MEDIEVAL HISTORY LIBRARY |
CHAPTER XII
PRIVATE LIFE IN THE IMPERIAL CIRCLE AND ITSDEPENDENCIES
WHILE the diplomacy of Justinian and the strategy of
Belisarius were apparently dictated only by motives of state policy
and military expediency, there were private influences at work, which
modified considerably the execution of their projects. The feminine
proclivities and prejudices of Theodora and Antonina on more than one
occasion diverted both men from the course which their better judgment
inclined them to follow. Distinctive as were the characters of the Emperor
and his most renowned general, in the quality of luxuriousness their
similarity was complete. In order that the power exercised by the women
in question over the destinies of the Empire at critical periods may
be realized, it is necessary to refer to some domestic incidents which
exemplify the extent of their conjugal gynarchy.
When Belisarius and his wife set out for Africa they were accompanied by a young Christian proselyte
named Theodosius, whom they had affiliated as their adopted son. Of
this youth Antonina became intensely enamoured, and succeeded in establishing
an illicit intercourse with him, which was obvious to every member of
the household except her too trusting husband. During their stay at
Carthage Belisarius entered fortuitously a remote chamber of the palace,
where he surprised his wife in company with Theodosius, whose dress
was disordered in a manner which indicated unmistakably the nature of
their commerce. The general was about to express himself indignantly,
when Antonina, with perfect assurance, explained: “I have just come
here with this young man in order to hide the most precious objects
in our share of the booty from the cupidity of the Emperor”. Her husband
stifled his suspicions and, blind to the evidence of his senses, retired
submissively, leaving the youth in the act of adjusting his clothing so as to accord with the requirements of decency.
This intrigue went on, therefore, indefinitely, but at
Syracuse a slave-girl, named Macedonia, vengeful or indignant, revealed
it in precise terms to Belisarius, and produced two of her fellow-slaves
to corroborate her evidence. The general was convinced,
and swore not to betray bis informants; and thereupon charged
some of his military intimates to make away with Theodosius. They, however,
more solicitous as to the favour of his wife, gave the paramour a warning
in consequence of which he fled to Ephesus. At the same time Antonina
managed to persuade her husband that she had been calumniated, with
the result that he surrendered the three witnesses to her discretion.
They perished by a cruel death at the hands of their mistress, who killed
them by torture, and had their bodies thrown into the sea.
In the next phase of the intrigue we see Antonina in
conflict with her son Photius, whose animosity
against Theodosius was such that the latter refused to return to the
embraces of his mistress unless he were expelled from the household.
This end was achieved by domestic persecution, and the paramour was
shortly afterwards reinstated with the connivance of Belisarius himself.
When the Master of Soldiers was sent into Mesopotamia against Chosroes,
Antonina, contrary to precedent, remained at Constantinople to enjoy
the society of her lover. Dreading, however, the interference of her
son, she plotted to encompass his death. In self-defence he brought
forward irrefragable evidence of the adulterous life that his mother
was leading, whereupon Belisarius engaged him by a solemn compact to
punish the enemy of his conjugal peace. With this design Antonina was
summoned to join her husband, and consequently, as had been foreseen,
Theodosius betook himself to his retreat at Ephesus, where he had attached
himself to a religious fraternity. Photius followed on and, having made himself master of his person, caused him
to be detained under strict surveillance.
It was in this year (541) that Chosroes undertook his
expedition into Lazica, thereby denuding Persia of his most effective
troops. For an enterprising Roman general the
way lay open through the richest part of Assyria to Ctesiphon, where
were congregated the captives and spoils of Antioch, within reach of
a strategical march. But Belisarius could not persuade himself to quit
the vicinity of the frontier, intent as he was on settling his relations
with his wife; and on hearing of her approach he retreated with his
forces to a position which enabled her to join him. Subsequent events
in this connection now become merged in occurrences which I have yet
to relate.
