CHAPTER XIII.
THE FINAL CONQUEST OF ITALY AND ITS ANNEXATION TO THE
EMPIRE
NOTWITHSTANDING the signal success of Belisarius in his
Italian campaign, the Gothic Kingdom was even further from being actually subjugated lo the Byzantine power than was Africa
after the capture of Gelimer. The first care of Justinian was to appoint
Alexander, an eminent Logothete, popularly known as "the Scissors,"
to supervise the financial administration of the country. His distinguishing
sobriquet had been acquired through his remarkable dexterity in chopping
round the gold coin according to an ingenious method of his own, which
left the margin apparently intact. This noted extortioner descended
on the Italians and sacked them mercilessly for suppositious debts,
so that in a short time the public allegiance was wholly alienated from
the victors. Even the army of occupation was defrauded of its pay to
such an extent that the soldiers began to view the hostile operations
of the enemy with complete indifference.
After the departure of Belisarius, Ildibad applied himself to revive the spirit of the remnants of the Gothic forces,
and to attract to his standard all the malcontents among the Italians.
He made Ticinum his headquarters, and soon found himself strong enough
to join battle with the only Roman army which was willing to take the
field. He defeated these troops with great slaughter,
and was on the way to win a reputation in arms, when, as the
result of a private feud, he was assassinated at a banquet. To him succeeded Eraric, but his elevation was displeasing
to the Goths in general, and in a few months he also was killed insidiously to make room for Totila, a nephew of Ildibad.
Totila, or Baduela, the most illustrious
King of the Goths in Italy after the great Theodoric, had already made
his submission to Justinian, when the messengers arrived to offer him
the crown of his nation. He was in command of Tarvisium,
and explained to them candidly his position, but promised that, if they
should take off Eraric by a certain day, before
his truce expired, he would accept the sovereignty.
The distasteful king disappeared; he was already a traitor,
and had stated his price to the Emperor, and the election of Totila was unanimously ratified by the Goths (541).
For many years Totila engaged
himself in the reconquest of Italy, during which time he traversed the
peninsula from north to south, and recovered
nearly all the towns which had been lost to the Goths. The Byzantines
failed to put an army into the field which could oppose him, and in
two minor engagements they were defeated with considerable loss. The
first blood was drawn at Faventia, whither Totila, in the
year after his accession, hastened to meet the enemy. His whole force
amounted to five thousand men, the relics of two hundred thousand whom
the Goths had at their command eight years previously at the outset
of the war. The Romans were twice as numerous, and the battle was begun
by a single combat between Artabazes, an Armenian general of the Persian contingent transported
from Sisauranum, and a strenuous Goth who
proposed himself as a champion. The Armenian was the victor, but received
a fortuitous wound, which ultimately proved fatal. A general collision
followed, when a skilfully posted ambush created a panic among the Byzantines,
who were dispersed with great carnage and the loss of all their ensigns.
The year after this success, to which was added the capture
of several towns and districts, Totila laid
siege to Naples. In general he adopted a policy
of clemency towards those communities which fell into his hands, a disposition
which disarmed resistance, and often much facilitated his progress. Thus he approached the Neapolitans with liberal promises, but
they were influenced by the Roman garrison to decline a surrender. A
blockade was established, therefore, in regular form. After some time,
when the inhabitants began to be severely pressed by famine, an attempt
to raise the siege was made by Demetrius, a Master of Soldiers who had
just arrived from Constantinople. A few hundred infantry constituted
his sole force, but he endeavoured to make the most of his slight resources
by putting into Sicily, and, while there, loading a
large number of freight vessels with provisions. Having given
this fleet the semblance of conveying numerous troops, he set sail for
Naples, whereupon the small Gothic army were thrown into consternation,
believing that he was advancing against them with an overwhelming force. Hence they were on the point of breaking up their camp, when
he, not being resolute enough to push the enterprise to a practical
issue, declined from his course and steered for the port of Rome. There
he essayed to transform the semblance into a reality by enlisting soldiers
from among those who had crowded to the capital, where John, nephew
of Vitalian, was in command. Their experience
of the Goths, however, had lately been discouraging, wherefore they
refused to associate themselves to his expedition. He was obliged, therefore,
to proceed to the relief of Naples without any increment of force. But
in the meantime, Totila, having become enlightened
in the matter, posted a number of warg alleys in hiding, and attacked the provision ships as soon as a landing
was attempted. All the vessels were taken, the crews were mostly captured
or slain, whilst the residue, including Demetrius, managed to escape
in small boats. Later on, another effort was
made, which was even more disastrous.
A newly-created Praetorian Praefect, in command of a
considerable war fleet, manned by Thracians and Armenians, was dispatched
by Justinian to regulate the affairs of Italy. As a purely civil official
he was incapable of maturing any plan of campaign, and, after wasting
much time on the voyage, at length arrived at Sicily. Here he yielded
to urgent pressure, and entrusted his forces to Demetrius, who again
made sail for Naples. A storm arose, however, and all the vessels were
cast ashore in confusion in the vicinity of the Gothic camp, where they
at once became the prey of the enemy. The general himself was taken
prisoner, and immediately utilized by Totila to bring about a surrender of the town. With a rope
round his neck he was led before the walls and compelled to proclaim
to the citizens that all hope of relief for them was at an end. Shortly
afterwards the Gothic King himself came up and harangued a meeting of
the Neapolitans to induce them to desist from their futile resistance.
He represented to them that on account of their determined defence against
Belisarius he not only regarded them with no animosity,
but was even grateful for the loyalty they had shown on that
occasion. He besought them, therefore, to let him take peaceful possession,
and to receive him as a friend whose intentions were wholly amicable.
They asked for thirty days; he replied by granting them
three months; but in a short time they surrendered
voluntarily, glad to be relieved from the intolerable state of destitution
to which they had been reduced. Totila then
acted with the greatest benignancy. The small Byzantine garrison were
dismissed safe and sound, and even assisted with horses and supplies
to enable them to make their way to Rome. As for the inhabitants, he
was so solicitous about their health that he posted guards at the gates
to see that food-stuffs were at first introduced sparingly, lest a sudden
surfeit of the long-famished stomachs should engender a fatal illness
throughout the city. His last procedure was to level the greater part
of the walls to the ground, a method of treatment he applied to all
other strongholds when captured, in order to deprive the Byzantines
of places of shelter from which they could safely carry on the warfare.
In those cases, however, where Totila considered severity to be expedient he showed himself to be as relentless
as the most tyrannical monarch. Thus, among his prisoners was one Demetrius,
the commissary of Naples, who during the siege had thought fit to provoke
him by the most unlicensed insults if he came within earshot of the
walls. This man he punished by excising his tongue and amputating both
his hands, after which infliction he set him at liberty. In another
instance an Italian complained to the King that his daughter had been
ravished by a Gothic guard, who happened to be a soldier of distinguished
prowess. He was at once committed to custody, but his companions pleaded
earnestly on his behalf. Thereupon Totila made them a speech in which he dwelt on the necessity for the Goths
to adhere to the principles of rectitude and to maintain an honourable
reputation among the people of the country. He also referred to the
case of Theodahad, who by his iniquities had become the prime cause
of the present war. Having persuaded his hearers by these arguments,
he had the culprit executed, and assigned his possessions to the girl
who had been outraged.
