in heaven, which governs the spiritual world, might be represented by a human
trinity, to govern the political empire of the Christians. The very proposal is
a proof of the complete supremacy of the civil over the ecclesiastical
authority in the eyes of the people, and the strongest evidence, that in the
public opinion of the age the emperor was regarded as the head of the church.
Such reasoning as the rebels used could be rebutted by no arguments, and
Constantine had energy enough to hang the leaders of the sedition, and
sufficient moderation not to molest his brothers. But several years later,
either from increased suspicions, or from some intrigues on their part, he
deprived them of the rank of Augustus, and condemned them to have their noses
cut off (A.D. 681). The condemnation of his brother to death by Constans
figures in history as one of the blackest crimes of humanity, while the
barbarity of the orthodox Constantine is passed over as a lawful act. Both rest
on the same authority on the testimony of Theophanes, the earliest Greek
chronicler, and both may really have been acts of justice necessary for the
security of the throne and the tranquillity of the empire. Constans was a man
of a violent temper, and Constantine of a mild disposition; both may have been
equally just, but both were, without doubt, unnecessarily severe. A brother's
political offences could hardly merit a greater punishment from a brother than
seclusion in a monastery, and the devotion of monks is not necessarily
increased by the loss of their noses. (Theophanes says that the brothers of
Constantine IV lost their noses in 609, but were not deprived of the imperial
title until 681).
The great object of the imperial policy at this period
was to oppose the progress of the Mohammedans. Constans had succeeded in
arresting their conquests, but Constantine soon found that they would give the
empire no rest unless he could secure it by his victories. He had hardly
quitted Sicily to return to Constantinople, before an Arab expedition from
Alexandria invaded the island, stormed the city of Syracuse, and after
plundering the treasures accumulated by Constans, immediately abandoned the
place. In Africa the war was continued with various success, but the Christians
were long left without any succours from Constantine, while Moawyah
supplied the Saracens with strong reinforcements. In spite of the courage and
enthusiasm of the Mohammedans, the native Christian population maintained their
ground with firmness, and carried on the war with such vigour, that in the year
676 a native African leader, who commanded the united forces of the Romans and
Berbers, captured the newly founded city of Kairowan,
which at a subsequent period became renowned as the capital of the Fatimite
caliphs. (Kairowan was founded by Akbah
in 670; taken by the Christians in 676; recovered by the Arabs under Zohair; but retaken by the Christians in 683; and finally
conquered by Hassan in 697).
The ambition of the caliph Moawyah
induced him to aspire to the conquest of the Roman Empire; and the military
organization of the Arabian power, which enabled the caliph to direct the whole
resources of his dominions to any single object of conquest, seemed to promise
success to the enterprise. A powerful expedition was sent to beside
Constantinople. The time required for the preparation of such an armament did
not enable the Saracens to arrive at the Bosphorus without passing a winter on
the coast of Asia Minor, and on their arrival in the spring of the year 672,
they found that the emperor had made every preparation for defence. Their
forces, however, were so numerous, that they were sufficient to invest
Constantinople by sea and land. The troops occupied the whole of the land side
of the triangle on which the city is constructed, while the fleet effectually
blockaded the port. The Saracens failed in all their assaults, both by sea and
land; but the Romans, instead of celebrating their own valour and discipline,
attributed their success principally to the use of the Greek fire, which was
invented shortly before this siege, and was first used on this occasion. The
military art had declined during the preceding century as rapidly as every
other branch of national culture; and the resources of the mighty empire of the
Arabs were so limited, that the caliph was unable to maintain his forces before
Constantinople during the winter. The Saracen army was nevertheless enabled to
collect sufficient supplies at Cyzicus to make that place a winter station,
while their powerful fleet commanded the Hellespont and secured their
communications with Syria. When spring returned, the fleet again transported
the army under the walls of Constantinople. This strange mode of besieging
cities, unattempted since the times when the Dorians
had invaded Peloponnesus, was continued for seven years; but in this warfare
the Saracens suffered far more severely than the Romans, and were at last
compelled to abandon their enterprise. (During the siege of Constantinople,
Abou Eyoub, who had received Mahomet into his house
on his flight to Medina, died; and the celebrated mosque of Eyoub,
in which the Sultan, on his accession, receives the investiture of the sword,
is said to mark the spot where he was buried). The land forces tried to effect
their retreat through Asia Minor, but were entirely cut off in the attempt; and
a tempest destroyed the greater part of their fleet off the coast of Pamphylia.
During the time that this great body of his forces was employed against
Constantinople, Moawyah sent a division of his troops
to invade Crete, which had been visited by a Saracen army in 651. The island
was compelled to pay tribute, but the inhabitants were treated with mildness,
as it was the policy of the caliph at this time to conciliate the good opinion
of the Christians, in order to pave the way for future conquests. Moawyah carried his religious tolerance so far as to
rebuild the church of Edessa at the intercession of his Christian subjects.
The destruction of the Saracen expedition against
Constantinople, and the advantage which the mountaineers of Lebanon took of the
absence of the Arab troops, by carrying their incursions into the plains of
Syria, convinced Moawyah of the necessity of peace.
The hardy mountaineers of Lebanon, called Mardaltes,
had been increased in numbers, and supplied with wealth, in consequence of the
retreat into their country of a mass of native Syrians who had fled before the
Arabs. They consisted chiefly of Melchites and Monothelites, and on that
account they had adhered to the cause of the Roman Empire when the Monophysites
joined the Saracens. The political state of the empire required peace; and the
orthodox Constantine did not feel personally inclined to run any risk in order
to protect the Mardaites. Peace was concluded between
the emperor and the caliph in the year 678, Moawyah
consenting to pay the Romans annually three thousand pounds of gold, fifty
slaves, and fifty Arabian horses. It appears strange that a prince, possessing
the power and resources at the command of Moawyah,
should submit to these conditions; but the fact proves that policy, not pride,
was the rule of the caliph's conduct, and that the advancement of his real
power, and of the spiritual interests of the Mohammedan religion, were of more
consequence in his eyes than any notions of earthly dignity.
In the same year in which Moawyah
purchased peace by paying tribute to the Roman emperor, the foundations of the
Bulgarian monarchy were laid in the country between the Danube and Mount
Haemus, and the emperor Constantine himself became tributary to a small horde
of Bulgarians. One of the usual emigrations which take place amongst barbarous
nations induced Asparuch, a Bulgarian chief, to seize
the low country about the mouth of the Danube; his power and activity obliged
the emperor Constantine to take the field against him in person. The expedition
was so ill conducted, that it ended in the complete defeat of the Roman army,
and the Bulgarians subdued a district inhabited by a body of Sclavonians, called the seven tribes, who were compelled to
become their tributaries. These Sclavonians had once
been formidable to the empire, but their power had been broken by the emperor
Constans. Asparuch established himself in the town of
Varna, near the ancient Odessus, and founded the
Bulgarian monarchy, a kingdom long engaged in hostilities with the emperors of
Constantinople, and whose power tended greatly to accelerate the decline of the
Greeks and reduce the numbers of their race in Europe.
The event, however, which exercised the greatest
influence on the internal condition of the empire during the reign of
Constantine Pogonatus, was the assembly of the sixth
general council of the church at Constantinople,
which was held under circumstances peculiarly favourable to candid discussion.
The ecclesiastical power was not yet too strong to set both reason and the
civil authorities at defiance. The decisions of the council were adverse to the
Monothelites; and the orthodox doctrine of two natures and two wills in Christ
was received by the common consent of the Greek and Latin parties as the true
faith of the Christian church. Religious discussion had now taken a strong hold
on public opinion, and as the majority of the Greek population had never
adopted the opinions of the Monothelites, the decisions of the sixth general
council contributed powerfully to promote the union of the Greeks with the
imperial administration.
Sect. V
Justinian II. — Depopulation of the Empire, and
decrease of the Greeks.
Justinian II succeeded his father Constantine at the
age of sixteen, and though so very young, he immediately assumed the personal
direction of the government. He was by no means destitute of talents, but his
cruel and presumptuous character rendered him incapable of learning to perform
the duties of his situation with justice. His violence at last rendered him
hateful to his subjects; and as the connection of the emperor with the Roman
government and people was direct and personal, he was easily driven from his
throne by a popular sedition. His rebellious subjects cut off his nose and
banished him to Cherson, A.D. 695. In exile his energy and activity gained him
the alliance of the Khazars and Bulgarians, and he returned to Constantinople
as a conqueror, after an absence of ten years. His character was one of those
to which experience is useless, and he persisted in his former course of
violence, until, having exhausted the patience of his subjects, he was
dethroned and murdered, A.D. 705-711.