Chosroes, on his side simultaneously, was beset with
untoward circumstances. Owing to the barren nature of Lazica his army
was ill-provided with necessaries, and many of his soldiers had perished
through disease and want. A mutinous spirit became rife, and during
their retreat, hearing of the successes of Belisarius and Valerian,
they feared to be cut off in the rocky passes commanded by heights accessible
to a hostile force. The Shah was assailed with reproaches for having
entered unadvisedly on a war with a nation of so much political competency,
and he began to be alarmed for the security of his throne. In this strait
his good fortune had provided him with a remedy of a peculiar kind,
which emanated from the assumption and indiscretion of the Byzantine
Empress herself. Zaberganes, his most influential
adviser, had received a letter from Theodora, to whom he was personally
known, imploring him to incline his master to grant considerate terms
of peace. “Should you achieve this object”, she added, “I can promise
you a splendid recompense on the part of my husband, who is absolutely
dependent on my advice.” Having read this epistle Chosroes inquired
of his staff whether a state could be efficiently governed in which
a woman exercised such a preposterous ascendancy. They agreed unanimously
that such an adversary did not deserve to be considered seriously,
and acquitted the Shah of having acted rashly in embarking on
a war with them. Confident, therefore, in the imbecility of the Byzantines,
they resumed their march and soon arrived safely within the borders
of their own country.
So far in the course of my narrative we have often seen
the names of Theodora and Antonina coupled together, but merely in juxtaposition.
As I proceed in my attempt to elucidate the sequence of events we shall
arrive at a point of time when their lives actually
become mingled. Some retrogression, however, is necessary in
order to enter on the political track of Theodora nearer its beginning
before we can reach those entanglements in her secret machinations where
concerted action between the two women becomes apparent. I have already
alluded cursorily to the circumstances under which Queen Amalasuntha
met her death, but the most effective cause of that crime was one which
remained hidden from the public. In addition to her royal descent, which
was derived from a long line of kingly ancestors, the Gothic queen was
a woman of great personal charm, of cultivated mind, and of an age scarcely
exceeding that of the Eastern Empress. Justinian was much impressed
at the prospect of a princess of her rank placing herself under his
protection, and he prepared a temporary establishment at Epidamnus, in a style suitable to her dignity, in anticipation
of her being obliged to fly from the soil of Italy. Later on he expected to receive her at Constantinople, where he doubtless
intended that she should be housed permanently in one of the palaces
adjacent to the Court. This project, so grateful to the Emperor, was
viewed with more than equal abhorrence by his consort. That Amalasuntha,
pro-eminent by her birth, her talents, and her beauty, would receive
unremitting homage and admiration from Justinian and his nobles, and
eclipse the Empress in her own halls, might be foreseen as an inevitable
result of such an arrangement.
While this affair was under consideration, and might
at any moment be realized, another woman appeared on the scene, to whom
the rivalry of the Gothic queen was at once as odious as it threatened
to become to Theodora herself. Gudelina, the
wife of Theodahad, participating in her husband’s elevation, assumed
the attributes of royalty at the Court of Ravenna, where she immediately
found herself outshone by her brilliant cousin, whose prerogatives and
merits were so much superior to her own. An instinctive alliance between
the two women, the sting to whose vanities was projected from the same
source, was quickly formed. Letters passed between them, cautiously
expressed, but clear to the mind of each; and Theodora infused some
of her own determination into the mind of the nominal queen in the West.
The details of the plot which ensued are lost to us, and we can only
see that the daughter of Theodoric, probably without apprehensions as
regards those for whom she had been the author of fortune, was ensnared
by a coalition of her foes, and under some specious pretence deported
from her own court. By this consummation the Gothic clique might, perhaps,
have been appeased; but the Empress was no advocate of half measures,
and when Peter departed on bis embassy to Ravenna he was intrusted by
her with a secret mandate to encompass the death of Amalasuntha. Instead,
therefore, of acting on behalf of Justinian, he obeyed Theodora, and
through his insidious counsels the unfortunate princess perished forthwith
in her obscure prison.