Totila now began to turn his attention to the recovery of the
capital, and his first move towards that object was to address a letter
to the Roman Senate with the view of predisposing their minds in his
favour. He reproached them gently with having forgotten the generous
treatment they had received at the hands of Theodoric and his successors,
and contrasted the behaviour of the Byzantines since they had
gained a footing in Italy with that of the Goths. At
the moment, indeed, he was able to use as an object-lesson, not
only the reinstituted financial oppression, but the conduct of the army
of occupation, who were leading a dissolute life in the fortresses among
prostitutes, whilst they pillaged the people of the neighbourhood without
compunction for the supply of their wants. The King followed up this
missive by causing agents who were in collusion with him in the city
to post up notices full of liberal promises to the Roman citizens should
they return to the Gothic allegiance. Whatever effect these overtures
may have had on the minds of the Romans, they were not immediately fruitful
to Totila, and the Byzantine garrison continued
to retain a firm hold on the capital.
Not for another twelvemonth, however, was a Gothic encampment
again seen before the walls of Rome (545); but in the meantime Totila had elaborated his
preparations so as to render a siege effective to the utmost. By capturing
the fortress of Tibur, situated on the Anio,
twenty miles to the north-east of the capital, he was enabled to command
the fluviatile navigation and to prevent supplies reaching Rome from
the fields of Tuscany. On the other hand, by posting numerous war-galleys
among the islands off the coast, in the track of the corn-ships which
sailed from Sicily, he cut off all possibility of the Roman granaries
being replenished by sea-borne provisions. Bessas was now governor of Rome, but the garrison under his
command amounted to only three thousand, and their ardour was soon damped
by the result of the first sally against the enemy. A band of Goths
approached the gates and drew upon themselves the attack of two eager
lieutenants, who chased them in simulated flight until they fell into
a skilfully-contrived ambush, from which few of them returned. After
this mishap, which was incurred against the advice of Bessas,
no more sallies were made by the besieged.
Such was now the prosperous position of Totila’s affairs. Yet a twelvemonth had already elapsed since
Belisarius had received a commission from Justinian to go to the relief
of Italy. But he dismissed him to this command without resources from
the state, telling him coldly that out of his own great wealth he was
to provide for the expenses of the expedition. The Constable, for such
he is now to be called, travelled slowly through Illiricum and arrived at Salona with four thousand recruits, whom while on his
way he had induced with difficulty to join his standard. He now embarked
for Pola in Istria, from whence after a short delay he arrived at Ravenna.
At the former place he was met by a group of Gothic spies, who explored
his camp and then returned to Totila with
the report that his martial equipment was contemptible. They deceived
the general by presenting a forged letter pleading for help on behalf
of Bonus, the governor of Genoa, who was said to be in a sore strait.
At Ravenna Belisarius issued a proclamation expressed in seductive terms,
inviting Italians and Goths to join him, but his appeal met with no
response, for the reputation of the Byzantines was at the lowest ebb
throughout the country.
From the time of his arrival at Pola he had begun to
send out small bands both by land and sea to attempt something against
the enemy, but success had generally been counterbalanced by disaster.
He now decided to apply to the Emperor for assistance; and he intrusted
his dispatch to John, whose place at Rome he filled by transferring Bessas from Spoleto. His petition was conceived
as follows: “Most puissant Prince, we have arrived in Italy, and, if
nothing but the presence of Belisarius were necessary, the country would now be subjugated to your
dominion. For here I am in the midst of the
Italians—but without soldiers, horses, arms, or money. If such resources
be requisite to carry on warfare it must be allowed that I am totally
unprepared. As I passed through Thrace and Illyria I enlisted a few volunteers, but they are only raw recruits, who shun
the enemy, desert their horses, and fling their arms on the ground.
We have no money at command; the Goths have already collected whatever
was due to us from the taxpayers. If I essay to address the soldiers
my mouth is stopped by knowing that they are hungering after their pay;
whilst numbers, who should be with us, have gone over to the enemy.
I beg of you to send me my veteran guards, and at the same time as many
troops of Huns and other barbarians as possible. Funds also are urgently
needed”.
These representations produced no immediate result, and
nearly a year passed away before the desired reinforcements began to
arrive. In the meantime Belisarius had returned
to Dalmatia, where he established his head-quarters at Epidamnum.
His main object was now to take action for
the relief of Rome, but he seemed to have lost much of the energy and
enterprise which formerly characterized him. As soon, however, as he
had received an increment of force he sent
two of his lieutenants to Portus, at the mouth of the Tiber, where a
strong fort was still held by the Byzantines. From thence, with the
co-operation of Bessas, they were to assail
the Goths, both parties acting simultaneously from opposite sides. They
made two attacks, in accordance with their instructions, but nothing
could move Bessas to emerge from his shelter;
and on the second occasion the Goths, having been forewarned, caught
them in an ambush with a fatal result to almost the whole band, including
the leaders.
So far military assistance had failed, but an effort
to reprovision the capital was now made from
another quarter.
Vigilius, the Roman Pontiff, was at the moment staying in Sicily, where he possessed large estates. He, therefore,
freighted a fleet of corn-ships and directed them to sail up the Tiber
by the way of Portus. But while they were still a long distance off
their approach was signalled to the Goths, who thereupon came down in
effective force and concealed themselves near the mouth of the river.
The movement was observed by the garrison of the fort, who at once climbed
to the highest points of the battlements, and by waving of hands and
garments tried to warn the convoy off. The ships’ crews, however, mistook
the gesticulations and imagined that their advent was being hailed with
rejoicings, wherefore they redoubled their energies in order to complete
the voyage. Hence they steered straight into
the ambuscade of barbarians and were all captured without a chance of
being rescued. Among the prisoners was a bishop, whom Totila relieved of both his hands, as the penalty of answering
falsely to his interrogations.
At the beginning of the next year (546) the Romans were
hard pressed by famine, and began to debate
the advisability of surrender. As a preliminary they sent an envoy to Totila to ask for a short truce on condition that if succour
did not arrive in the interval they would give
themselves up. Pelagius, the chosen deputy, was a man who acted a considerable
part on the ecclesiastical stage, and was already well known to Justinian,
at whose Court he had resided for several years as Papal legate. The
Gothic king received him warmly, but interrupted him, as he was about
to begin his exhortation, in order to enter on a justification of himself.
First he warned Pelagius that there were three things which
it would be useless for him to solicit, viz., clemency towards the Sicilians,
to spare the walls of Rome, or to deliver up fugitives who had joined
his army. He went on to picture the happy state of Sicily when the Goths
first conquered the peninsula, abounding in wealth through the splendid
fertility of its soil, and able to export copious supplies for the sustenance
of Rome. At the prayer of the Romans Theodoric had left the island almost
ungarrisoned, lest the inhabitants should be disturbed in their peaceful
occupations to the detriment of the capital. Yet when a small Byzantine
force landed they were received everywhere
with open arms and the island was allowed to become a base for the invasion
of Italy. As for Rome itself, the Greeks had shut themselves up there
and harassed the Goths by artifices and stratagems without ever daring
to march out and meet them fairly in battle. The citizens, he added,
would profit by the destruction of those walls which were the cause
of their being reduced to destitution while the hostile armies were
intent on their schemes of attack and defence. In reply to this harangue
Pelagius merely protested that he had not been permitted to deliver
his message, and, on his return to the city, declared that he had found
the King in too impracticable a mood to be influenced by any entreaties.
The Romans now felt desperate and approached Bessas and his staff with supplications that he would either
provide them with food, turn them out of the city, or at least end their
sufferings by killing them at once. His only answer was a recommendation
to contain themselves for the present, as Belisarius would soon be at
hand with an army of relief. Thus the reign
of famine was prolonged until the last stages of starvation were reached.
