READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE CHRISTIAN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TEUTONIC KINGDOMS 300-500CHAPTER I.CONSTANTINE AND HIS CITY
THE first
question that has to be considered in laying down the plan of a Medieval
History is, Where to begin? Where shall we draw the line that separates it from
Ancient History? Some would fix it at the death of Domitian, others at that of
Marcus. Some would come down to Constantine, to the death of Theodosius, to the
great barbarian invasion of 406, or to the end of the Western Empire in 476;
and others again would go on to Gregory I, or even as late as Charlemagne.
There is even something to be said for beginning with Augustus, or at the
destruction of Jerusalem, though perhaps these epochs are not seriously
proposed. However, they all have their advantages. If for example we consider
only the literary merit of the historians, we must draw the line after Tacitus;
and if we fix our eyes on the feud of Roman and barbarian, we cannot stop till
the coronation of Charlemagne. Curiously enough, the epoch usually laid down at
the end of the Western Empire in 476, is precisely the one for which there is
least to be said. We should do better than this by dividing in the middle of
the Gothic War (535-553). We have in quick succession the closing of the
Schools of Athens, the Code of Justinian, the great siege of Rome, and the
abolition of the consulship. The Rome which Belisarius delivered was still the
Rome of the Caesars, while the Rome which Narses entered sixteen years later is
already the Rome of the popes. It is the same in Gaul. The remains of the old
civilization still found under the sons of Clovis are mostly obliterated in the
next generation. Procopius witnessed as great a revolution as did Polybius.
But even this
would not be satisfactory. We cannot cut in two the Gothic War and the reign of
Justinian; and in any case we can draw no sharp division after Constantine
without ignoring the greatest power of the world that Eastern Roman Empire
which carried down the old Greco-Roman civilization almost to the end of the
Middle Ages. In truth, the precise beginning of Medieval History is as
indefinite as the precise beginning of the fog. There is no point between
Augustus and Charlemagne where we can say, “The old is finished, the new not
yet begun”. Choose where we will, medieval elements are traceable before it,
ancient elements after it. Thus Theodoric's government of Italy is on the old
lines, while the Frankish invasion of Gaul belongs to the new order. If in the
present work we begin with Constantine, we do not mean that there is any break
in history at this point, though we see important changes in the adoption of
Christianity and the fixing of the government in the form it retained for
centuries. The chief advantage of choosing this epoch is that as the medieval
elements were not strong before the fourth century, we shall be able to trace
nearly the whole of their growth without encroaching too much on Ancient
History. At the same time, we shall hold ourselves free to trace them back as
far as may be needful.
We begin with
an outline of Constantine’s life. Its significance we can discuss later.
Flavius Valerius Constantinus was born at Naissus in Dacia, about the year 274. His father
Constantius was already a man of some mark, though still in the lower stages of
the career which brought him to the purple. On his father’s side Constantius
belonged to the great families of Dardania, the hilly
province north of Macedonia, while his mother was a niece of the emperor
Claudius Gothicus. But Constantine’s own mother
Helena was a woman of low rank from Drepanum in
Bithynia, though there is no reason to doubt that she had the legal (and quite
moral) position of concubina or monargatic wife to Constantius.
Of
Constantine’s early years we know only that he had no learned education; and we
may presume from his hesitating Greek that he was brought up in Latin lands,
perhaps partly Dalmatia, where his father was at one time governor. In 293
Constantius was made Caesar, and practically master of Gaul, with the task
assigned him of recovering Britain from Carausius.
But as a condition of his elevation he was required to divorce Helena and marry
Theodora, a stepdaughter of Maximian. Constantine was
taken to the court of Diocletian, partly as a hostage for his father, and
partly with a view to a future place for him in the college of emperors. So he
went with Diocletian to Egypt in 296, and made acquaintance on the way with
Eusebius, the future historian and bishop of Caesarea. Next year he seems to
have seen service with Galerius against the Persians. About this time he must
have taken Minervina (most likely as a concubina), for her son Crispus was already a young
man in 317. Early in 303 the Great Persecution was begun with the demolition of
the church at Nicomedia: and there was a tall young officer looking on with
thoughts of his own, like Napoleon watching the riot of June 1792.