Hitherto Theodora and Antonina had pursued their respective
courses at a distance from each other, but they were on convergent paths,
which after the outbreak of the Gothic war necessarily became united.
Although she had previously viewed her with dislike, the Empress now
found that the wife of Belisarius was the only congenial agent she could
employ for the furtherance of her underhand designs. Whether through
policy or prejudice, Theodora had always been a zealous partisan of
the Monophysite sect, and she was anxious
to wring some concessions from the Catholics, which should conduce to
the union of Christendom. To promote a willing instrument to the Papal
chair was the leading move towards this end; and as a first step Silverius had to be removed to make room for such a pliable
occupant.
After the capture of Rome the
opportunity occurred, and the commission was given to Antonina. By her
artifices the Pope was accused of collusion with the Goths and banished
to the lonely isle of Palmaria. There shortly
afterwards he ended his life at the hands of an assassin suborned by
the same intrigant. By her address and success on this occasion Antonina
conquered the favour of the Empress, who for the future deigned to make
use of her whenever some object had to be attained by means of bold
and deceitful assurance. Her skill in such diplomacy was soon to be
tested in a more delicate enterprise.
On his restoration to office after the Nika riot John
of Cappadocia attained to the summit of his power. He accumulated wealth
to a prodigious amount, and at length his mind became inflated by the
possession of vast resources to such an extent that he deemed nothing
less than the purple to be an adequate reward of his merit. He had recourse
to soothsayers, who predicted for him the highest fortune he could desire;
and he displayed himself to an expectant element of the populace in
dazzling apparel and surrounded by extraordinary state. To publish his
importance to the utmost he went on a progress through the Orient, where
he enthralled the vulgar by his magnificence, and appalled the sober-minded
by the unscrupulousness of his extortions. Having fulfilled his purpose
by this expedition, he returned to the capital, and made a triumphal
entry escorted, or rather borne along, by a pageant of female nudity,
thinly veiled by a diaphanous material which exposed more than it concealed
of their beauties.
Notwithstanding his singular talents and versatility
in devising expedients, there was one relationship in which John showed
himself to be obtuse and indiscreet in the highest degree. Overpowered
by his own conceit, and feeling that the Emperor reposed unlimited confidence
in him, he was unable to appreciate the fact that Theodora exercised
a boundless dominion over her husband. He, therefore, not only neglected
to pay his court to the Empress, but, contemning and resenting her interference
in affairs, met her with a hostile countenance, and even went so far
as to asperse her in conversation with Justinian. Becoming fully aware
of his sentiments towards her, Theodora soon came to hate him with an
intensity she displayed towards no other member of the bureaucracy.
His ruin was long uppermost in her thoughts, and she sought assiduously
for some opportunity of killing him without incurring the odium of the
deed. On his side the Cappadocian was keenly perceptive of the enmity
he had kindled against himself in the breast of his Imperial mistress,
and lived in continual dread of her murderous intent. Although
he was encompassed by thousands of private guards, such as no Praetorian
Praefect had ever before maintained, and his palace was paraded by wakeful
sentinels every hour of the day and night, he was unable to sleep without
rising from time to time to explore with his eye every passage leading
to his bedchamber, fearful lest some barbarian might be lurking in the
dark ready at any instant to deal him his death-blow.
Such was the posture of affairs in relation to John until
in the tenth year of his magistracy the inevitable catastrophe befell
him. It was in 541, when Belisarius left his wife behind him at Constantinople,
that Theodora unbosomed herself to her confidential friend, as that
lady had now become, as to her grievances against the insolent Praefect.
The wile-weaving Antonina immediately evolved a plot to deliver her
royal mistress from her pet aversion. Euphemia, an only child, was the
daughter of the Cappadocian, and for her he cherished a deep affection.
In sympathy with her father, the girl abhorred the Empress as the source
of his disquietude; and would have welcomed eagerly a change of sovereignty.