Money and every kind of property were sacrificed to buy any residue
of corn that could be discovered or the meanest description of animal
food. When horses, dogs, and mice were consumed, the people took to
feeding on nettles, which grew in profusion among ruins and around the
inner circuit of the walls. Deaths and suicides from the unbearable
distress were of frequent occurrence. Nevertheless the garrison was fairly nourished, for Bessas had stored a large quantity of grain in well-guarded granaries, from
which he not only maintained his men, but sold portions regularly to
the richer citizens. Thus he kept on amassing wealth at a rapid rate, and was unwilling
that the siege should be raised as long as his lucrative trade continued.
In the direst extremity some citizens purchased from the soldiers the
right to escape, for the last payment they were able to make; and, ultimately,
large numbers were turned adrift to perish by the wayside or to be seized
and slain by the Goths.
By this time Belisarius, having been joined at Epidamnum by as many troops as he saw any prospect of obtaining,
determined to proceed with all his force against Totila.
John had at last returned, and with him he concerted his measures of
transit and attack. The former, with a portion of the army, was to land
at Hydruntum, and make his way northwards with Rome as his objective;
while the Constable, with the bulk of the troops, was to sail round
the peninsula, and make a descent on the enemy
from the waters adjacent to the capital. As for the part played by John
in this campaign, it may be dismissed at once by saying that after landing
he carried on a desultory warfare in southern Italy, made marches and
counter-marches through being impeded by the enemy, but never arrived
within striking distance of Rome. Belisarius, however, soon achieved
his proposed voyage, and appeared at the mouth of the Tiber, where he
at once began offensive operations against the Goths. One of his first
steps was to relieve himself of the delicate charge of his wife, and
to have her guarded in a place of safety. He, therefore, consigned her
to the fortress of Portus, under the charge of one of his lieutenants
named Isaac, whom he enjoined to devote all his attention to shielding
her from harm.
“Remain at your post”, said he, “even should you hear
that I am slain”.
The most pressing necessity was now to revictual Rome,
and this Belisarius essayed to do by carrying a fleet of provision ships
up the Tiber. He had at his disposal two hundred war-galleys, which
he loaded with foodstuffs and also equipped
most effectively with a view to forcing a passage. Thus on the forecastle of each vessel he constructed a wooden bulwark after
the pattern of mural battlements, from the shelter of which his marines
could safely discharge their darts. As Totila had foreseen that such attempts would be made he had long taken measures
to render them ineffectual. Across the river, at a narrow part about
three miles up, he had raised an obstruction in the form of a wooden
bridge, at each end of which on the bank he built a large tower, also
of timber. In addition chains were used to
dose the passage over the water farther down. With a view to assailing
this structure the Roman general joined together laterally two of his
vessels, and on them he erected a tower, high enough to overtop those
constructed by the Goths at the sides of the stream. A boat filled with
combustibles, pitch, sulphur, resin, was placed on the summit of the
tower; and this fabric he caused to be navigated in advance of his flotilla.
His spare cavalry and infantry he drew up on the river bank near the
sea; and he notified Bessas to make a diversion by sallying forth and assaulting
simultaneously the Gothic camp.
Everything prospered as had been intended; the chains
were broken through, the defenders of the wooden bridge were severely
smitten by the arrows which were showered from the galleys, and the
floating tower was brought into close contact with the obstructive barrier.
Then the boat was set alight and launched on to the top of one of the
enemy's towers, which took fire and was consumed with two hundred of
its occupants. One detail only of the manoeuvres failed of accomplishment; Bessas never moved, wholly engrossed as he
was with his mercenary avidity. Suddenly, when success appeared to have
been almost attained, the operations were abandoned and Belisarius drew off his forces without attempting
to push his advantage. Antonina, though unwittingly, was the cause of
this disastrous collapse. While the assault was proceeding a glowing
account of the victorious progress of the Byzantines was brought to
Portus, whereupon Isaac, inflamed with ardour, collected a hundred cavalry,
and made a dash for a section of the Gothic army which was encamped
near Ostia. At first the enemy were dispersed, but they shortly rallied,
and, recognizing the paucity of their adversaries, charged them, with
the result that many were slain, while Isaac and some others were captured.
A few, however, escaped, who rode full speed to Belisarius and informed
him that Isaac was taken prisoner. The general, without stopping to
inquire, immediately sounded the signals of retreat, and made all haste
to Portus, concluding that his wife had fallen into the hands of the
Goths. There he learned the true details as to the temerity of Isaac,
which affected him so deeply that he became seriously ill,
and was incapacitated for some time from taking the field. Such
was the last effort to save Rome from being retaken by the Goths, and
before long Totila succeeded in making himself master of the city.
Nothing could have been more languid and ill organized
than the defence of Rome under Bessas. The
garrison lost all sense of discipline, no strict watch was kept, and
the officers rarely went on their rounds to see that the sentinels remained
awake at their posts. Under these circumstances four Isaurians,
who were on guard at the Asinarian gate, conceived
the possibility of making their fortunes. Choosing a quiet hour of the
night, they let themselves down the wall by ropes, and paid a visit
to the barbarian King in his camp. There they explained to him with
what facility they were able to pass in and out, and proffered to introduce Gothic soldiers in the same manner. He promised liberally, but distrusted his informants and
sent back two of his men to put the matter to the proof. They passed
in and reported favourably, but still Totila hesitated, suspecting a stratagem. A few nights later the Isaurians returned and made the same representations, whereupon the King repeated
the experiment by the agency of two other spies. They also entered the
city, and explored the feasibility of the scheme, but Totila delayed taking any decisive step. The question, however, was talked
over in the Gothic camp, and soon after a Roman patrol, coming on a
group of the enemy loitering near the walls, seized them and brought
them before Bessas. On being examined they confessed that they had hopes
of the city being betrayed by some Isaurians,
but he dismissed their statement as being not worth considering.
For the third time the traitors approached Totila, and he now sent two officers of his staff, in whom
he reposed the utmost confidence, to investigate the proposal. On their
confirming the previous reports he decided to act. One evening after
nightfall Totila got all his men under arms, and marched in silence to the Asinarian gate.
Four Goths, selected for their strength and courage, surmounted the
wall by means of ropes let down to them by the Isaurians.
Inside they attacked the gate with axes, and cut away all the woodwork in which the locks and bolts were fixed. The
portal was then thrown open, and the King entered with his troops. Still
apprehensive of some deception, he drew them up in close order in the
nearest open space and waited for daylight. Insensibly a report as to
what had happened spread through the city, upon which the garrison crowded
to Bessas, and all fled through one of the
opposite gates. Of the citizens a few nobles and about five hundred
of the proletariat were all that remained within the walls; and these,
emaciated by famine, dragged themselves with difficulty to take refuge
in the churches.
As soon as morning broke the Goths laid aside their suspicions
and began to scour the streets, when a few soldiers, who had remained,
and about threescore civilians, fell victims to their rage. Totila wended his way to the church of St. Peter, with the
intention of offering up a thanksgiving, and was met on the threshold
by Pelagius, who adjured him by the Gospels which he held in his band,
to spare the Romans.
"Still a suppliant, Pelagius!" exclaimed the
King.
"Yes," replied the priest, "since God
has made me your servant."
The Victor now issued his commands to stay all further
massacre, but, with reservations as to his own share, permitted his
soldiers to spoil the houses. Much wealth came into his hands from the
palaces of the nobles, and especially the immense treasures accumulated
by Bessas as the gains of his nefarious traffìc.