When Diocletian
and Maximian abdicated (1 May 305) it was generally
believed that Constantine would be one of the new Caesars. There was reason for
this belief. He had been betrothed to Fausta, the
daughter of Maximian, as far back as 293, when she
was a mere child; and daughters of emperors were not common enough to be thrown
away on outsiders. Moreover, money had recently been coined at Alexandria with
the inscription CONSTANTINUS CAESAR. But at the last moment Diocletian passed
him over. Perhaps he was over-persuaded by Galerius: more likely he was
reserving him to succeed his father in Gaul. After this, however, the court of
Galerius was no place for Constantine. Presently he managed to escape, and
joined his father at Boulogne. After a short campaign in Caledonia, Constantius
died at York (25 July 306) and the army hailed Constantine Augustus. He was a
good officer, the sons of Theodora were only boys, and the army of Britain
(always the most mutinous in the Empire) had no mind to wait for a new Caesar
from the East. Its chief mover was Crocus the Alemannic king (according Gregory
of Tours this Crocus overran Gaul and the north of Italy in the year 268): and
this would seem to be the first case of a barbarian king as a Roman general,
and also the first case of barbarian action in the election of an emperor.
Willingly or unwillingly, Galerius recognized Constantine, though only as Caesar.
It mattered little: he had the power, and the title came a couple of years
later.
Thus
Constantine succeeded his father in Gaul and Britain. We hear little of his
administration during the next six years (306-312), but we get a general impression
that he was a good ruler, and careful of his people. Such fighting as he had to
do was of the usual sort against the Franks, mostly inside the Rhine, and
against the Alemanni and the Bructeri beyond it. The
war however was merciless, for even heathen feeling was shocked when he gave
barbarian kings to the beasts, along with their followers by thousands at a
time. But Gaul had never recovered from the great invasions (254-285) and his
remissions of taxation gave no permanent relief to the public misery. In religion
he was of course heathen; but he grew more and more monotheistic, and the
Christians always counted him friendly like his father.
The last act of
Galerius (Apr. 311) was an edict of toleration for the Christians. It was not
encumbered with any ‘hard conditions’, but it was given on the heathen
principle that every god is entitled to the worship of his own people, whereas
the persecution hindered the Christians from rendering that worship. A few days
after this Galerius died. There were now four emperors. Constantine held Gaul
and Britain, Maxentius Italy, Spain and Africa, while Licinius (more properly Licinian) ruled Illyricum, Greece and
Thrace, and Maximin Daza (or Daia)
held everything beyond the Bosphorus. Their political alliances were partly
determined by their geographical position, Constantine reaching over Maxentius
to Licinius, while Maximin reached over Licinius to Maxentius; partly also by their relation to the
Christians, for this was now the immediate question of practical politics.
Constantine was friendly to them, and Licinius had
never been an active persecutor; whereas Maximin was a cruel and malicious
enemy, and Maxentius, standing as he did for Rome, could not but be hostile to
them. So Maxentius was to crush Constantine, and Maximin to deal with Licinius.
Constantine did
not wait to be crushed. Breaking up his camp at Colmar, he pushed rapidly
across the Alps. In a cavalry fight near Turin, the Gauls overcame the formidable cataphracti—horse and
rider clad in mail—of Maxentius. Then straight to Verona, where in Ruricius Pompeianus he found a
foeman worthy of his steel. Right well did Pompeianus defend Verona; and if he escaped from the siege, it was only to gather an army
for its relief. Then another great battle. Pompeianus was killed, Verona surrendered, and Constantine made straight for Rome.
Still Maxentius
gave no sign. He had baffled invasion twice before by sitting still in Rome,
and Constantine could not have besieged the city with far inferior forces. At
the last moment Maxentius came out a few miles, and offered battle (28 Oct.