Intuitively conscious of her sentiments, Antonina approached Euphemia
with blandishments, and, by professing a fellow feeling, soon captured
her confidence. She bewailed the lot of her husband, whose magnificent
services had been ill-requited by Justinian, and simulated a demeanour
of hopeless discontent.
"But why, my dearest friend," exclaimed the
girl, "when you have the remedy in your own hands, the devotion
of the army, do you hesitate to redress your wrongs?"
"In the camp," replied the temptress, "we
could do nothing unless we had a powerful coadjutor in the capital;
but, were your father to join our party, we should doubtless effect
what God wills with the greatest case."
The Cappadocian was at once informed by his daughter
of all that had passed, and she expressed her belief in the sincerity
of Antonina with warm enthusiasm. He was captivated by the brilliant
suggestion, which seemed to him to signalize the providential fulfilment
of the prophecies on which he relied. He, therefore, instructed Euphemia
to prepare an interview between himself and Antonina for the following
day, but first to extract from her an oath, in the form most sacred
to the Christians, that she was acting in strict good faith. Antonina
perjured herself without hesitation in the most impressive manner,
but represented that an immediate colloquy in the city would
be perilous. She, however, was about to join her husband in the East,
and would halt on her way at their suburban residence, where a meeting
might take place without arousing suspicion. Hence it was agreed that
on a certain date John should repair by night to the place indicated,
where mutual pledges could be given and their
plans matured for execution. Justinian was now quietly informed that
John was engaged in a plot against the throne, whereupon he ordered
Narses, with a company of guards, to be present at the meeting, in concealment.
Should John be overheard to utter anything treasonable, they were to
rush in and cut him down on the spot. At the same time, such was his
attachment to the man, he sent a secret emissary warning him to have
no clandestine relations with Antonina. The caution was, however, disregarded
by the ambitious conspirator; the interview took place, and he expressed
his intentions clearly in the hearing of the eunuch. He was attacked
forthwith by the soldiers, but his own guards, who had also been lying
in wait, flew to his assistance, and in the scuffle which ensued he made his escape. Had he even now sought the presence
of the Emperor he could have saved his credit by some plausible explanation;
but he acknowledged his guilt by hastening to take sanctuary in a church,
and thus gave Theodora time to elaborate all her charges in due form.
A sentence of degradation and confiscation was now passed,
and John was banished to Cyzicus, where, under the Gospel name of Peter,
he was forcibly ordained as a cleric. A bishopric, however, he declined—criminals
of lofty rank in that age were punished by being made bishops—still
indulging himself in visions of restoration, and chose to remain in the unattached orders of the ministry. Shortly, in
fact, he began to live in his old style of splendour, for Justinian
had not exacted a rigorous surrender of all his property, whilst he
was also able to draw on large reserves which he had hidden away. Nevertheless further trials awaited him; an unpopular bishop of Cyzicus was murdered,
and he was accused of the deed. A commission of Senators repaired lo
the place, and, although his innocence was proved, old charges of peculation
were raked up, and in the end he was stripped
of everything, and turned out as a mendicant with a single garment.
He was then shipped to Alexandria, where he was forced to beg his bread; again under some pretence he was seized and
imprisoned for three years; yet, while living as a vagrant, he often
had the audacity to try and raise money by claiming arrearages from
defaulting debtors of the treasury.
We are now in a position lo take up the thread of our narrative as regards Belisarius, whom we left,
in a state of mental distraction over his wife's irregularities, in
Mesopotamia. As soon as he came up with her he placed her under guard in strict seclusion, divested of the honours
due to her rank, and began to prepare a process for the severance of
their relationship for the future. But he vacillated, postponing any
decisive step; and at length a will more powerful than his own intervened
to deprive him of al option in the matter. The news of her confidant's
disgrace was quickly carried to Theodora, and she resolved that her
right to do as she pleased should be vindicated in the most complete
and effectual manner. All her adversaries were arrested at a single
coup, and Belisarius was commanded peremptorily to make his peace with
his wife. Photius was seized and submitted to the torture, but he kept
his faith steadfastly, and refused to disclose where he had sequestered
Theodosius. Theodora, however, put her agents on his track, and in no
long-time succeeded in unearthing him from his enforced obscurity. Only
after several years of suffering did Photius escape from the prison he had been consigned to, and, making his way
by secret paths to Jerusalem, at last freed himself from persecution
by becoming a monk.