The reign of such a tyrant was not likely to be
inactive. At its commencement, he turned his arms against the Saracens, though
the caliph Abdalmelik offered to make additional
concessions, in order to induce the emperor to renew the treaty of peace which
had been concluded with his father. Justinian sent a powerful army into Armenia
under Leontius, by whom he was subsequently dethroned. All the provinces which
had shown any disposition to favour the Saracens were laid waste, and the army
seized an immense booty, and carried off a great part of the inhabitants as
slaves. The barbarism of the Roman government had now reached such a pitch that
the Roman armies were permitted to plunder and depopulate even those provinces
where a Christian population still afforded the emperor some assurance that
they might be retained in permanent subjection to the Roman government The
soldiers of an undisciplined army, — legionaries without patriotism or
nationality, — were allowed to enrich themselves by slave hunts in Christian
countries, and the most flourishing agricultural districts were reduced to
deserts, incapable of offering any resistance to the Mohammedan nomads. But the
caliph Abdalmelik, being engaged in a struggle for
the caliphate with powerful rivals, and disturbed by rebels even in his own
Syrian dominions, found himself reduced to the necessity of purchasing peace on
terms far more favourable to the empire than those of the treaty between
Constantine and Moawyah. He engaged to pay Justinian
an annual tribute of three hundred and sixty-five thousand pieces of gold,
three hundred and sixty slaves, and three hundred and sixty Arabian horses. The
provinces of Iberia, Armenia, and Cyprus were equally divided between the
Romans and the Arabs; but Abdalmelik obtained the
principal advantage from the treaty, for Justinian not only consented to
abandon the cause of the Mardaites, but even engaged
to assist the caliph in expelling them from Syria. This was effected by the
treachery of Leontius, who entered their country as a friend, and murdered
their chief. Twelve thousand Mardaite soldiers were
enrolled in the armies of the empire, and distributed in garrisons in Armenia
and Thrace. A colony of Mardaites was established at Attalia in Pamphylia, and the power of this valiant people
was completely broken. The removal of the Mardaites
from Syria was one of the most serious errors of the reign of Justinian. As
long as they remained in force on Mount Lebanon, near the centre of the Saracen
power, the emperor was able to render them a serious check on the Mohammedans,
and create dangerous diversions whenever the caliphs invaded the empire.
Unfortunately, in this age of religious bigotry, the Monothelite opinions of
the Mardaites made them an object of aversion or
suspicion to the imperial administration; and even under the prudent government
of Constantine Pogonatus, they were not viewed with a
friendly eye, nor did they receive the support which should have been granted
to them on a just consideration of the interests of Christianity, as well as of
the Roman empire.
The general depopulation of the empire suggested to
many of the Roman emperors the project of repeopling favoured districts, by an
influx of new inhabitants. The origin of many of the most celebrated cities of
the Eastern Empire could be traced back to small Greek colonies. These
emigrants, it was known, had rapidly increased in number and risen to wealth.
The Roman government appears never to have clearly comprehended that the same
causes which produced the diminution of the ancient population would be sure to
prevent the increase of new settlers ; and their attempts at repeopling
provinces, and removing the population of one district to new seats, were
frequently renewed. Justinian lI had a great taste
for these emigrations. Three years after the conclusion of peace with Abdalmelik, he withdrew the inhabitants from the half of
the island of Cyprus, of which he remained master, in order to prevent the
Christians from becoming accustomed to the Saracen administration. The Cypriote
population was transported to a new city near Cyzicus, which the emperor called
after himself, Justinianopolis. It is needless to
offer any remarks on the impolicy of such a project; the loss of life, and the
destruction of property inevitable in the execution of such a scheme, could
only have been replaced under the most favourable circumstances, and by a long
career of prosperity. It is known that, in consequence of this desertion, many
of the Cypriote towns fell into complete ruin, from which they have never since
recovered.
Justinian, at the commencement of his reign, made a
successful expedition into the country occupied by the Sclavonians
in Macedonia, who were closely allied with the Bulgarian principality beyond
Mount Haemus. This people, emboldened by their new alliance, pushed their
plundering excursions as far as the Propontis. The imperial army was completely
successful, and both the Sclavonians and their
Bulgarian allies were defeated and the country of the Sclavonians
subdued. In order to repeople the fertile shores of the Hellespont about
Abydos, Justinian transplanted a number of Sclavonian
families into the province of Opsicium. This colony
was so numerous and powerful, that it furnished a considerable contingent to
the imperial armies.
The peace with the Saracens was not of long duration.
Justinian refused to receive the first gold pieces coined by Abdalmelik, which bore the legend, ‘God is the Lord’. The
tribute had previously been paid in money from the municipal mints of Syria;
and Justinian imagined that the new Arabian coinage was an attack on the Holy
Trinity. He led his army in person against the Saracens, and a battle took
place near Sebastopolis, on the coast of Cilicia, in which he was entirely
defeated, in consequence of the treason of the leader of his Sclavonian troops. Justinian fled from the field of battle,
and on his way to the capital he revenged himself on the Sclavonians
who had remained faithful to his standard for the desertion of their countrymen
by putting most of them to death, and he ordered the wives and children of
those who had joined the Saracens to be murdered. The deserters were
established by the Saracens on the coast of Syria and in the Island of Cyprus;
and under the government of the caliph, they were more prosperous than under
that of the Roman emperor. It was during this war that the Saracens inflicted
the first great badge of civil degradation on the Christian population of their
dominions. Abdalmelik established the Haratch, or Christian capitation tax, in order to raise
money to carry on the war with Justinian. This unfortunate mode of taxing the
Christian subjects of the caliph in a different manner from the Mohammedans
completely separated the two classes, and reduced the Christians to the rank of
serfs of the State, whose most prominent political relation with the Mussulman
community was that of furnishing money to the government. The decline of the
Christian population throughout the dominions of the caliphs was the consequence
of this ill-judged measure, which has probably tended more to the depopulation
of the East than the tyranny of Mussulman rulers or the ravages of Mussulman
armies.
The restless spirit of Justinian plunged into the
ecclesiastical controversies which divided the church. He assembled a general
council, called usually in Trullo
from the hall of its meeting having been covered with a dome. The proceedings
of this council tended only to increase the growing differences between the
Greek and Latin parties in the church. Of one hundred and two canons which it
sanctioned, the pope finally rejected six, as adverse to the usages of the
Latins. Thus an additional cause of separation was created between the Greeks
and Latins, and at the very time when both statesmen and priests declared that
the strictest unity in religious opinions was necessary to maintain the
political power of the empire, the measures of the church, the political
arrangements of the times, and the social feelings of the people, all tended to
render union impossible. (The six canons rejected were — the fifth, which
approves of the eighty-five apostolic canons, commonly attributed to Clement;
the thirteenth, which allows priests to live in wedlock; the fifty-fifth, which
condemns fasting on Saturdays; the sixty-seventh, which earnestly enjoins
abstinence from blood and things strangled; the eighty-second, which prohibits
the painting of Christ in the image of a lamb; and the eighty-sixth, concerning
the equality of the bishops of Rome and Constantinople).
A taste for building is a common fancy of sovereigns
who possess the absolute disposal of large funds without any feeling of their
duty as trustees for the benefit of the people whom they govern. Even in the
midst of the greatest public distress, the treasury of nations, on the very
verge of ruin and bankruptcy, must contain large sums of money drawn from
annual taxation. This treasure, when placed at the irresponsible disposal of
princes who affect magnificence, is frequently employed in useless and ornamental
building; and this fashion has been so general with despots, that the princes
who have been most distinguished for their love of building, have not
unfrequently been the worst and most oppressive sovereigns. It is always a
delicate and difficult task for a sovereign to estimate the amount which a
nation can wisely afford to expend on ornamental architecture; and, from his
position, he is seldom qualified to judge correctly on what buildings ornament
ought to be employed, in order to make art accord with the taste and feelings
of the people. Public opinion affords the only criterion for the formation of a
sound judgment on this department of public administration; for, when princes
possessing a taste for building are not compelled to consult the wants and
wishes of their subjects in the construction of national edifices, they are
apt, by their wild projects and lavish expenditure, to create evils far greater
than any which could result from an exhibition of bad taste alone. In an evil
hour, the love of building took possession of Justinian’s mind. His lavish
expenditure soon obliged him to make his financial administration more
rigorous, and general discontent quickly pervaded the capital. The religious
and superstitious feelings of the population were severely wounded by the
emperor’s eagerness to destroy a church of the Virgin, in order to embellish
the vicinity of his palace with a splendid fountain. Justinian’s own scruples
required to be soothed by a religious ceremony, but the patriarch for some time
refused to officiate, alleging that the church had no prayers to desecrate holy
buildings. The emperor, however, was the head of the church and the master of
the bishops, whom he could remove from office, so that the patriarch did not
long dare to refuse obedience to his orders. It is said, however, that the
patriarch showed very clearly his dissatisfaction, by repairing to the spot and
authorizing the destruction of the church by an ecclesiastical ceremony, to
which he added these words, ‘to God, who suffers all things, be rendered glory,
now and for ever. Amen’. The ceremony was sufficient to satisfy the conscience
of the emperor, who perhaps neither heard nor heeded the words of the
patriarch, but the public discontent was loudly expressed, and the fury of the
populace threatened a rebellion in Constantinople. To avert the danger, he took
every measure which unscrupulous cruelty could suggest. As generally happens in
periods of general discontent and excitement, the storm burst in an unexpected
quarter, and left the emperor suddenly without support. Leontius, one of the
ablest generals of the empire, whose exploits have been already mentioned, had
been thrown into prison, but was at this time ordered to assume the government
of the province of Hellas. He considered the nomination as a mere pretext to
remove him from the capital, in order to put him to death at a distance without
any trial. On the eve of his departure, Leontius placed himself at the head of
a sedition ; Justinian was seized, his ministers were murdered by the populace
with savage cruelty, and Leontius was proclaimed emperor. Leontius spared the
life of his dethroned predecessor for the sake of the benefits which he had
received from Constantine Pogonatus. He ordered
Justinian’s nose to be cut off, and exiled him to Cherson. From this mutilation
the dethroned emperor received the insulting nickname of Rhinotmetus,
or Docknose, by which he is distinguished in
Byzantine history.