312) at Saxa Rubra. A skillful flank march of Constantine forced him to fight with the Tiber behind him, and
the Mulvian bridge for his retreat. His Numidians
fled before the Gaulish cavalry, the Praetorian Guard
fell fighting where it stood, and the rest of the army was driven headlong
into the river. Maxentius perished in the waters, and Constantine was master of
the West.
This short
campaign, the most brilliant feat of arms since Aurelian’s time, was an epoch
for Constantine himself. To it belongs the story of the Shining Cross.
Somewhere between Colmar and Saxa Rubra he saw in the sky one afternoon a bright cross with the words Hoc Vince,
and the army saw it too; and in a dream that night Christ bade him take it for
his standard. So Constantine himself told Eusebius, and so Eusebius recorded it
in 338; and there is no reason to suspect either the one or the other of
deceit. The evidence of the army is in any case not worth much; but that of Lactantius in 314 and of the heathen Nazarius in 321 puts it beyond reasonable doubt that something of the sort did happen.
But we need not therefore set it down for a miracle. The cross observed may
very well have been a halo, such as Whymper saw when
he came down after the accident on the Matterhorn in 1865—three crosses for his
three lost companions. The rest is no more than can be accounted for by
Constantine’s imagination, inflamed as it must have been by the intense anxiety
of the unequal contest. Yet after all, the cross was not an exclusively
Christian symbol. The action was ambiguous, like most of Constantine’s actions
at this period of his life. He was quite clear about monotheism; but he was not
equally clear about the difference between Christ and the Unconquered Sun. The Gauls had fought of old beneath the Sun-god’s cross of
light: so while the Christians saw in the labarum the cross of Christ, the
heathens in the army would only be receiving an old standard back again. Such
was the origin of the Byzantine Labarum.
Constantine
remained two months in Rome, leaving in the first days of 313 for Milan, where
he gave his sister Constantia in marriage to Licinius,
and conferred with him on policy generally, and on the hostile attitude of
Maximin in particular. That ruler had not published the edict of Galerius, but
merely sent a circular to the officials that actual persecution was to be
stopped for the present. A few months later (about Nov. 311) he resumed it,
with less bloodshed and more statesmanship. It was far more skillfully planned than any that had gone before. Maximin’s endeavor was to stir up the municipalities against the Christians, to organize a rival
church of heathenism, and to give a definitely antichristian bias to education.
Even the fall of Maxentius had drawn from him only a rescript so full of
inconsistencies that neither heathens nor Christians could make head or tail of
it, except that Maximin was a prodigious liar. He even denied that there had
been any persecution during his reign. At all events, this was not the complete
change of policy needed to save him. Constantine and Licinius saw their advantage, and issued from Milan a new edict of toleration. Its text
is lost, but it went far beyond the edict of Galerius. For the first time in
history, the principle of universal toleration was officially laid down: that
every man has a right to choose his religion and to practice it in his own way
without any discouragement from the State. No doubt it was laid down as a
political move, for neither Constantine nor Licinius kept to it. Constantine tried to crush Donatists and Arians, and Licinius fell back even from toleration of Christians.
Still the old heathen principle, that no man may worship gods who are not on
the official list, was rejected for the present, and toleration became the
general law of the Empire, till the time of Theodosius.
The wedding
festivities were rudely interrupted by the news that Maximin had made a sudden
attack without waiting for the end of the winter, and met with brilliant
success, capturing Byzantium and pushing on towards Adrianople. There, however, Licinius met him with a very inferior force, and
completely routed him (30 April 313). Maximin fled to Nicomedia, and soon found
that it would be as much as he could do to hold the line of Mount Taurus. Now
he had no choice—the Christians were strong in Egypt and Syria, and must be
conciliated at any cost. So he issued a new edict, explaining that the
officials had committed many oppressions very painful to a benevolent ruler
like himself; and now, to make further mistakes impossible, he lets all men
know that everyone is free to practice whatever religion he pleases. Maximin
gives the same liberty as Constantine and Licinius—he
could not safely offer less—but he states no principle of toleration. However,
it was too late now. Maximin died in the summer, and Licinius issued a rescript carrying out the decisions of Milan, and restoring
confiscated property to “the corporation of the Christians”. It was published
at Nicomedia 13 June 313. Constantine sent out similar letters in the West.