In the autumn (541) the Master of Soldiers and his wife
returned to Constantinople, where the reception accorded to them at
Court was in conformity with their respective merits in the eyes of
Theodora. At the first convenient moment the Empress received her friend
in private and addressed her: "Dearest Patrician Lady, a jewel
fell into my hands the other day, the like of which no one ever saw
before; but, if you wish to see it, I shall be pleased to show it to
you". Antonina begged effusively to be permitted to see the treasure;
when Theodora, passing her band behind a curtain which veiled the entrance
to another apartment, led out Theodosius and presented him to his mistress.
The raptures which ensued, and the expressions of gratitude bestowed
by Antonina on her benefactress, surpassed description; but the reunion
of the lovers was of brief duration. Theodosius, for whom the Empress
was meditating great honours, was shortly afterwards seized with a dysentery,
and disappeared from the ranks of the living.
Much deeper humiliation, however, was in store for Belisarius.
Next year, when he was absent with the army in the East, a report was
spread that he Emperor, resident in the plague-stricken capital, was
himself in the throes of a fatal attack of the malady. The question
of the throne becoming vacant was anxiously debated by the generals,
and some of them observed that, if the people of Constantinople proceeded
to elect a successor, he should not have the allegiance of the army.
Justinian, however, recovered unexpectedly, and the attitude adopted
by the military council was divulged at Court. Theodora was especially
enraged, as she assumed it to be part of her prerogative, in the case
of her husband's death, to nominate the next occupant of the throne.
When the generals returned to Constantinople for the season, she instituted
an inquiry, and chose to see in Belisarius, though without proof, the
leader of the culprits. She denounced him in the bitterest terms to
the Emperor, who was doubtless only too pleased at finding a pretext
to subdue the excessive popularity of his eminent subordinate. He was
forthwith deprived of his post of General of the East; his veteran guards,
who had followed him into so many battles, were divided into parcels
and assigned to various magnates of the Court, and his fortunes were
seized for the benefit of the fisc. As a mere private citizen he
might be seen daily walking dejectedly alone between bis house and the
Court, where he was viewed with neglect and disfavour, but feared to
absent himself lest a worse fate might befall him. In the meantime Antonina enjoyed the highest favour with the Empress, whilst the intercourse
between husband and wife was of the coldest description. For several
weeks the great general languished in the abject condition to which
he had been reduced, although it appeared that his wife, being possessed
of such powerful interest, should be regarded as the arbiter of his
fate. On a certain day he left the palace, where he had been treated
with such contumely, even by minions of low grade, that on the way home
he glanced around involuntarily, fearful lest assassins should be posted
in some obscurity with a mandate to terminate his life. On his arrival
he threw himself on his couch, despairing of any alleviation of his
lot, while in an adjacent chamber he heard his wife's footsteps as she
walked to and fro restlessly, under the influence
apparently of some painful agitation. It was already dark when some one from without was heard demanding admission, and shortly
an emissary was announced as the bearer of a despatch from the Empress.
Belisarius shuddered and drew himself up, anticipating
him to be the messenger of death. A letter was then presented to him,
which he opened and read as follows: "You are not ignorant, my
good sir, as to what your conduct has been towards us. But I am extremely
indebted to your wife, and for her sake I pardon you, and make her a
present of your life; look upon her as your saviour,
and remember that our favour towards you in future shall be strictly
measured by the amiability of your disposition towards her." A
sudden revulsion of feeling was produced by the perusal of these words;
he rushed to his wife and knelt before her. He kissed her feet and protested
that he owed her everything; for the future she might call him her slave,
and he should never again claim to control her as a husband.