Sect. VI
Anarchy in the
Administration until the accession of Leo III
The government of Leontius was characterized by the
unsteadiness which not unfrequently marks the administration of the ablest
sovereigns who obtain their thrones by accidental circumstances rather than by
systematic combinations. The most important event of his reign was the final
loss of Africa, which led to his dethronement. The indefatigable caliph Abdalmelik despatched a powerful expedition into Africa
under Hassan ; the province was soon conquered, and Carthage was captured after
a feeble resistance. An expedition sent by Leontius to defend the province
arrived too late to save Carthage, but the commander-in-chief forced the
entrance into the port, recovered possession of the city, and drove the Arabs
from most of the fortified town on the coast. The Arabs received new
reinforcements, which the Roman general demanded from Leontius in vain. At last
the Arabs assembled a fleet, and the Romans, being defeated in a naval
engagement, were compelled to abandon Carthage, which the Arabs utterly
destroyed, — having too often experienced the superiority of the Romans, both
in naval affairs and in the art of war, to venture on retaining populous and
fortified cities on the sea coast. This curious fact affords strong proof of
the great superiority of the Roman commerce and naval resources, and equally
powerful evidence of the disorder in the civil and military administration of
the empire, which rendered these advantages useless, and allowed the imperial
fleets to be defeated by ships collected by the Arabs from among their Egyptian
and Syrian subjects. At the same time it is evident that the naval victories of
the Arabs could never have been gained unless a powerful party of the
Christians had been induced, by their feelings of hostility to the Roman
empire, to afford them a willing support; for there were as yet few
shipbuilders and sailors among the Mussulmans.
The Roman expedition, on its retreat from Carthage,
stopped in the Island of Crete, where a sedition broke out among the troops, in
which their general was killed and Apsimar, the commander of the Cibyraiot troops, was declared emperor by the name of
Tiberius. (The Cibyraiot Theme included the ancient
Caria, Lyda, Pamphylia, and a part of Phrygia; Cibyra Magna was a considerable town at the angle of
Phrygia, Caria, and Lycia. Tiberius Caesar was regarded as its second founder,
from his having remitted the tribute after a severe earthquake). The fleet
proceeded directly to Constantinople, which offered no resistance. Leontius was
dethroned, his nose was cut off, and he was confined in a monastery. Tiberius
Apsimar governed the empire with prudence, and his brother Heraclius commanded
the Roman armies with success. The imperial troops penetrated into Syria; a
victory was gained over the Arabs at Samosata, but the ravages committed by the
Romans in this invasion surpassed the greatest cruelties ever inflicted by the
Arabs; two hundred thousand Saracens are said to have perished during the
campaign. Armenia was alternately invaded and laid waste by the Romans and the
Saracens, as the various turns of war favoured the hostile parties, and as the
changing interests of the Armenian population induced them to aid the emperor
or the caliph. But while Tiberius was occupied in the duties of government, and
living without any fear of a domestic enemy, he was suddenly surprised in his
capital by Justinian, who appeared before Constantinople at the head of a
Bulgarian army.
Ten years of exile had been spent by the banished
emperor in vain attempts to obtain power. His violent proceedings made him
everywhere detested, but he possessed the daring enterprise and the ferocious
cruelty necessary for a chief of banditti,
joined to a singular confidence in the value of his hereditary claim to the
imperial throne; so that no undertaking appeared to him hopeless. After
quarrelling with the inhabitants of Cherson, and with his brother-in-law, the
king of the Khazars, he succeeded, by a desperate exertion of courage, in
reaching the country of the Bulgarians. Terbelis,
their sovereign, agreed to assist him in recovering his throne, and they
marched immediately with a Bulgarian army to the walls of Constantinople. Three
days after their arrival, they succeeded in entering the capital during the
night. Ten years of adversity had increased the natural ferocity of Justinian’s
disposition: and a desire of vengeance, so unreasonable as to verge on madness,
seems henceforward to have been the chief motive of his actions. The population
of Constantinople was as cruel, if not quite so barbarous, as the nations
beyond the pale of Christian civilization. Justinian gratified them by
celebrating his restoration with splendid chariot races in the circus. He sat
on an elevated throne, with his feet resting on the necks of the dethroned
emperors, Leontius and Tiberius, who were stretched on the platform below,
while the Greek populace shouted the words of the Psalmist, ‘Thou shalt tread
down the asp and the basilisk, thou shalt trample on the lion and the dragon’.
The dethroned emperors and Heraclius, who had so well sustained the glory of
the Roman arms against the Saracens, were afterwards hung from the battlements
of Constantinople. Justinian’s whole soul was occupied with plans of vengeance.
The conquest of Tyana laid Asia Minor open to the
incursions of the Saracens, but instead of opposing these dangerous enemies, he
directed his disposable forces to punish the cities of Ravenna and Cherson,
because they had incurred his personal hatred. Both the proscribed cities had
rejoiced at his dethronement; they were both taken and treated with savage
cruelty. The Greek city of Cherson, though the seat of a flourishing commerce,
and inhabited by a numerous population, was condemned to utter destruction.
Justinian ordered all the buildings to be razed with the ground, and every soul
within its walls to be put to death; but the troops sent to execute these
barbarous orders revolted, and proclaimed an Armenian, called Bardanes,
emperor, under the name of Philippicus. Seizing the fleet, they sailed directly
to Constantinople. Justinian was encamped with an army in Asia Minor .when
Philippicus arrived, and took possession of the capital without encountering
any resistance. Justinian was immediately deserted by his whole army, for the
troops were as little pleased with his conduct since his restoration, as every
other class of his subjects; but his ferocity and courage never failed him, and
his rage was unbounded when he found himself abandoned by every
one. He was seized and executed, without having it in his power to offer
the slightest resistance. His son Tiberius, though only six years of age, was
torn from the altar of a church, to which he had been conducted for safety, and
cruelly massacred; and thus the race of Heraclius was extinguished, after the
family had governed the Roman empire for exactly a century (A.D. 611 to 711).
During the interval of six years which elapsed from
the death of Justinian II to the accession of Leo the Isaurian, the imperial
throne was occupied by three sovereigns. Their history is only remarkable as
proving the inherent strength of the Roman body politic, which could survive
such continual revolutions, even in the state of weakness to which it was
reduced. Philippicus was a luxurious and extravagant prince, who thought only
of enjoying the situation which he had accidentally obtained. He was dethroned
by a band of conspirators, who carried him off from the palace while in a fit
of drunkenness, and after putting out his eyes, left him helpless in the middle
of the hippodrome. The reign of Philippicus would hardly deserve notice, had he
not increased the confusion into which the empire had fallen, and exposed the
total want of character and conscience among the Greek clergy, by
re-establishing the Monothelite doctrines in a general council of the eastern
bishops.
As the conspirators who dethroned Philippicus had not
formed any plan for choosing his successor, the first secretary of state was elected
emperor by a public assembly held in the great church of St. Sophia, under the
name of Anastasius II. He immediately re-established the orthodox faith, and
his character is consequently the subject of eulogy with the historians of his
reign. The Saracens, whose power was continually increasing, were at this time
preparing a great expedition at Alexandria, in order to attack Constantinople,
Anastasius sent a fleet with the troops of the theme Opsicium,
to destroy the magazines of timber collected on the coast of Phoenicia for the
purpose of assisting the preparations at Alexandria. The Roman armament was
commanded by a deacon of St. Sophia, who also held the office of grand
treasurer of the empire. The nomination of a member of the clergy to command the
army gave great dissatisfaction to the troops, who were not yet so deeply
tinctured with ecclesiastical ideas and manners as the aristocracy of the
empire. A sedition took place while the army lay at Rhodes: John the Deacon was
slain, and the expedition quitted the port in order to return to the capital.
The soldiers on their way landed at Adramyttium, and
finding there a collector of the revenues of a popular character, they declared
him emperor, under the name of Theodosius III.
The new emperor was compelled unwillingly to follow
the army. For six months Constantinople was closely besieged, and the emperor
Anastasius, who had retired to Nicaea, was defeated in a general engagement.
The capital was at last taken by the rebels, who were so sensible of their real
interests, that they maintained strict discipline, and Anastasius, whose
weakness gave little confidence to his followers, consented to resign the
empire to Theodosius, and to retire into a monastery, that he might secure an
amnesty to all his friends. Theodosius was distinguished by many good
qualities, but his reign is only remarkable as affording a pretext for the
assumption of the imperial dignity by Leo III, called the Isaurian. This able
and enterprising officer, perceiving that the critical times rendered the
empire the prize of any man who had talents to seize and power to defend it,
placed himself at the head of the troops in Asia Minor, assumed the title of
emperor, and soon compelled Theodosius to quit the throne and become a priest.
During the period which elapsed between the death of
Heraclius and the accession of Leo, the few principles of administration which
had lingered in the imperial court were gradually neglected. The long cherished
hope of restoring the ancient power and glory of the Roman Empire expired, and
even the aristocracy, which always clings the last to antiquated forms and
ideas, no longer dwelt with confidence on the memory of former days. The
conviction that the empire had undergone a great moral and political change, which
severed the future irrevocably from the past, though it was probably not fully
understood, was at least felt and acted on both by the people and the
government. The sad fact that the splendid light of civilization which had
illuminated the ancient world had now become as obscure at Constantinople as at
Rome, Antioch, Alexandria, and Carthage, was too evident to be longer doubted;
the very twilight of antiquity had faded into darkness. It is rather the
province of the antiquary than of the historian to collect all the traces of
this truth scattered over the records of the seventh century.