Such poverty now prevailed at Rome that members of the noblest families
might be seen in mean apparel begging their bread through the streets
from the enemy. Among these was Rusticiana,
the daughter of Symmachus and widow of Boethius, who had expended all
she possessed in relieving the indigent. Some time previously she purchased from the Byzantine rulers at a great price
the privilege of overthrowing the statues of Theodoric
in revenge for his having executed her father and husband.
The Goths would now have retaliated, but Totila saved her from their hands, and also restrained
them from violating any of the females found in the city.
The day after the capture the Gothic King convened his forces, and preached them a sermon on the advantages
of ethical conduct in warfare. He pointed out to them that in the first
campaign, although numerous and rich, they had succumbed to seven thousand
Greeks, because they shrunk from no excesses and committed every crime
that seemed expedient at the moment. Now, however,
through adhering to the principles of rectitude, although diminished
to a mere handful with slight resources, they had triumphed over twenty
thousand of the enemy. He also addressed the Romans in the same sense
as his former dispatch and proclamations, reproaching them for their
ingratitude to the Goths, and again expressing his amazement at their
indiscretion and prejudice in preferring the oppressive rule of the
Byzantines.
Totila’s next procedure was to send a legation, of whom Pelagius
was the chief, to solicit an equitable peace from Justinian. They were
the bearers of a letter in which he prayed for a restoration of the
amicable relations which had prevailed between Anastasius and Theodoric;
but they also had verbal instructions to threaten the total
destruction of Rome, the massacre of the Senate, and a Gothic
invasion of Illyricum. In response the Emperor did not enter
into any negotiations, but merely indicated that Belisarius was
his Plenipotentiary, through whom only he was willing to treat.
When this answer was conveyed to Totila,
he resolved to raze Rome to the ground, and transform the area into
a sheep pasture; after which he planned a march into Southern Italy
against John, who had lately inflicted some damage on the Gothic forces
in that region. He began by ruining the walls, of which he had levelled
about a third part of the circumference, when he received an expostulation
from Belisarius, who had been apprised of bis design.
"Men of wisdom," wrote the general, "have
always been characterized by the desire to build great cities, but to
ruin them can only be described as the work of fools. Rome, by reason
of its extent and magnificence, is the most excellent of all the cities
of the earth; built gradually in the course of many ages by a long series
of emperors, with the assistance of numerous architects and artificers;
the realization of immense resources brought together from every part
of the world. Destroy this splendid creation, and you will incur eternal
obloquy in the memory of succeeding generations. But pause and reflect
that the issue of this war must be one of two events: either you conquer
or are defeated. In the first case you will find that the injury is
your own, and you have demolished the proudest ornament of your kingdom.
In the second you have aroused the just resentment of the victor,
and can expect no clemency at bis hands."
Totila was persuaded by these arguments,
and refrained from doing any further damage to the capital. The
Senators, however, he placed under guard in his camp as hostages, and
the residue of the inhabitants he deported into Campania. He then removed
from the neighbourhood to inspect the progress of his affairs in other
parts of Italy. Rome was thus left wholly deserted.
As soon as Belisarius heard of the departure of Totila, he determined to re-occupy the vacant capital. He
brought all his men up from Portus, therefore, and set them to work
in rebuilding in a temporary fashion the ruined stretches of Wall. The
stones, which lay scattered around, were collected and placed in position,
without mortar, as accurately as possible; stakes were planted outside;
the fosse was cleared; and the adjacent ground was plentifully sown
with calthrops.
In three weeks the work was
completed, and, before long, many of the Romans, eager to occupy their
old domiciles, returned, for whom the general laid up a copious store
of provisions. When Totila heard of this procedure,
he was much annoyed, and hastened back with all speed to recapture the
city. The Goths delivered several assaults, but were invariably repulsed
with loss, notwithstanding that they had torn down and destroyed all
the gates, which had, therefore, to be defended by bodies of men packed
in the open passages. Seeing no prospect of success, the Gothic King
soon retired with his army, from whom he had to endure many reproaches
for not having adopted more effective measures to render Rome untenable.
In his retreat on this occasion he destroyed all the bridges over the
Tiber except the Milvian. Belisarius now fitted new gates to the city
and again went through the form of sending the keys to Justinian.
During the next year (547) the hostile armies frequently
came into collision, but no decisive success was won. In 548 Belisarius
recognized that the peninsula could not be conquered without much greater
forces than he had at command, but Justinian appeared to be lukewarm
in the matter, and the contingents he despatched from time to time were
barely sufficient to counterbalance the losses. The Constable resolved,
therefore, to send his wife on a special mission to Constantinople,
hoping that, if she brought the question before the Empress, her exceptional
influence might obtain for him the needed reinforcements. Antonina arrived
at the Imperial capital, but only to learn that the Augusta had died
a few weeks previously, whilst Justinian was immersed in theological
studies to such an extent that his administrative energy had completely
deserted him. She acted, therefore, on the alternative, which doubtless
had been proposed by her husband, and petitioned the Emperor for his
recall. Her request was readily granted, and thus terminated the second
campaign of five years which Belisarius had conducted in Italy. This
time he returned home without martial honour, but with a considerable
accretion of wealth, which he had exacted with little scruple from the
Italians, according to the usual practice of the age, whenever an opportunity
offered.
After the departure of Belisarius, Totila breathed more freely, and determined to devote all his energies to the
recovery of Rome. During the last year of his stay the Constable, by
hovering around Southern Italy with his fleet, had confined the attention
of the Gothic King to that quarter, while the capital had been committed
to the charge of an excellent soldier named Diogenes, with a garrison
of three thousand picked men.
Early in 549 the third siege of Rome by the Goths was
begun, but the city was now well provisioned, and the governor vigilant,
so that for several months the enemy made no sensible progress. There
was still, however, among the defenders a band of Isaurians,
to whom was entrusted the custody of a gate on the south, that named
after the Apostle Paul; and they also conceived the idea of betraying
their charge to Totila. As the reward of their treachery, they saw some of
their former comrades abounding in wealth, whilst the arrears of pay
due to the Byzantine army already extended over several years. They opened up communications, therefore, with the
King; and in collusion with the traitors a plan of capture was soon
agreed upon. But the circumstances were now very different, and an elaborate
scheme had to be devised in order to attain to the same result. Success,
however, was made commensurate with the greater complication of detail.
The Tiber was now entirely at the command of Totila, as he had recently taken the fortress of Portus; whilst
the only stronghold in the vicinity still held by the Romans was Centunicellae, a sea-port nearly forty miles to the north.
Having posted a strong ambush on the road to the latter place, the King
led the bulk of bis forces secretly in the first watch of the night
to the neighbourhood of the gate in question. At the same time he instructed two boats carrying trumpeters to row quietly up the river,
and, as soon as they arrived at the north wall of the city, to begin
sounding their instruments with all their force. Everything turned out
as had been anticipated; when the garrison heard the blast of the trumpets,
all rushed to the proximity of the Aurelian gate, thinking that a surprise
assault was being delivered on that side. Thus the Isaurians were left in sole charge of
the gate of St. Paul, which they immediately opened for the admission
of the Gothic army. The news quickly circulated that the enemy were
within the walls, with the usual consequence of panic and flight by
those gates which were remote from the vicinity of the hostile troops. Centumcellae was the destination of most of the fugitives,
where they expected to find a safe retreat, but on the way they fell into the ambuscade set by Totila,
so that almost all perished. Four hundred of the garrison, however,
fortified themselves in the tomb of Hadrian and nearly as many took
refuge in the churches, but they were soon induced by Totila's liberal promises to give themselves up. A majority
of them even took service with his forces.