After this crisis Theodora dealt definitely
with the fortune of Belisarius, which he had amassed during his
wars. His money and valuables were estimated to amount to six thousand
pounds of gold, and of this she made two portions, one half to be returned
to the owner, the other she presented to the Emperor. Jealous even of
so much wealth remaining in private hands, she now sought to cement
a marriage between a young relative of her own and Joannina,
the only child of Belisarius.
The general now petitioned to be reinstated in his military
rank, in order that he might march against the Persians, but Antonina
protested that she would never again visit a country where she had been
subjected to such outrageous treatment. He was appointed, therefore,
to the equivocal position of Count of the Stables, which left the rulers
of his destiny the option of employing him on any opportune service.
The sequels of two episodes related in a previous portion
of this work may form a fitting conclusion to the present chapter. The
first concerns the son of Theodora, who, as an infant, was apprehensively
removed from the custody of his mother. In the remote province of Arabia the child grew up to manhood under the tutelage of his
father, who watched with interest the career of his former mistress,
but without revealing to the youth the secret of his birth. Being on
his death-bed, however, he thought it right to communicate to him all
the details as to his origin. After his father's decease, therefore,
John set out for Constantinople, expecting that his mother would recognize
his claims and provide for him accordingly. On his arrival he introduced
himself among her servitors, stating plainly who he was, and awaited
her pleasure. But Theodora was alarmed lest the knowledge of this amour
and its result should come to the ears of Justinian, and determined that all trace of it should be effaced. Hence she received her son in strict privacy,
and at once commended him to the attention of certain satellites of
hers, who were generally regarded as the authors of unexplained disappearances.
What method of suppression was adopted remained uncertain, but, whether
alive or dead, nothing further was ever seen of this John.
When Artabanes returned to Constantinople (546) after
his signal exploits at Carthage, he was received with great applause,
and immediately promoted to the rank of Master of Soldiers at Court.
He was much exalted by his good fortune, and especially at the prospect
of marrying the Emperor's niece, Prejecta,
on whose account he had resigned his independent vicegerency of Africa. With the acquiescence of all parties, the brilliant nuptials
were being prepared, when, at the last moment, an unexpected obstacle
intervened to shatter his impassioned hopes. A wife of his youthful
days, long since repudiated and forgotten, still languished in his native
land. In the times of his humble fortune she was indifferent to the
relationship, but, learning by report of her husband’s eminent success
in the Byzantine service, she became eager to enjoy the benefit of his
advancement. Abandoning Armenia, therefore, she arrived opportunely
in the capital, and became informed of the projected union which would
exclude her for ever from his life. She presented herself at the Palace
with her sad story, and prayed for an audience
of the Empress. Theodora, who always evinced a lively desire to act
as the special providence of distressed women, readily granted her admission,
and resolved to interfere on her behalf. She did so with her usual effectivity,
the imminent marriage was broken off, and the unwilling Artabanes was
forced to establish his rejected consort in her conventional position
as the head of his household. As for Prejecta,
she was shortly consoled with another partner, and became the wife of
John, son of the luckless Pompeius, who had perished more than a dozen years before
in the Nika rebellion. But Artabanes was so exasperated that he was
induced by some malcontents of his own nation to join a conspiracy which
had for its object the assassination of Justinian and the elevation
of Germanus to the throne. The plot, however, was quickly betrayed,
and proved such a complete fiasco, that, after a commission of the Senate
had sat on the offenders and passed a nominal sentence, the Emperor
lost all interest in the matter. Even Artabanes within a twelvemonth
was lifted out of his disgrace and given an active appointment as Master
of the Forces in Thrace.
CHAPTER XIII.THE FINAL CONQUEST OF ITALY AND ITS ANNEXATION TO THE EMPIRE
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