There is one curious and important circumstance in the
history of the later days of the Roman Empire, of which little beyond the mere
fact has been transmitted by historians. A long and violent contention was
carried on between the imperial power and the aristocracy, which represented
the last degenerate remains of the Roman senate. This struggle distracted the
councils and paralyzed the energy of the Roman government. It commenced in the
reign of Maurice, and existed under various modifications during the whole
period of the government of the family of Heraclius. This aristocratic
influence had more of an oriental than of a Roman character; its feelings and
views originated in that class of society imbued with a semi-Greek civilization
which had grown up during the days of the Macedonian rather than of the Roman
Empire; and both Heraclius and Constans II, in their schemes for circumscribing
its authority in the State, resolved to remove the capital of the empire from
Constantinople to a Latin city. Both conceived the vain hope of re-establishing
the imperial power on a purely Roman basis, as a means of subduing, or at least
controlling, the power of Greek nationality, which was gaining ground both in
the State and the Church. The contest terminated in the destruction of that
political influence in the Eastern Empire, which was purely Roman in its
character. But the united power of Greek and oriental feelings could not destroy
the spirit of Rome, until the well-organized civil administration of Augustus
and Constantine ceased to exist. The subjects of the empire were no great
gainers by the change. The political government became a mere arbitrary
despotism, differing little from the prevailing form of monarchy in the East,
and deprived of all those fundamental institutions, and that systematic
character, which had enabled the Roman state to survive the extravagancies of
Nero and the incapacity of Phocas.
The disorganization of the Roman government at this
period, and the want of any influence exercised upon the court by the Greek
nation, are visible in the choice of the persons who occupied the imperial
throne after the extinction of the family of Heraclius. They were selected by
accident, and several were of foreign origin, who did not even look upon
themselves as either Greeks or Romans. Philippicus was an Armenian, and Leo
III, whose reign opens a new era in eastern history, was an Isaurian. On the
throne he proved that he was destitute of any attachment to Roman political
institutions, and any respect for the Greek ecclesiastical establishment. It
was by the force of his talents, and by his able direction of the State and of
the army, that he succeeded in securing his family on the Byzantine throne; for
he unquestionably placed himself in direct hostility to the feelings and
opinions of his Greek and Roman subjects, and transmitted to his successors a
contest between the imperial power and the Greek nation concerning picture-worship,
in which the very existence of Greek nationality, civilization, and religion
became at last compromised. From the commencement of the iconoclastic contest,
the history of the Greeks assumes a new aspect. Their civilization, and their
connection with the Byzantine empire, become linked with the policy and
fortunes of the Eastern Church, and ecclesiastical affairs obtained in their
minds a supremacy over all social and political considerations.
Sect. VII
General view of the condition of the Greeks at the
extinction of the Roman Power in the East
The history of the European Greeks becomes extremely
obscure after the reign of Justinian I. Yet during this period new nations
intruded themselves into Greece and the Hellenic race was compelled to struggle
hard in order to maintain a footing in its native seats. It has been already
mentioned that Avar and Sclavonian tribes effected
permanent settlements in Greece. The Hellenic population, unable to contend
with the misery to which the cultivators of the soil were reduced, abandoned
whole provinces to foreign emigrants, and retired under the protection of
walled towns. The Thracian race, which always effectually resisted the
influence of Greek civilization, began also to disappear. From an early period
the extensive countries in which it was predominant, from the banks of the
Danube to the shores of the Aegean sea were exposed to constant invasions.
Romans, Goths, Sclavonians, and Bulgarians
depopulated its ancient seats as conquerors and settled in them as colonists.
But the territorial changes produced by the Saracen conquests increased the
political importance of the Greek race. The frontier towards Syria commenced at
Mopsuestia in Cilicia, the last fortress of the Arab
power. It ran along the chains of Mounts Amanus and
Taurus to the moimtainous district to the north of
Edessa and Nisibis, called, after the time of Justinian, the Fourth Armenia, of
which Martyropolis was the capital. It then followed
nearly the ancient limits of the empire until it reached the Black Sea, a short
distance to the east of Trebizond. On the northern shores of the Euxine,
Cherson was now the only city that acknowledged the supremacy of the empire,
retaining at the same time all its wealth and commerce, with the municipal privileges
of a free city. In Europe, Mount Haemus formed the barrier against the
Bulgarians, while the mountainous ranges which bound Macedonia to the
north-west, and encircle the territory of Dyrrachium, were regarded as the
limits of the free Sclavonian states. It is true that
large bodies of Sclavonians had penetrated to the
south of this line, and formed separate communities in Greece and the
Peloponnesus, but not in the same independent condition with reference to the
imperial administration as their northern brethren of the Servian family.
Istria, Venice, and the cities on the Dalmatian coast,
acknowledged the supremacy of the empire, though their distant position, their
commercial connections, and their religious feelings, were all tending towards
a final separation. In the centre of Italy, the exarchate of Ravenna still held
Rome in subjection, but the people of Italy were entirely alienated from the
political administration, which was now regarded by them as purely Greek, and
the Italians, with Rome before their eyes, could hardly admit the pretensions
of the Greeks to be regarded as the legitimate representatives of the Roman
Empire. The national feelings of the Italians were hostile to the imperial
government as soon as it fell into the hands of Greeks; it would have required,
therefore, an able and energetic central administration to prevent the loss of
central Italy. The condition of the population of the south of Italy and of
Sicily was very different. There the majority of the inhabitants were Greeks in
language and manners, and few portions of the Greek race had suffered less in
number and wealth ; yet the cities of Gaeta, Naples, Amalfi, and Sorrento, the
district of Otranto, and the peninsula to the south of the ancient Sybaris, now
called Calabria, were the only parts which remained under the Byzantine
government. Sicily, though it had begun to suffer from the incursions of the
Saracens, was still populous and wealthy. Sardinia, the last possession of the
Greeks to the westward of Italy, was conquered by the Saracens in the year A.D.
711.
In order to conclude the view which, in the preceding
pages, we have endeavoured to present of the various causes that gradually
diminished the numbers, and destroyed the civilization, of the Greek race, it is
necessary to sketch the position of the nation at the commencement of the
eighth century. At this unfortunate period in the history of mankind, the
Greeks were placed in imminent danger of the same extinction as their Roman
conquerors. The Arabs threatened to annihilate their political power, and the Sclavonians were colonizing their ancient territories. The
victories of the Arabs were attended with very different consequences to the
Greek population of the countries which they subdued, from those which had
followed the conquests of the Romans. Like the earlier domination of the
Parthians, the Arab power ultimately exterminated the whole Greek population in
the conquered countries; and though, for a short period, the Arabs, like their
predecessors the Parthians, protected Greek civilization, their policy soon
changed, and everything Greek was proscribed. The arts and sciences which
flourished at the court of the caliphs were chiefly derived from their Syrian
subjects, whose acquaintance both with Syriac and Greek literature opened to
them an extensive range of scientific knowledge from sources utterly lost to
the moderns. It is to be observed, that a very great number of the eminent
literary and scientific authors of later times were Asiatics,
and that these writers frequently made use of their native languages in those
useful and scientific works which were intended for the practical instruction
of their own countrymen. In Egypt and CyrenaTca the
Greek population was soon exterminated by the Arabs, and every trace of Grecian
civilization was much sooner effaced than in Syria; though even there no very
long interval elapsed before a small remnant of the Greek population was all
that survived. Antioch itself, long the third city of the Eastern Empire, the
spot where the Christians first received their name and the principal seat of
Greek civilization in Asia for upwards of nine centuries, though it was not
depopulated and razed to the ground like Alexandria and Carthage, nevertheless
soon ceased to be a Grecian city.
The numerous Greek colonies which had flourished in
the Tauric Chersonese, and on the eastern and
northern shores of the Euxine, were almost all deserted. The greater number had
submitted to the Khazars, who occupied all the open country with their flocks
and herds. During the reign of Justin, the city of Bosporus, in Tauris, had
been captured by the Turks, who then occupied a considerable portion of the Tauric Chersonesus. The city of
Cherson alone continued to maintain its independence in the northern regions of
the Black Sea, resembling, in its political relation to the empire, the cities
of Dalmatia, and by its share of the northern trade, balancing the power and
influence of the barbarian princes in the neighbourhood. Its inhabitants, shut
out from the cultivation of the rich lands whose harvests had formerly supplied
Athens with grain, were entirely supported by foreign commerce. Their ships
exchanged the hides, wax, and salt fish of the neighbouring districts for the
necessaries and luxuries of a city life, in Constantinople and the maritime
cities of the empire. It affords matter for reflection to find that Cherson, —
situated in a climate which, from the foundation of the colony, opposed
insurmountable barriers to the introduction of much of the peculiar character
of Greek social civilization, and which deprived the art and the popular
literature of the mother country of some portion of their charm, — to whose
inhabitants the Greek temple, the Greek agora, and the Greek theatre, must ever
have borne the characteristics of foreign habits, and in a land where the
piercing winds and heavy clouds prevented a life out of doors from being the
essence of existence — should still have preserved, to this late period of
history, both its Greek municipal organization, and its independent civic
government. Yet such was the case; and we know from the testimony of
Constantine Porphyrogenitus, that Cherson continued to exist in a condition of
respectable independence, though under imperial protection, down to the middle
of the tenth century.