Totila now did all in his power to restore Rome to its pristine
splendour, as he had lately been taunted by Theodebert with not being the actual sovereign of Italy, since his capital, besides
being held by the Greeks, was partly in ruins. He had sought an alliance
with the Franks through marriage with one of the King's daughters, and
on these grounds the band of the princess had been refused to him. Hence he re-established a Senate composed of Italians and Goths, and tried
to repatriate as many as possible of the inhabitants who had been scattered
in various directions.
At this period the Gothic King again attempted to compose
a peace with Justinian, but his overtures were treated with unconcern.
It is probable that at this juncture the Emperor would have been willing
to ratify a treaty, but he had at his side an adviser who urged him
persistently not to abandon Italy to the dominion of the Aran heretics.
Pope Vigilius had been for a couple of years resident at the Byzantine
Court, and, as the representative of Orthodox Italy, he could by no
means endure that the Papal seat should be under the control of the
Goths. Germanus was, therefore, appointed to be commander-in-chief,
but he died on his way through Illyricum, and for the next two years
the war continued to be waged by land and sea on the same indecisive
lines. The principal exploit of Totila was the reconquest of Sicily, but he left it incomplete;
and shortly afterwards Artabanes virtually recovered the island for
the Empire.
In the autumn of the year 551, a naval battle off Ancona,
disastrous to the Goths, again induced Totila to approach the Emperor with peace proposals, but Justinian remained
obdurate, and seemed to be possessed with a rooted prejudice against entering into any convention with the Goths.
The name had become odious to him, and, after so many years of quasi-occupation
of Italy, he doubtless looked on that nation merely as heretic rebels
who disturbed the peace in an integral part of his dominions. In this
naval engagement, the only express conflict on the water in this century,
the Romans were provided with fifty warships of the utmost capacity,
the Goths with forty-seven. John was in chief command on the side of
the Romans, Indulfus, a renegade officer of
Belisarius, on that of the Goths. The fight was begun with great ardour
on both sides, and conducted as nearly as possible
in the form of a battle on land. A cloud of arrows was interchanged
by the hostile crews, and then the ships were impelled against each
other in order to facilitate the use of swords and spears.
The Byzantine fleet, however, was manned by sailors who
were skilful in manoeuvring their vessels, but the barbarians, not being
a maritime nation, could not dispose of crews who were versed in nautical
evolutions. On the one side the ships were navigated methodically and
kept in just array, while on the other they were urged indiscriminately
to the attack. Certain groups of the Gothic fleet were marshalled with
an excessive interspace, and among these the Romans drove in, isolating
the vessels, and easily sinking them by their combined action. In other
positions the ships of the barbarians were packed together so closely
that they hampered each other’s progress and checked the use of the
oars; and in such cases their efforts were perverted into a contest
to regain their freedom of movement. Hence the battle resulted in thirty-six
vessels being destroyed by the Byzantines, whilst the remaining eleven
escaped to the shore, where they were burnt to save them from the enemy.
The preservation of Ancona for the Empire was the immediate result of
this victory.
After the death of Germanus the Emperor decided to appoint
Narses to the command of the war in Italy, although the eunuch was now
a very old man, and, according to evidence which cannot be ignored,
probably almost an octogenarian. We are also told that he was short
of stature and slightly built, but mentally strenuous and decisive in
character to a remarkable degree. As soon as the question was broached
of ordaining him to the conduct of the Gothic war, he declared frankly
that he would not accept the commission unless he were granted resources
adequate to the magnitude of the enterprise. Justinian yielded, with
the result that an invasion of Italy was planned by the eunuch on a
scale which was a revelation to those habituated to the fitful and partial
efforts of the last dozen years. Not only did he levy an army commensurate
with the undertaking, but he insisted on being provided with funds to
liquidate the arrears due to the half-hearted troops who had languished
in the country for so long without receiving their pay.
Narses set out for Italy in 551, but he was delayed on
his route by an eruption of the Huns, which it was no part of his duty
to arrest. He established a camp, therefore, at Philippopolis, and waited
calmly until the barbarians had divided into two streams, one of which
bore destruction to Thessalonica, and the other in the direction of
the metropolis. The Illyrian frontier, was, indeed, the training school
of byzantine generals, and the eunuch himself was one of those who had
often been engaged in the task of resisting barbarian raids by which
the Danubian provinces were continually pillaged
and depopulated. His progress was also impeded somewhat by a deficiency
in the commissariat, which arose from a convoy of provision ships having
been captured in the Adriatic, previous to the battle of Ancona, by Totila’s fleet.
Early in 552, however, he was able to concentrate all
his forces at Salona, where the vital problem of transit into Italy
began to be discussed. Besides a numerous Byzantine army of the conventional
type, he had been joined by fully ten thousand barbarian auxiliaries
from tribes not regularly drawn upon, as Foederati for the Imperial
Service. Lombards, Herules, Huns, and Gepids crowded to his standard, and he even disposed of a
considerable Persian contingent led by Cavades,
the real or reputed grandson of the late Shahinshah.
All those who made a profession of arms among the Byzantines or their
allies, both officers of rank and private soldiers, were eager to take
part in this expedition; the one class attracted by the Illustrious
dignity held by Narses at Court, the other by the munificence displayed
by him towards the armies he had commanded, and because of the benignancy
of his personal hearing among the troops.
Totila, on his side, had not been idle, but had made himself
well acquainted with the extent of the hostile preparations which were
impending against him, and he, therefore, employed every means that
foresight could devise to render the invasion of his kingdom difficult
and dangerous. He knew that the prime objective of the Byzantine general
would be Ravenna, but he had ascertained that he did not possess such
a fleet of transports as could convey the whole army at once across
the Ionic Gulf. Should the troops, however, sail by detachments, he
expected to be able to cut off the separate brigades when they were
in the act of disembarking. On the other band, should Narses elect to
march by land, it was necessary for him to round the head of the Adriatic
Sea and pursue his route along the foot of the Alps through the plains
which stretched past the city of Verona. To the latter district, therefore,
he sent his most able general Teias, instructing
him to render the passage arduous and impracticable by every art known
to the military engineer. Thus Teias obstructed and broke up the ground in the vicinity of
the Po in all conceivable ways. Over a width of several miles trees were felled and strewn in the paths of access, broad and deep
trenches were excavated, precipitous gulches were delved, and extensive
areas were hollowed out, into which water and mud were allowed to run
from adjacent streams. On the proximate side of this rudely diversified
barrier the Gothic general awaited the Byzantine army, to attack them
with his troops should they venture to pass.
Having determined to march overland, Narses advanced
with his army from Salona to the north of Istria, where he halted on
the border of the Venetian territory. Under the semblance of a friendly
pact with the Goths, the Franks, still cherishing the design of extending
their dominions, were in occupation of Transpadane Italy in its whole breadth. A recent legation from the Emperor to win
them over as allies against Totila had failed; and, if the Byzantines were to pass by
the route of Verona without being harassed by the Franks, it was obligatory
to have some prior understanding with them. The emissaries, however,
sent by Narses to the generals of that nation returned with a specious
refusal, but at the same time informants arrived who made him aware
that the permission, if granted, would have been futile owing to the
obstructive dispositions of Teias. A military council was now held; there was still a
third way of entering the peninsula, which Totila had left unguarded, beset as it was by obstacles which seemed to preclude
the passage of an army. By proceeding along the coast they would be secure from hostile interruption, but the land line was
irregular, marshy, and broken by numerous estuaries of navigable rivers.