The defeat of
Maximin ends the long contest of Church and State begun by Nero. Former
persecutions had died out of themselves, and even Gallienus had only restored the confiscated property; but now the Christians had gained
full legal recognition, of which they were never again deprived. Licinius and Julian might devise annoyances and connive at
outrages, and work the administration in a hostile spirit; but they never
ventured to revoke the Edict of Milan. Heathenism was still strong in its
associations with Greek philosophy and culture, with Roman law and social
order, and its moral character stood higher than it had done. It hardly looked
like a beaten enemy: yet such it was. Its last real hope was gone.
Religious peace
was assured, but the unity of the Empire was not yet restored. Constantine and Licinius were both ambitious, and war between them was only
a question of time. They were not unequally matched. If Constantine had the
victorious legions of Gaul, Licinius ruled the East
from the frontier of Armenia to that of Italy, so that he was master of the
Illyrian provinces, which furnished the best soldiers of the Roman army. Every
emperor from Claudius to Licinius himself was an
Illyrian, except Tacitus and Carus. And if
Constantine had done a splendid feat of arms, Licinius was a fine soldier too, and (with all his personal vices) not less careful of
his subjects.
Constantine was
called away from Milan by some incursions of the Franks, who kept him busy
during the summer of 313. When things were more settled, he proposed to
institute a middle domain for his other brother-in-law Bassianus.
The plan seems to have been that while Constantine gave him Italy, Licinius should give him Illyricum. Licinius frustrated it by engaging Bassianus in a plot for
which he was put to death, and then refused to give up to Constantine his agent
Senecio, the brother of Bassianus. This meant war.
Constantine took the offensive as he had done before, pushing into Pannonia
with no more than 20,000 men, and attacking Licinius where he was endeavoring to cover Sirmium.
He had 35,000 against him, but a hard-fought battle (8 Oct. 314) ended in a
complete victory, and the capture of Sirmium. Licinius fled towards Adrianople, deepening the quarrel on
the way by giving the rank of Caesar to his Illyrian general Valens. A new army
was collected; but another great battle on the Mardian plain was indecisive. Constantine won the victory; but Licinius and Valens were able to take up a threatening position in his rear at Beroea. So peace had to be made. First Valens was
sacrificed: then Licinius gave up Illyricum from the
Danube to the extremity of Greece, retaining in Europe only Thrace, which,
however, in those days reached north to the Danube. So things settled down.
Constantine returned to Rome in the summer to celebrate his Decennalia (25 July 315), and in 317 the succession was secured by the nomination of
Caesars, Crispus and Constantine the sons of Constantine, and Licinianus the son of Licinius.
Crispus was grown up, but Constantine was a baby.
The treaty
might be hollow, but it kept the peace for nearly eight years. If Constantine
was evidently the stronger, Licinius was still too
strong to be rashly attacked. So each went his own way. It soon appeared which
was the better statesman. Constantine drew nearer to the Christians, while Licinius drifted into persecution, devising annoyances
enough to make them enemies but not enough to make them harmless. Thus Constantine
allows manumission in church, judges the Donatists, closes the courts on
Sundays, loads the churches with gifts, and, at last (May 323), frees
Christians from all pagan ceremonies of state. Licinius drove the Christians from his court, forbade meetings of bishops, and meddled
vexatiously with their worship. This gave the war something of a religious
character; but its occasion was not religious. The Goths had been pretty quiet
since Aurelian had settled them in Dacia. It was not till 322 that Rausimod their king crossed the Danube on a foray.