In Greece itself the Hellenic race had been driven
from many fertile districts by Sclavonian settlers,
who had established themselves in large bodies in Greece and the Peloponnesus,
and had often pushed their plundering and piratical incursions among the
islands of the Archipelago, from which they had carried off numerous bands of
slaves. In the cities and islands which the Greeks still possessed, the
secluded position of the population, and the exclusive attention which they
were compelled to devote to their local interests and personal defence,
introduced a degree of ignorance which soon extinguished the last remains of
Greek civilization, and effaced all knowledge of Greek literature. The
diminished population of the European Greeks occupied the shores of the
Adriatic to the south of Dyrrachium, and the maritime districts of Greece,
Macedonia, and Thrace, as far as Constantinople. The interior of the country
was everywhere overrun by Sclavonic colonies, though
many mountainous districts and most of the fortified places still remained in
the possession of the Greeks. It is, unfortunately, impossible to explain with
precision the real nature and extent of the Sclavonic
colonization of Greece; and, indeed, before it be possible to decide how far it
partook of conquest, and how far it resulted from the occupation of deserted
and uncultivated lands, it becomes absolutely necessary to arrive at some
definite information concerning the diminution which had taken place in the
native agricultural classes, and in the social position of the slaves and serfs
who survived in the depopulated districts. The scanty materials existing render
the inquiry one which can only engage the attention of the antiquary, who can
glean a few isolated facts; but the historian must turn away from the
conjectures which would connect these facts into a system. The condition of
social life during the decline of the Roman empire led to the division of the
provincial population into two classes, the urban and the rustic, or into
citizens and peasants; and the superior postion and
greater security of the citizens gradually enabled them to assume a political
superiority over the free peasants, and at last to reduce them, in a great
measure, to the rank of serfs, Slaves became, about the same time, of much
greater relative value, and more difficult to be procured; and the distinction
naturally arose between purchased slaves, who formed a part of the household
and of the family of the possessor, and agricultural serfs, whose partial
liberty was attended by the severest hardships, and whose social condition was
one of the lowest degradation and of the greatest personal danger. The
population of Greece and the islands, in the time of Alexander the Great, may
be estimated at three millions and a half; and probably half of this number
consisted of slaves. We know from the testimonies of Strabo, Plutarch, and
Pausanias, that the population decreased greatly under the Roman government and
that large districts lay waste. The extent, however, to which the general
depopulation affected the agricultural population, and the value of labour,
must be ascertained before full light can be thrown on the real nature of the Sclavonic and Albanian colonization of Greece.
No description could exaggerate the sufferings of an
agricultural population while it is diminishing in numbers, whether those
sufferings proceed from hostile violence or want of food. The plains of Greece
were often laid waste by armies of invaders, who carried off slaves and cattle
and left landlords to starve in the midst of uncultivated fields. Cities
situated in the most fertile regions were dependent on supplies of food from
abroad and soon dwindled into walled villages, where what had once been
flower-gardens sufficed to furnish grain for the inhabitants and pasture for
their cattle. Even Thessalonica, with a territory renowned for its fertility,
was only saved from famine by large importations of foreign grain. The smaller
cities of Greece and the Peloponnesus did not possess the same advantages of
situation, and sank rapidly into ruin. Roads, bridges, aqueducts, and quays
were all allowed to decay after Justinian confiscated the municipal revenues of
the Greek cities. The transport of provisions by land in a country so
precipitous as Greece must always be expensive. The neglect of roads is
therefore a primary cause of poverty and barbarism. Even during the period of
its greatest prosperity, the Roman government paid attention to those roads
only which served as great military lines of communication.
At the beginning of the eighth century we find the
native Greeks called Helladikoi by Byzantine writers
in order to distinguish them from the ancient Hellenes and from the Romaioi or Greeks of the Roman empire. The word was a
contemptuous name for them as mere provincials. The appellation Hellenes was
generally used to indicate the votaries of paganism, and was too closely
connected with the historic glory of ancient Hellas to be bestowed on the rude
people of an insignificant province. Even so late as the ninth century the
inhabitants of the mountainous regions in Laconia still adhered to paganism.
Their heathenism however consisted, in all probability, rather in a
superstitious repetition of ancient ceremonies than in the retention of the
ideas and feelings of Greek mythology or pagan worship, of which they were
doubtless as ignorant as they were of contemporary Christianity.
Even in Asia Minor the decline of the numbers of the
Greek race had been rapid. This decline must, however, be attributed rather to
bad government causing insecurity of property and difficulty of communication
than to hostile invasions; for from the period of the Persian invasion during
the reign of Heraclius, the greater part of this immense country had enjoyed
almost a century of uninterrupted peace. The Persian invasions had never been
very injurious to the sea- coast, where the Greek cities were still numerous
and wealthy; but oppression and neglect had already destroyed the internal
trade of the central provinces, and literary instruction was becoming daily of
less value to the inhabitants of the isolated and secluded districts of the
interior. The Greek tongue began to be neglected, and the provincial dialects,
corrupted by an admixture of the Lydian, Carian, Phrygian, Cappadocian, and
Lycaonian languages, became the ordinary medium of business and conversation.
Bad government had caused poverty, poverty had produced barbarism, and the
ignorance created by barbarism became the means of perpetuating an arbitrary
and oppressive system of administration. The people, ignorant of all written
language, felt unable to check the exercise of official abuses by the control
of the law, and by direct application to the central administration. Their
wish, therefore, was to abridge as much as possible all the proceedings of
power; and as it was always more easy to save their persons from the central
power than their properties from the subordinate officers of the
administration, despotism became the favourite form of government with the
great mass of the Asiatic population.
It is impossible to attempt any detailed examination
of the changes which had taken place in the numbers of the Greek population in
Asia Minor. The fact that extensive districts once populous and wealthy, were
already deserts, is proved by the colonies which Justinian II settled in
various parts of the country. The frequent repetition of such settlements, and
the great extent to which they were carried by the later emperors, prove that
the depopulation of the country had proceeded more rapidly than the destruction
of its material resources. The descendants of Greek and Roman citizens ceased
to exist in districts, while the buildings stood tenantless, and the olive
groves yielded an abundant harvest. In this strange state of things the country
easily received new races of inhabitants. The sudden settlement of a Sclavonian colony so numerous as to be capable of
furnishing an auxiliary army of thirty thousand men, and the unexpected
migration of nearly half of the inhabitants of the island of Cyprus, without
mentioning the emigration of the Mardaites who were
established in Asia Minor, could never have taken place unless houses, wells,
fruit-trees, water-courses, enclosures, and roads had existed in tolerable
preservation, and thus furnished the new colonists with an immense amount of
what may be called vested capital to assist their labour. The fact that these
colonies could survive and support themselves, seems a curious circumstance
when connected with the depopulation and declining state of the empire which
led to their establishment.
The existence of numerous and powerful bands of
organized brigands who plundered the country in defiance of the government was
one of the features of society at this period, which almost escapes the notice
of the meagre historians whom we possess, though it existed to such an extent
as to have greatly aggravated the distress of the Greek population. Even had
history been entirely silent on the subject, there could have been no doubt of
their existence in the latter days of the Roman Empire, from the condition of
the inhabitants, and from the geographical conformation of the land. History
affords, however, a few casual evidences of the extent of the evil. The
existence of a tribe of brigands in the mountains of Thrace during a period of
two centuries, is proved by the testimony of unimpeachable authorities.
Menander mentions bands of robbers, under the name of Scamars,
who plundered the ambassadors sent by the Avars to the emperor Justin II; and
these Scamars continued to exist as an organized
society of robbers in the same district until the time of Constantine V (Copronymus), A.D.
765, when the capture and cruel torture of one of their chiefs is narrated by
Theophanes.
History also records numerous isolated facts which,
when collected, produce on the mind the conviction that the diminution in
numbers, and the decline in civilization of the Greek race, were the effect of
the oppression and injustice of the Roman government, not of the violence and
cruelty of the barbarian invaders of the empire. During the reign of that
insane tyrant Justinian II, the imperial troops, when properly commanded,
showed that the remains of Roman discipline enabled them to defeat all their
enemies in a fair field of battle. The emperor Leontius, and Heraclius the
brother of Tiberius Apsimar, were completely victorious over the re- doubted
Saracens; Justinian himself defeated the Bulgarians and Sclavonians.
But the whole power and wealth of the empire was withdrawn from the people and
concentrated in the hands of the government. The Greek municipal guards had
been deprived of their arms under Justinian I, whose timid policy regarded
internal rebellion as far more to be dreaded than foreign invasions. The people
were disarmed because their hostile feelings were known and feared. The
European Greeks were regarded as provincials just as much as the wild
Lycaonians or Isaurians; and if they succeeded in obtaining arms and resisting
the progress of the Sclavonians, they owed their
success to the weakness and neglect which, in all despotic governments, prevent
the strict execution of those laws which are at variance with the feelings and
interests of the population, the moment that the agents of the government can
derive no direct profit from enforcing them.