By the advice of John, however, whose experience of a decade in the
country qualified him to act as guide, this seemingly impassable route
was undertaken and successfully accomplished. All the available ships
and boats followed the army close to the shore; and by means of them,
as often as the mouth of a river was reached, a floating bridge was
improvised, over which the troops passed in safety.
After Narses arrived at Ravenna he gave the whole army
a nine days' rest, during which time he received a further accession
of strength through being joined by all the Byzantine detachments remaining
in that region. Just as the work of recuperation was completed the Gothic
governor of Ariminum, Usdrilas by name, taking umbrage at his apparent inactivity, addressed him a
sharp, provocative letter. "After filling all Italy with rumours
of the terrible host of barbarians, which you are bringing against us",
said he, "you now stay loitering behind the walls of Ravenna. Come
out at once and show your spirit to the Goths; no longer tantalize us,
who are eager to meet you in the field."
The eunuch smiled at the bravado of the Goth, and shortly
afterwards resumed his march with all his forces. The first skirmish
with the enemy occurred at the crossing of a small stream near Ariminum, from whence Usdrilas came
out at the head of a troop of horse; and the Romans were elated by the
happy omen, as they considered it, of the boastful Goth being slain
in this encounter. Narses now pushed onwards with all, having the Flaminian
Way on his left, and began to move through the Apennines towards the
fields of Tuscany. In the meantime Totila,
having effected a junction with Teias in the
vicinity of Rome, pressed forward to meet the invaders at a distance
as far as possible from the capital.
As soon, however, as news was brought in of their rapid
progress, he called a halt and pitched his camp near the village of Taginae, among the western slopes of the Apennines. Before
long the approach of the Byzantine army was signalled; and when Narses
found himself within a dozen miles of the enemy's camp he sent forward
his legates with an invitation to the Gothic king to surrender peacefully,
representing to him that he could not hope to resist the whole force
of the Roman Empire. As an ulterior proposal, should they find him resolved
to fight, he was to be asked to name a day of battle. Being admitted
to an audience they submitted the prescribed offer, to which Totila replied angrily that he would accept no terms, but that they must prepare
for a conflict. Thereupon the legates at once propounded the request:
"Appoint a time then, good lord, to decide the matter by arms".
"On the eighth day from the present," said the King, and dismissed
his interrogators.
On receiving this response Narses immediately began to
instruct his line of battle, anticipating that Totila would advance to the attack without delay, in the hope of finding him
unprepared. Nor was he deceived, for on the following day the whole
Gothic army poured into the neighbourhood and drew themselves up not
farther than a couple of bowshots from bis own position. The site of
hostilities was a small plain surrounded by eminences, which were popularly
supposed to be the sepulchral mounds of a Gallio host who had been slaughtered
here by Camillus in the early years of the Republic. Hence the place
was named the "Graves of the Gauls."
Close to the Roman army on the left was a low hill, which
protected them from being assailed directly on that flank, but which,
if held by the enemy, might become the source of a deadly play of darts.
The night was tempestuous, and, while it was yet dark, the eunuch sent
a squad of fifty infantry to occupy this elevation. Directly day broke Totila saw the advantage which had been gained,
and determined to dislodge the occupants. A troop of cavalry
were sent against them, but what with the adverse slope, the discharge
of arrows, the spear thrusts, and the clashing of shields, which terrified
the horses, the Goths could make no headway, and had to retire discomfited.
A second, and a third time, Totila urged a
similar attack, but nothing could overcome the strenuous resistance
offered by the Byzantines, and at length he had to desist from his efforts.
The time of the main battle was now at hand, and on each
side the generals delivered an exhortation to their troops. Narses lauded
the superiority of his own men and spoke of the enemy with contempt,
asserting them to be mostly renegades from the Imperial service, whose
best prospect was to perish while making a desperate onslaught.
Totila encouraged his army by impressing on them that this
was the critical day of the war, and by a present victory they would
irretrievably crush the power of the Emperor. As for the forces opposed
to them he pointed out that they were only mercenary barbarians,
who would be chary of risking their personal safety merely in exchange
for the high pay by which they had been allured.
Both armies were now marshalled over against each other
in a long and deep array. Narses collected all his barbarian auxiliaries,
with whom he was unfamiliar, into the centre, and made them stand dismounted
from their horses. The flower of the Roman troops he placed in the wings,
four thousand foot-archers in front, and behind them fifteen hundred cavalry in each division. On the opposite side the Goths were
ranged in two lines, all their cavalry being in front and the infantry
behind. The two generals now rode along their respective battle fronts,
uttering words of encouragement; and Narses added the objective stimulus
of rich jewels, armlets, necklets, and golden chains, displayed aloft
on the points of spears, and promised the bestowal of them as the rewards
of valour. As in most cases, there was a single combat in the interspace,
the champions this time being a Roman renegade and an Armenian, when
the triumph of the latter infused an access of confidence into the Imperial
troops. Totila, however, was anxious for a short delay, as he was
awaiting the advent of two thousand horse, whose approach had just been
intimated to him. In the meantime he essayed
to divert the attention of the enemy by exhibiting his address in equitation
and play of arms. He was dressed with regal
magnificence, and his weapons and armour were resplendent with gold.
Purple plumes flowed from his helmet and lance, and he was mounted on
a charger of faultless proportions. He began
to caracole along the front of his line, wheeling his horse in circles
and pulling him up short at one instant or another to turn in a different
direction. Simultaneously his spear was tossed into the air and caught
dexterously with interchanging hands, now by one part, now by another.
In this saltatory exercise he frittered away the whole forenoon; and
then he sent a herald to ask for a parley with Narses. The eunuch, however,
replied that it was mere trifling for him to propose a debate on the
field, which he had declined at the fitting time.
It was now announced to Totila that the expected accession of cavalry had arrived, whereupon he retired
to his tent and passed the word for his troops to fall out and partake
of their midday meal. With a swift change, however, all returned to
their ranks, and the Gothic cavalry at once began an impetuous charge
against the enemy, thinking to catch them in disorder. But Narses had
suspected a ruse, and therefore had restrained his men from breaking
into loose order or laying aside any part of their equipment. At the
same time, lest they should suffer by fasting, he caused them to be
served with refreshments while standing in line with their eyes fixed
on the movements of the enemy. As soon as he perceived in what manner
the battle had begun, the Roman general executed an evolution which
was fatally adverse to the chances of the attacking troops. The wings were
signalled to deploy towards the centre, and thus in a moment the Byzantine
army assumed a crescentic formation, which embraced the Gothic cavalry
between its extended horns. From each side the four thousand archers
poured their arrows into the dense squadrons of horse, who by some strange
perversity or misjudgement had been ordered to rely solely on their
spears and the force of their charge to overthrow the ranks of the enemy.
A small proportion only of the Gothic horsemen succeeded in reaching
the Roman line, most of them falling or becoming disabled the moment
they entered the deadly interspace between the two fires. Nevertheless they maintained their efforts with tenacity till
the decline of day, when the Byzantine army by a unanimous impulse began
to move forwards against them in firm array. Gradually the Goths were
pushed backwards, becoming more and more disordered as they retreated,
until they again came in contact with their
own infantry. In proportion as the enemy yielded the ardour of the Romans
had become inflamed; men of all arms attacked fiercely, and soon the
retreat became a rout; whilst the Gothic infantry, seeing the defeat
of their main force, attempted no defence, but fled wherever the way
seemed to the open for escape. Six thousand of the Goths were slain
on the field, and, in addition, a large number of the Imperial troops, who, during the last decade, had from time to time
deserted to their standard.