The Roman government always threw the greatest
difficulties in the way of their subjects' acquiring the means of defending
themselves without the aid of the imperial army. The injury Justinian inflicted
on the Greek cities by disbanding their local militia, and robbing them of the
municipal funds devoted to preserve their physical well-being and mental
culture, caused a deep-rooted hatred of the imperial government. This feeling
is well portrayed in the bitter satire of Procopius. The hatred between the
inhabitants of Hellas and the Roman Greeks connected with the imperial
administration soon became mutual; and at last, as has been already mentioned,
a term of contempt was used by the historians of the Byzantine empire to
distinguish the native Greeks from the other Greek inhabitants of the empire, —
they were called Helladikoi.
After the time of Justinian we possess little
authentic information concerning the details of the provincial and municipal
administration of the Greek population. The state of public roads and
buildings, of ports, of trade, of maritime communications; of the nature of the
judicial, civil, and police administration, and of the extent of education
among the people — in short, the state of all those things which powerfully
influence the character and the prosperity of a nation, are almost unknown. It
is certain that they were all in a declining and neglected state. The local
administration of the Greek cities still retained some shadow of ancient forms,
and senates existed in many, even to a late period of the Byzantine Empire.
Indeed, they must all have enjoyed very much the same form of government as
Venice and Amalfi, at the period when these cities first began to enjoy a
virtual independence.
The absence of all national feeling, which had ever
been a distinguishing feature of the Roman government, continued to exert its
influence at the court of Constantinople long after the Greeks formed the bulk
of the population of the empire. This spirit separated the governing classes
from the people, and constituted all those who obtained employments in the
service of the State into a body, directly opposed to Greek nationality,
because the Greeks formed the great mass of the governed. The election of many
emperors not of Greek blood at this period must be attributed to the strength
of this feeling. This opposition between the Greek people and the imperial
administration contributed to revive the authority of the Eastern Church. The
church was peculiarly Greek; indeed, so much so, that an admixture of foreign
blood was generally regarded as almost equivalent to a taint of heresy. As the
priests were chosen from every rank of society, the whole Greek nation was
usually interested in the prosperity and passions of the church. In learning
and moral character the higher clergy were far superior to the rest of the
aristocracy, and they possessed sufficient influence to protect their friends
and adherents among the people, in many questions with the civil government.
This legitimate authority, supported by national feelings and prejudices, gave
them unbounded influence, the moment that any dispute ranged the Greek clergy
and people on the same side in their opposition to the imperial power. The
Greek Church appears for a long period of history as the only public
representative of the feelings and views of the nation, and, after the
accession of Leo the Isaurian, it must be regarded as an institution which
tended to preserve the national existence of the Greeks.
Amidst the numerous vices in the political state of
mankind at this period, it is consoling to be able to find a single virtue. The
absence of all national feeling in the imperial armies exercised a humane
influence on the wars which the empire carried on against the Saracens. It is
certain that the religious hatred, subsequently so universal between the
Christians and Mohammedans, was not very violent in the seventh and eighth
centuries. The facility with which the orthodox patriarchs of Jerusalem and
Alexandria submitted to the Mohammedans has been already mentioned. The empire,
it is true, was generally the loser by this want of national and patriotic
feeling among the Christians; but, on the other hand, the gain to humanity was
immense, as is proved by the liberality of Moawyah,
who rebuilt the church of Edessa. The Arabs for some time continued to be
guided by the sentiments of justice which Mahomet had carefully inculcated, and
their treatment of their heretic subjects was far from oppressive, in a
religious point of view. When Abdalmelik desired to
convert the splendid church of Damascus into a mosque, he abstained, on finding
that the Christians of Damascus were entitled to keep possession of it, by the
terms of their original capitulation. The insults which Justinian II and the
caliph Walid respectively offered to the religion of his rival, were rather the
effect of personal insolence and tyranny, than of any sentiment of religious
bigotry. Justinian quarrelled with Abdalmelik, on
account of the ordinary superscription of the caliph’s letters — “Say there is
pone God, and that Mahomet is his prophet”. Walid violently expelled the
Christians from the great church of Damascus, and converted it into a mosque.
At this period, any connection of Roman subjects with the Saracens was viewed
as ordinary treason, and not as subsequently in the time of the Crusades, in
the light of an inexpiable act of sacrilege. Even the accusation brought
against the Pope, Martin, of corresponding with the Saracens, does not appear
to have been made with the intention of charging him with blacker treason than
that which resulted from his supporting the rebel exarch Olympius.
All rebels who found their enterprise desperate, naturally sought assistance
from the Saracens, as the most powerful enemies of the empire. The Armenian, Mizizius, who was proclaimed emperor at Syracuse, after the
murder of Constans II, applied to the Saracens for aid. The Armenian Christians
continually changed sides between the emperor and the caliph, as the alliance
of each appeared to afford them the fairest hopes of serving their political
and religious interests. But as the Greek nation became more and more
identified with the political interests of the church, and as barbarism and
ignorance spread more widely among the population of the Byzantine and Arabian
empires, the feelings of mutual hatred nourished by almost constant hostilities
became more violent.
The government of the Roman Empire had long been
despotic and weak, and the financial administration corrupt and oppressive; but
still its subjects enjoyed a benefit of which the rest of mankind were almost
entirely destitute, in the existence of an admirable code of laws, and a
complete judicial establishment, separated from the other branches of the
public administration. It is to the existence of this judicial establishment,
guided by a published code, and controlled by a body of lawyers educated in
public schools, that the subjects of the empire were chiefly indebted for the
superiority in civilization which they retained over the rest of the world. In
spite of the neglect displayed in the other branches of the administration, the
central government always devoted particular care to the dispensation of
justice in private cases, as the surest means of maintaining its authority, and
securing its power, against the evil effects of its fiscal extortions. The
profession of the law continued to form an independent body, in which learning
and reputation were a surer means of arriving at wealth and honour than the
protection of the great; for the government itself was, from interest,
generally induced to select the ablest members of the legal profession for
judicial offices. The existence of the legal profession, uniting together a
numerous body of educated men, guided by the same general views, and connected
by similar studies, habits of thought, and interests, must have given the
lawyers an independence both of character and position, which, when they were
removed from the immediate influence of the court, could not fail to operate as
some check on the arbitrary abuse of administrative and fiscal power.
In all countries which exist for any length of time in
a state of civilization, a number of local, communal, and municipal
institutions are created, which really perform a considerable portion of the
duties of civil government; for no central administration can carry its control
into every detail; and those governments which attempt to carry their
interference farthest are generally observed to be those which leave most of
the real work of government undone. During the greater period of the Roman
domination, the Greeks had been allowed to retain their own municipal and
provincial institutions, as has been stated in the earlier part of this work,
and the details of the civil administration were left almost entirely in their
hands. Justinian I destroyed this system as far as lay in his power; and the
effects of the unprotected condition of the Greek population have been seen in
the facilities which were afforded to the ravages of the Avars and Sclavonians. As the empire grew weaker, and the danger from
the barbarians more imminent, the imperial regulations could not be enforced.
Unless the Greeks had obtained the right of bearing arms, their towns and
villages must have fallen a prey to every passing band of brigands, and their
commerce would have been annihilated by Sclavoman and
Saracen cruisers. The inhabitants of Venice, Istria, and Dalmatia, the citizens
of Gaeta, Capua, Naples, and Salerno, and the inhabitants of continental
Greece, the Peloponnesus, and the Archipelago, would have been exterminated by
their barbarous neighbours, unless they had possessed not only arms which they
were able and willing to use, but also a municipal administration capable of
directing the energies of the people without consulting the central government
at Constantinople. The possession of arms, and the government of a native
magistracy, gradually revived the spirit of independence; and to these
circumstances must be traced the revival of the wealth of the Greek islands,
and of the commercial cities of the Peloponnesus. Many patriotic Greeks may
possibly have brooded over the sufferings of their country in the monasteries,
whose number was one of the greatest social evils of the time; and the furious
monks, who frequently issued from their retirement to insult the imperial authority
under some religious watchword, were often inspired by political and national
resentments which they could not avow, and which perhaps they did not
themselves fully understand.
The period of history treated in this volume has
brought down the record of events to the final destruction of ancient political
society in the Eastern Empire; still the reader must carefully bear in mind
that in the seventh and eighth centuries the external appearance of the
principal cities of the empire was generally little changed. The outward aspect
of the Roman world was modified, but it was not metamorphosed. Though the
wealth and the numbers of the inhabitants had diminished, most of the public
buildings of the ancient Greeks existed in all their splendour, and it would be
a very incorrect picture indeed of a Greek city of this period, to suppose that
it resembled in any way the filthy and ill-constructed burghs of the middle
ages. The solid fortifications of ancient military architecture still defended
many cities against the assaults of the Sclavonians,
Bulgarians and Saracens; the splendid monuments of ancient art were still
preserved in all their brilliancy, though unheeded by the passer-by; the agoras were frequented, though by a less numerous and less
busy population; the ancient courts of justice were still in use, and the
temples of Athens had yet sustained no injury from time, and little from
neglect. The enmity of the iconoclasts to picture-worship, which, as Colonel Leake justly remarks, has been the theme for much
exaggeration, had not yet caused the destruction of the statues and paintings
of pure Grecian art. The classical student, with Pausanias in his hand, might
unquestionably have identified every ancient site noticed by that author in his
travels, and viewed the greater part of the buildings which he describes. In
many of the smaller cities of Greece it is doubtless true that the barbarians
had left dreadful marks of their ravages. When imperial vanity could be
gratified by the destruction of ancient works of art, or when the value of
their materials became an object of cupidity, the masterpieces of sculpture
were exposed to ruin. The emperor Anastasius I permitted the finest bronze
statues, which Constantine had collected from all the cities of Greece, to be melted
into a colossal image of himself. During the reign of Constans II, the bronze
tiles of the Pantheon of Rome were taken away. Yet new statues continued to be
erected to the emperors in the last days of the empire. A colossal statue of
bronze, attributed to the emperor Heraclius, existed at Barletta, in Apulia, as
late as the fourteenth century. That the Greeks had not yet ceased entirely to
set some value on art, is proved by the well-executed cameos and intaglios, and
the existing mosaics, which cannot be attributed to an earlier period. Yet no
more barbarous coinage ever circulated than that which issued from the mint of
Constantinople during the early part of the seventh century. The soul of art
had fled; that public feeling which inspires correct taste was extinct, and the
excellence of execution still existing was only the result of mechanical
dexterity and apt imitation of good models.
The destinies of literature were very similar to those
of art; nothing was now either produced or understood, but what was deemed of
practical utility to the body or the soul; yet the memory of the ancient
writers was still respected, and the cultivation of ancient literature still
conferred a high degree of reputation. Learning was neither neglected nor
despised, though its objects were sadly misunderstood, and its pursuits
confined to a small circle of votaries. The learned institutions, the
libraries, and the universities of Alexandria, Antioch, Berytus,
and Nisibis, were destroyed; but at Athens, Thessalonica, and Constantinople,
literature and science were not utterly neglected; public libraries and all the
conveniences for a life of study still existed. Many towns must have contained
individuals who solaced their hours by the use of these libraries; and although
poverty, the difficulties of communication, and declining taste, daily
circumscribed the numbers of the learned, there can be no doubt that they were
never without some influence on society. Their habits of life and the love of
retirement, which a knowledge of the past state of their country tended to
nourish, inclined this class rather to conceal themselves from public notice,
than to intrude on the attention of their countrymen. The principal Greek poet
who flourished during the latter years of the Roman Empire, and whose writings
have been preserved, is George Pisida, the author of
three poems in iambic verses on the exploits of Heraclius, written in the
seventh century. It would perhaps be difficult, in the whole range of
literature, to point to poetry which conveys less information on the subject
which he pretends to celebrate, than that of George Pisida.
In taste and poetical inspiration he is quite as deficient as in judgment, and
he displays no trace of any national character. The historical literature of
the period is certainly superior to the poetical in merit, for though most of
the writers offer little to praise in their style, still much that is curious
and valuable is preserved in the portion of their writings which we possess.
The fragments of the historian Menander of Constantinople, written about the
commencement of the seventh century, make us regret the loss of his entire
work. From these fragments we derive much valuable information concerning the
state of the empire, and his literary merit is by no means contemptible. The
most important work relating to this period is the general history of Theophylactus Simocatta, who
wrote in the earlier part of the seventh century. His work contains a great
deal of curious information, evidently collected with considerable industry;
but, as Gibbon remarks, he is destitute of taste and genius, and these
deficiencies lead him to mistake the relative importance of historical facts.
He is supposed to have been of Egyptian origin.
Two chronological writers, John Malalas,
and the author of the ‘Chronicon Paschale’, likewise
deserve notice, as they supply valuable and authentic testimony as to many
important events. The frequent notices concerning earthquakes, inundations,
fires, plagues, and prodigies, which appear in the Byzantine chronicles, afford
strong ground for inferring that something like our modem newspapers must have
been published even in the latter days of the empire. The only ecclesiastical
historian who belongs to this period is Evagrius,
whose church history extends from A.D. 429 to 593. In literary merit he is
inferior to the civil historians, but his work has preserved many facts which
would otherwise have been lost. The greater number of the literary and
scientific productions of this age are not deserving of particular notice. Few,
even of the most learned and industrious scholars, consider that an
acquaintance with the pages of those whose writings are preserved, is of more
importance than a knowledge of the names of those whose works are lost. The
discovery of paper, which Gibbon says came from Samarcand
to Mecca about 710, seems to have contributed quite as much to multiply
worthless books as to preserve the most valuable ancient classics. By rendering
the materials of writing more accessible in an age destitute of taste, and
devoted to ecclesiastical and theological disputation, it announced the arrival
of the stream of improvement in a deluge of muddy pedantry and dark stupidity.
The mighty change which had taken place in the
influence of Greek literature since the time of the Macedonian conquest
deserves attention. All the most valuable monuments of its excellence were
preserved, and time had in no way diminished their value. But the mental
supremacy of the Greeks had, nevertheless, received a severer shock than their
political power; and there was far less hope of their recovering from the blow,
since they were themselves the real authors of their degeneracy, and the sole
admirers of the inflated vanity which had become their national characteristic.
The admitted superiority of Greek authors in taste and truth, those universal
passports to admiration, had once induced a number of writers of foreign race
to aspire to fame by writing in Greek; and this happened, not only during the
period of the Macedonian domination, but also under the Roman Empire, after the
Greeks had lost all political supremacy, when Latin was the official language
of the civilized world, and the dialects of Egypt, Syria, and Armenia possessed
a civil and scientific, as well as an ecclesiastical literature. The Greeks
forfeited this high position by their inordinate self-adulation. This feeling
kept their minds stationary, while the rest of mankind was moving forward. Even
when they embraced Christianity they could not lay aside the trammels of a
state of society which they had repudiated; they retained so many of their old
vices that they soon corrupted Christianity into Greek orthodoxy.
The conquests of the Arabs changed the intellectual as
well as the religious and political condition of the East. At Alexandria, in
Syria, and in Cyrenaica, the Greeks soon became extinct; and that portion of
their literature which still retained a value in the eyes of mankind came to be
viewed in a different light. The Arabs of the eighth century undoubtedly
regarded the scientific literature of the Greeks with great respect, but they
considered it only as a mine from which to extract a useful metal. The study of
the Greek language was no longer a matter of the slightest importance, for the
learned Arabians were satisfied if they could master the results of science by
the translations of their Syrian subjects. It has been said that Arabic has
held the rank of an universal language as well as Greek, but the fact must be
admitted only in the restricted sense of applying it to their extensive empire.
The different range of the mental and moral power of the literatures of Arabia,
of Rome, and of Greece, is in our age fully apparent.
There is no country in the world more directly
dependent on commerce for the well-being of its inhabitants than the land
occupied by the Greeks round the Aegean Sea. Nature has separated these
territories by mountains and seas into a variety of districts, whose
productions are so different, that unless commerce afford great facilities for
exchanging the surplus of each, the population must remain comparatively small,
and languish in a state of poverty and privation.
The Greeks retained the greater share of that commerce
which they had for ages enjoyed in the Mediterranean. The conquest of
Alexandria and Carthage gave it a severe blow, and the existence of a numerous
maritime population in Syria, Egypt, and Africa, enabled the Arabs to share the
profits of a trade which had hitherto been a monopoly of the Greeks. The
absolute government of the caliphs, their jealousy of their Christian subjects,
and the civil wars which so often laid waste their dominions, rendered property
too insecure in their dominions for commerce to flourish with the same
tranquillity which it enjoyed under the legal despotism of the Eastern
emperors; for commerce cannot long exist without a systematic administration,
and soon declines, if its natural course be at all interrupted.
The wealth of Syria at the time of its conquest by the
Arabs proves that the commerce of the trading cities of the Roman Empire was
still considerable. A caravan, consisting of four hundred loads of silk and
sugar, was on its way to Baalbec at the time the
place was attacked. Extensive manufactories of silk and dye-stuffs flourished,
and several great fairs assisted in circulating the various commodities of the
land through the different provinces. The establishment of post-horses was at first
neglected by the Arabs, but it was soon perceived to be so essential to the
prosperity of the country, that it was restored by the caliph Moawyah. The Syrian cities continued, under the Saracen
government, to retain their wealth and trade as long as their municipal rights
were respected. No more remarkable proof of this fact need be adduced, than the
circumstance of the local mints supplying the whole currency of the country
until the year 695, when the Sultan Abdalmelik first
established a national gold and silver coinage.
Even the Arabian conquests were insufficient to
deprive the empire of the great share which it held in the Indian trade. Though
the Greeks lost all direct political control over it, they still retained
possession of the carrying trade of the south of Europe; and the Indian
commodities destined for that market passed almost entirely through their
hands. The Arabs, in spite of the various expeditions which they fitted out to
attack Constantinople, never succeeded in forming a maritime power; and their
naval strength declined with the numbers and wealth of their Christian
subjects, until it dwindled into a few piratical squadrons. The emperors of
Constantinople really remained the masters of the sea, and their subjects the
inheritors of the riches which its commerce affords.