The life and fortunes of Totila were forfeited on the day of Taginae, but
the mode of death of the Gothic King is wrapped in some uncertainty.
At the outset of the battle, according to one account, a chance arrow
pierced him with a mortal wound, and compelled bis removal from the
field. After his departure, the Goths engaged the enemy without tactical
direction, and failed through being deprived of his skilful supervision.
Another version relates that as soon as the catastrophe was complete he fled through the darkness with a few followers, when he received
a lance-thrust from the hand of a barbarian, who was unaware that he
had struck the King. Whatever may have been the immediate cause of the
fatality, it seems certain that on that night he arrived at Caprae,
about ten miles from the scene of the battle, in a dying state. There
he shortly expired and was buried by his companions, who at once left
the neighbourhood. Soon afterwards a Gothic woman, resident on the spot,
who had seen the occurrence, told some Roman soldiers that the King
was dead, and indicated to them his grave. Disbelieving her story, they
disinterred the body and found that she had spoken the truth. Before
they restored the corpse to the earth they
stripped it of its regal apparel, which they brought to Narses. He,
in his turn, forwarded the spoils to Justinian. Such was the inglorious
end of the reign of Totila, whose martial
talents and civil magnanimity deserved a better fate; and we would fain
believe that version of his death which elucidates by an inevitable
mischance the infelicitous result of this ill-conducted battle so unworthy
of his previous reputation.
Narses now marched on Rome, receiving on his way the
submission of several towns which had been taken and retaken during
the present war. At the same time the remnant of the Goths mustered
at Ticinum, which Totila had fortified as the repository of his treasure in North Italy, and
there they immediately elected Teias as King.
When the eunuch arrived before the capital, he found the Gothic garrison
prepared to offer a vigorous resistance; but their dispositions were
unskilful, and they were far from being able to foresee the various
possibilities of capture. The siege, therefore, was of brief duration,
and they were shortly circumvented by a simple strategical ruse. Three
simultaneous assaults were made on distant portions of the wall; and
the defenders allowed their attention to be concentrated on these points,
whilst leaving the rest of the wide circuit vacant. Then Narses, seizing
a favourable moment, ordered one of his lieutenants named Dagisthaeus,
supported by a strong brigade, to make a sudden attempt with scaling
ladders on one of the deserted stretches of wall. They ascended, meeting
with no obstruction, gates were thrown open, and the Imperial standard
was displayed from the battlements; whereupon the Goths abandoned the
defence and saved themselves by every available outlet.
Thus for the fifth time in less than a score of years was
Rome captured by one or other of the contending nations; and again on
this, the third occasion, the Emperor had the gratification of receiving
the keys of the city from one of his generals.
Yet the subjugation of Italy was still far from complete;
and an arduous task had still to be executed by Narses before he could
proclaim the peaceful settlement of the ruined Gothic kingdom to be
an accomplished fact. Desperate bands of Gothic marauders now pervaded
the country and wreaked their vengeance uncontrolled on the Italians
for the ill-success of their arms. All the Roman senators were murdered
in Campania, where for their own safety they had been located by Totila;
and even at Ticinum a band of hostages, selected
from the noblest families, were slaughtered by order of the new Gothic
King. And Teias, notwithstanding his limited resources, was not in the
least inclined to make his submission to the victorious eunuch,
but determined to oppose him to the last by every means in his
power. First, he tried to win the alliance of Theodebald,
who had lately succeeded his father on the throne of the Franks, but
that monarch declined to identify himself with a failing cause.
The prime object of contention between the hostile generals
was now the city of Cumae in Campania, where Totila had deposited the richest complement of his treasures and on that account
provided it with a strong garrison. At first John was sent into Tuscany
to obstruct the avenues of approach from the north; but Teias eluded his vigilance, and, by pursuing devious and unfrequented paths
in the vicinity of the Adriatic coast, penetrated
into Campania before the Byzantines had become aware of his escape.
There he fortified his camp on the distal side of Mount Vesuvius, close
to the Bay of Naples. The position chosen by the Goths was the south
side of a bridge over the Draco, a small river flowing between steep
banks, impassable even for infantry. On this spot they built wooden
towers and constructed military engines, by means of which, owing to
the difficulty of access, they were able to withstand the efforts of
the whole Roman army for two months. With their fleet in proximity they
held the command of the sea, so that they suffered from no lack of provisions.
At the end of that time, however, the ships were betrayed to the enemy
by a traitorous Goth who was in charge of them,
and thus their supplies were cut off. They now took refuge on the Lactarian
Mount, which rises from the ridge of land separating the Bay of Naplos from that of Salerno. Here they soon found themselves
in danger of being starved out, and resolved, therefore, to make a desperate
effort to regain their freedom. Unexpectedly they came down on foot
in a solid mass, and threw themselves on the
Byzantine troops. Teias, in the forefront
of the battle, performed prodigies of valour, and soon became the central
aim for his adversaries. A dozen spears became fixed in his shield,
so that he could no longer wield it freely to shelter himself. He called
loudly for bis armour-bearer, and an attempt to exchange it was made,
but for a moment his body remained unprotected and he received a fatal
wound. Nevertheless, his men fought on
till night terminated the conflict. At the dawn of day the fìght was resumed, and again
persevered in till night. At last they sent a deputation to Narses,
proposing that they should be allowed to possess themselves of whatever
funds they had deposited at their homes in various parts of the country,
upon which they would leave Italy to go and live according to their
own laws among other barbarians. Following the counsel of John, Narses
made a convention to that effect; whereupon the Goths agreed to surrender
all their remaining strongholds and to evacuate the peninsula.
Such was the end of the dominion of the Ostrogoths in
Italy, but Narses still had a considerable war to wage, partly owing
to the convention not being strictly carried out, but chiefly because
the Franks were firmly convinced that they could make themselves masters
of Italy. Their resources were great, but for more than a decade they
had been witnesses of the successful resistance offered by Totila with his small army to the anxious efforts of the Emperor; and hence
they were itching to find a plausible pretext for invading the country
in force. Theodebald was a feeble youth, evidently tottering to the
grave, and two nobles of his court, the brothers Leuthar and Butilin, professed to rule both the King
and the nation. As soon, therefore, as it became patent that the power
of the Goths in Italy was irretrievably shattered, they affected to
be moved by the prayers of a few refugees of that people, who had dwelt
in the Transpadane region, and had not been
directly concerned in the compact with Narses. Hence they quickly levied an army of over seventy thousand
men, and suddenly appeared in North Italy under the semblance of being
zealous allies of the Goths, but in reality because they believed the
country to be without a master. The Roman general had not yet received
the submission of Cumae, whilst some thousands of Gothic soldiers had
fortified themselves at Compsae under a bellicose Hunnish leader, named Ragnaris; but on hearing of
the Frankish invasion he abandoned his operations against them, and
marched into Tuscany. Here he stayed to accept the capitulation of a
number of towns, but sent on the greater part of bis forces to block
the way of the invaders on the southern bank of the Po. Some slight
successes were obtained, but the eunuch was really
incapable of opposing the Frankish host, and he soon retired
to the shelter of Ravenna for the winter (553). Italy was now virtually
lost again to the Empire had the barbarians who invaded it been capable
of organizing a government or founding an administration. But to indulge
themselves in rapine was the only course that was intelligible to them,
and they possessed the country as brigands, not as civilized conquerors.