The principal trade of the Greeks, after the Arabian
conquests, consisted of three branches, — the Mediterranean trade with the
nations of Western Europe, the home trade, and the Black Sea trade. The state
of society in the south of Europe was still so disordered, in consequence of
the settlements of the barbarians, that the trade for supplying them with
Indian commodities and the manufactures of the East was entirely in the hands
of the Jews and Greeks, and commerce solely in that of the Greeks. The
consumption of spices and incense was then enormous; a large quantity of spice
was employed at the tables of the rich, and Christians burned incense daily in
their churches. The wealth engaged in carrying on this traffic belonged chiefly
to the Greeks; and although the Arabs, after they had rendered themselves
masters of the two principal channels of the Indian trade, through Persia and
Syria, and by the Red Sea and Egypt, contrived to participate in its profits,
the Greeks still regulated the trade by the command of the northern route
through central Asia to the Black Sea. The consumption of Indian productions
was generally too small at any particular port to admit of whole cargoes
forming the staple of a direct commerce with the West. The Greeks rendered this
traffic profitable, from the facility with which they could prepare mixed
cargoes by adding the fruit, oil, and wine of their native provinces, and the
produce of their own industry; for they were then the principal manufacturers
of silk, dyed woollen fabrics, jewellery, arms, rich dresses and ornaments. The
importance of this trade was one of the principal causes which enabled the
Roman empire to retain the conquests of Justinian in Spain and Sardinia, and
this commercial influence of the Greek nation checked the power of the Groths, the Lombards, and the Avars, and gained for them as
many allies as the avarice and tyranny of the exarchs and imperial officers
created enemies. It may not be superfluous to remark, that the invectives
against the government and persons of the exarchs which abound in the works of
the Italians, and from them have been copied into the historians of Western
Europe, must always be sifted with care, as they are the outbreaks of the
violent political aversion of the Latin ecclesiastics to the authority of the
Eastern Empire, not an echo of the general opinion of society. The people of
Rome, Venice, Genoa, Naples, and Amalfi clung to the Roman empire from feelings
of interest, long after they possessed the power of assuming perfect
independence. These feelings of interest arose from the commercial connection
of the West and East. The Italians did not yet possess capital sufficient to
carry on the eastern trade without the assistance of the Greeks. The cargoes
from the north consisted chiefly of slaves, wood for building, raw materials of
various kinds, and provisions for the maritime districts.
The most important branch of trade, in a large empire,
must ever be that which is carried on within its own territory, for the
consumption of its subjects. The peculiar circumstances have been noticed that
make the prosperity of the inhabitants of those countries which are inhabited
by the Greek race essentially dependent on commerce. Internal commerce, if it had
been left unfettered by restrictions, would probably have saved the Roman
empire; but the financial difficulties, caused by the lavish expenditure of
Justinian I, induced that emperor to invent a system of monopolies which
ultimately threw the trade of the empire into the hands of the free citizens of
Venice, Amalfi, and other cities, whom it had compelled to assume independence.
Silk, oil, various manufactures, and even grain, were made the subject of
monopolies, and temporary restrictions were at times laid on particular
branches of trade for the profit of favoured individuals. The traffic in grain
between the different provinces of the empire was subjected to onerous, and
often arbitrary arrangements; and the difficulties which nature had opposed to
the circulation of the necessaries of life, as an incentive to human industry,
were increased, and the inequalities of price augmented for the profit of the
treasury or the gain of the fiscal officers, until industry was destroyed.
These monopolies, and the administration which
supported them, were naturally odious to the mercantile classes. When it became
necessary, in order to retain the Mediterranean trade, to violate the great
principle of the empire, that the subjects should neither be intrusted with arms,
nor allowed to fit out armed vessels to carry on distant commerce, these armed
vessels, whenever they were able to do so with impunity, violated the
monopolies and fiscal regulations of the emperors. The independence of the
Italian and Dalmatian cities then became a condition of their commercial
prosperity. There can be little doubt, that if the Greek commercial classes had
been able to escape the superintendence of the imperial administration as
easily as the Italians, they, too, would have asserted their independence; for
the emperors of Constantinople never viewed the merchants of their dominions in
any other light than as a class from whom money was to be obtained in every
possible way. This view is common in all absolute governments. An instinctive aversion
to the independent position of the commercial classes, joined to a contempt for
trade, usually suggests such measures as eventually drive commerce from
countries under despotic rule. The little republics of Greece, the free cities
of the Syrian coast, Carthage, the republics of Italy, the Hanse towns,
Holland, England, and America, all illustrate by their history how much trade
is dependent on those free institutions which offer a security against
financial oppression; while the Roman empire affords an instructive lesson of
the converse.
The trade of Constantinople with the countries round
the Black Sea was an important element in the commercial prosperity of the
empire. Byzantium served as the entrepot of this commerce and the traffic to
the south of the Hellespont, even before it became the capital of the Roman
Empire. After that event, its commerce was as much augmented as its population.
It was supplied with grain from Egypt, and cattle from the Tauric
Chersonese, and large public distributions of provisions attracted population,
kept and made it the seat of a flourishing manufacturing industry. The trade in
fur and the commerce with India by the Caspian, the Oxus, and the Indus,
centred at Constantinople, whence the merchants distributed the various
articles they imported among the nations of the West, and received in exchange
the productions of these countries. The great value of this commerce, even to
the barbarous nations which obtained a share in it, is frequently mentioned by
the Byzantine historians. The Avars profited greatly by this traffic, and the
decline of their empire was attributed to its decay; though there can be little
doubt that the real cause, both of the decline of the trade and of the Avar
power, arose from the insecurity of property, originating in bad government.
The wealth of the mercantile and manufacturing classes in Constantinople
contributed, in no small degree, to the success with which that city repulsed
the attacks of the Avars and the Saracens.
Nothing could tend more to give us a correct idea of
the real position of the Greek nation at the commencement of the eighth
century, than a view of the moral condition of the lower orders of the people;
but, unfortunately, all materials, even for a cursory inquiry into this subject,
are wanting. The few casual notices which can be gleaned from the lives of the
saints, afford the only authentic evidence of popular feeling. It cannot,
however, escape notice, that even the shock which the Mohammedan conquests gave
to the Orthodox Church, failed to recall its ministers back to the pure
principles of the Christian religion. They continued their old practice of
confounding the intellects of their congregations, by propagating a belief in
false miracles, and by discussing the unintelligible distinctions of scholastic
theology. From the manner in which religion was treated by the Eastern clergy,
the people could profit little from the histories of imaginary saints, and
understand nothing of the doctrines which they were instructed to consider as
the essence of their religion. The consequence was, that they began to fall
back on the idle traditions of their ancestors, and to blend the last
recollections of paganism with new superstitions, derived from a perverted
application of the consolations of Christianity. Relics of pagan usages were
retained; a belief that the spirits of the dead haunted the paths of the living
was general in all ranks; a respect for the bones of martyrs, and a confidence
in the figures on amulets, became the real doctrines of the popular faith. The
connection which existed between the clergy and the people, powerful and great
as it really was, appears at bottom to have been based on social and political
grounds. Pure religion was so rare, that the word only served as a pretext for
increasing the power of the clergy, who appear to have found it easier to make
use of the superstitions of the people than of their religious and moral
feelings. The ignorant condition of the lower orders, and particularly of the
rural population, explains the curious fact, that paganism continued to exist
in the mountains of Greece as late as the reign of the Emperor Basil (A.D.
867-886), when the Mainates of Mount Taygetus were at last converted to Christianity.
It is often cited as a proof of the barbarous
condition to which Greece was at this time reduced, that it is only mentioned
by historians as a place of banishment for criminals. But this mode of
announcing the fact, that many persons of rank were exiled to the cities of
Greece, leaves an incorrect impression on the mind of the reader, for the most
flourishing cities of the East were often selected as the places best adapted
for the safe custody of political prisoners. We know from Constantine
Porphyrogenitus that Cherson was a powerful commercial city, whose alliance or
enmity was of considerable importance to the Byzantine Empire, even so late as
the tenth century. Yet this city was selected as a place of banishment for
persons of high rank, who were regarded as dangerous state criminals. Pope
Martin was banished thither by Constans II, and it was the place of exile of
the emperor Justinian II. The emperor Philippicus, before he ascended the
throne, had been exiled by Tiberius Apsimar to Cephalonia, and by Justinian I.
to Cherson, a circumstance which would lead us to infer that a residence in the
islands of Greece was considered a more agreeable sojourn than that of Cherson.
Several of the adherents of Philippicus were, after his dethronement, banished
to Thessalonica, one of the richest and most populous cities of the empire.
The command of the imperial troops in Greece was
considered an office of high rank, and it was accordingly conferred on
Leontius, when Justinian II wished to persuade that general that he was
restored to favour. Leontius made it the stepping-stone to the throne. But the
strongest proof of the wealth and prosperity of the cities of Greece, is to be
found in the circumstance of their being able to fit out the expedition which
ventured to attempt wresting Constantinople from the grasp of a soldier and
statesman, such as Leo the Isaurian was known to be, at the time when the
Greeks deliberately resolved to overturn his throne.
It is difficult to form any correct representation of
a state of society so different from our own, as that which existed among the
Greeks in the eighth century. The rural districts, on the one hand, were
reduced to a state of desolation, and the towns, on the other, flourished in
wealth; agriculture was at the lowest ebb, while trade was in a prosperous
condition. If, however, we look forward to the long series of misfortunes which
were required to bring this favoured land to the state of complete destitution
to which it sank at a later period, we may arrive at a more accurate knowledge
of its condition in the early part of the eighth century, than would be
possible were we to confine our view to looking back at the records of its
ancient splendour, and to comparing a few lines in the meagre chronicles of the
Byzantine writers with the volumes of earlier history recounting the greatest
actions with unrivalled elegance.
THE CONTEST WITH THE
ICONOCLASTS