The bulk of their army was, in fact, composed of German tribes, who
had not yet been converted to Christianity. Even the Goths recognized
shortly that they had nothing to hope for from such allies; and before
long, Aligernus, the brother of Teias, journeyed voluntarily to the north and presented himself
before Narses with the keys of Cumae in his band.
At the first flush of spring Leuthar and Butilin roused themselves to prosecute
their raid, and made a rapid and destructive march through Central
Italy until they arrived on the south of Rome. The brothers now divided
their forces, and, while one half carried their ravages down to the
Sicilian strait, the other devastated the eastern tract of the peninsula
until they were brought up by the waters of the Mediterranean. The churches
were broken into and rifled of all their precious ornaments by the heathen Gernians, but the Orthodox Franks abstained
scrupulously from any such sacrilege. The summer was already at its
height, when communication was reopened between the Frankish leaders;
and Leuthar announced his decision to return
home forthwith in order to enjoy the fruits of the expedition. He exhorted
his brother to follow bis example, and not stake the rich spoils of
Italy on the doubtful event of a war with the Romans. Between Butilin and the Goths, however, a bond had been executed in
precise terms, by which it was prearranged that, should he succeed in
ousting the Byzantines, he should become their king. He, therefore,
remained in Campania, whilst his brother proceeded to retrace his steps
to the north. On the way a foreguard of three
thousand men fell into an ambush, contrived by Artabanes at Fanum,
with disastrous results, but the main army continued its march unopposed,
crossed the Po, and pitched their camp at Ceneta,
in Venetia. Here they bewailed the loss of much of their booty on the
long route, and gave themselves up to a life of indolence and relaxation
in compensation for their protracted predatory exertions. Soon, however,
a pestilence invaded the camp, emanating doubtless from an ill-ordered
commissariat and defective sanitation, by which most of them perished,
including Leuthar himself.
As for Butilin and the moiety
of the host which remained with him, they also succumbed to disease
in considerable numbers. The plenteous supply of grapes in Campania
induced them to indulge too freely in a raw wine of their own concoction,
and hence many of them fell victims to a fatal flux from the bowels.
Since Butilin hoped to obtain a permanent
seat in the country, he decided to fortify himself in a strong position,
and await the development of events. At Casilinum, on the river Vulturnus,
he found a suitable spot, and there he fixed bis camp within an enclosure
strongly fenced by wagons and stakes. Their front was defended by the
river, and wooden towers which they built at the foot of an adjoining
bridge. His army amounted to about thirty thousand men, and he was also
expecting reinforcements which had been promised by his brother as soon
as he had deposited his treasures in a place of safety.
Narses now thought himself strong enough to meet the
diminished host of Franks in the field; and he therefore came down from
the north and encamped on the other side of the river, almost in sight
of the enemy. His whole force, however, did not exceed eighteen thousand
men, a great many of the barbarians, who had accompanied him into Italy,
having been dismissed to their homes shortly after the defeat of Totila.
He began hostilities by cutting off the foraging parties, on which the
Franks were dependent for supplies, a proceeding which harassed them
so much that they decided to end the molestation by a battle. When the
Roman general noticed that the enemy were preparing to attack him he disposed his forces in order, placing all his infantry in the centre,
and his cavalry on the wings. A certain number of his troops who were
armed only with missiles, bowmen, and slingers, he posted at the rear,
and he also concealed a detachment of horse in an adjacent wood. The
martial equipment of the army opposed to him was very incomplete. All
were infantry who bore no defensive armour, except shields and an occasional
helmet; and their only offensive weapons were a sword, a barbed javelin,
and a two-edged axe. They drew themselves up in the form of a wedge
with the apex in front, and when the order to charge was given they
drove down on the Roman centre with an impetus which carried them right
through the troops opposed to them, so that they seemed to be on the
way to capture the camp of their adversaries. Narses now signalled for
his wings to wheel round towards the centre, until they faced almost
the reverse way, and then to empty their quivers into the unprotected
backs of the enemy.
At the same time they were assailed
in front by a brigade of Herules who had not
arrived at their place in the centre before the sudden onslaught of
the Franks. The result of these tactics was the practical annihilation
of the barbarian host, along with whom Butilin himself perished. While most of them were slain and many driven into
the river, it is said that only five escaped death on the field of battle.
Of the Romans only eighty were killed, and these were
the men who stood in the ranks where they had to withstand the first
shock of the Frankish charge. Shortly after this victory Narses proceeded
to the reduction of Compsae, where the number
of recalcitrant Goths, who had taken asylum with Ragnaris,
now amounted to seven thousand.
The fortress was blockaded during the winter; and at
the beginning of spring (555), after their leader had been slain in
a chance encounter, the occupants surrendered unconditionally to the
eunuch, who sent them to Constantinople, so that their services might
be utilized for the future in the defence of the Empire.
After a war of twenty years Justinian at last felt himself
to be the veritable sovereign of Italy; and he drew up forthwith a comprehensive
Act for the future government of the country. The title of this document,
the legate to whose hand it was entrusted, and the place chosen for
its promulgation, were all worthy of its importance.
In the autumn of 554 the exiled Pope Vigilius quitted the Imperial capital to annunciate the Pragmatic
Sanction from the throne of St. Peter as the Emperor’s message of amity
to the Italian people. Yet the concessions made to the inhabitants by
this Constitution were, perhaps, not worthy of the name; and many who
benefited, through the adoption of a definite Imperial policy, did so
at the expense of others. Not altogether inequitably, however, as the
main object of the Emperor was to restore the status quo before the
accession to power of Totila. The Pragmatic Sanction, therefore, enacted a universal
reinstatement of, and restitution to those who were the losers by the
interior administration of that monarch.
In his efforts to consolidate his power he had made,
or winked at, sweeping transfers of real and personal estate to his
supporters from those who were disaffected to his cause. Now everyone
was called on to take his own again wherever he could fìnd it, without being troubled to make out his claim in conformity with
the niceties of legal practice, it being conceded that there might have
been an indefinite loss or destruction of instruments of title during
the general upset. Lands and cattle, houses and movables were to revert
to their original owners; slaves of both sexes, who had obtained or
assumed their freedom in the laxity of the times, were to return to
the hand of their masters; and even the marriage tie was declared to
be a nullity if contracted under the altered social conditions. Thus,
husbands and wives who relapsed into servitude could be repudiated by
their hymeneal partners; and even nuns, who had tasted or matrimony,
had the option of re-entering their convents.
On the other hand, Justinian did not encroach on the
liberty of his new subjects by depriving them of advantages which they
had formerly enjoyed; for instance, the provincial Rectors were to be
chosen locally by the prelates of the Church from among the Italians
themselves; and the salaries customarily paid at Rome for the promotion
of liberal studies, literature, rhetoric, law, and physic, were to be
continued to the professors. He also invited the Roman senators to visit
him at the Byzantine Court whenever it pleased them to do so; and enacted
that travellers might pass without let or hindrance between Italy and
the rest of the Empire. The usual formulas as to the efficient collection
of the taxes and against fiscal oppression were, of course, prominently
expressed in this Constitution; and in this department we may be sure
that the Gothic rule was often regretted.
CHAPTER XIV.RELIGION IN THE SIXTH CENTURY
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