Constantine drove them back, chased them beyond the Danube, slew Rausimod, and settled thousands of Gothic serfs in the
adjacent provinces. But in the pursuit he crossed the territory of Licinius; and this led to war. Constantine’s army was
130,000 strong, and his son Crispus had a fleet of 200 sail, in the Piraeus. Licinius awaited him with 160,000 men near Adrianople,
while his admiral Amandus was to hold the Hellespont
with 350 ships. There was no idea of using the fleet to take Constantine in the
rear.
After some
difficult maneuvers, Constantine won the first battle
(3 July 323), but was brought to a stop before the walls of Byzantium. Licinius was safe there, so long as he held the sea; so he
chose Martinianus his magister officiorum for
the new Augustus of the West. Meanwhile Constantine strengthened his fleet, and
his son Crispus completely defeated Amandus in the
Hellespont. Licinius left Byzantium to defend
itself—it had held out two years against Severus—and prepared to maintain the
Asiatic shore. Constantine left Byzantium on one side and landed near Chrysopolis, where he found the whole army of Licinius drawn up to meet him. The battle of Chrysopolis (18 or 20 Sept. 323) was decisive. Licinius fled to Nicomedia, and presently Constantia came
out to ask for her husband’s life. It was granted, and Constantine confirmed
his promise with an oath. Nevertheless Licinius was
put to death in October 325 on a charge of treasonable intrigue. The charge is
unlikely: but Licinius was quite capable of it, and
his execution does not seem to have estranged Constantia from her brother. But
perhaps the matter is best connected with the family tragedy which we shall
come to presently.
As a general,
Constantine ranks high among the emperors. Good soldiers as they mostly were,
none but Severus and Aurelian could boast of any such career of victory as had
brought Constantine from the shores of Britain to the banks of the Tiber and
the walls of Byzantium. But after the “crowning mercy” of Chrysopolis there was no more fighting, except with the Goths. The last fourteen years of
Constantine (323-337) were years of peace: and the first question which then
confronted him was the question of religion. By what road did he approach
Christianity, and how far did he come on the journey?
Two fables may
be dismissed at once—the heathen fable told by Zosimus in the fifth century,
that the Christians were complaisant when the philosophers refused to absolve
him for the murder of his son Crispus; and the papal fable of the eighth
century, that he was healed of leprosy by Pope Sylvester, and thereupon gave
him dominion over “the palace, the city of Rome, and the entire West”. These
legends are summarily refuted by the fact that he was baptized in 337, not as
they tell us in 326. Turning now to history, we have no reason to suppose that
he owed Christian impressions to his mother’s teaching: but Constantius was an
eclectic of the better sort, and a man of some culture; and his memory contrasted
well with that of his colleagues. Constantine seems to have begun where his
father left off, as more or less monotheistic and averse to idols, and more or
less friendly to the Christians; and all these things grew upon him. The last
of them may not have meant much at first, for even hostile emperors like
Severus and Diocletian had sense enough to keep on good terms with the
Christians when they were not prepared to crush them. But Constantine was drawn
to them personally as well as politically; by his pure life and genuine
humanity as well as by his shrewd statesmanship. Their lofty monotheism and
austere morals attracted the man, their strong organization arrested the
attention of the ruler.
When Diocletian
threw down his challenge to the Church, he made religion the urgent question of
the time: and the persecution was a visible failure before Constantine was well
settled in Gaul. If Diocletian had failed to crush the Church, others were not
likely to succeed. Maximin or Licinius might hark
back to the past; but Constantine saw clearly that the Empire would have to
make some sort of terms with the Church, so that the only question was how far
it would be needful or safe to go. For the moment, a little friendliness to the Gaulish bishops was enough to secure the good will of
the Christians all over the Empire. Then came the wars of 312-3, which forced
on Constantine and Licinius the championship of the
Christians, and made it plain good policy to give them full legal toleration. Licinius stopped there, and Constantine did not make up his
mind without anxiety. The God of the Christians had shown great power, and
might be the best protector; and in any case a firm alliance with their strong
hierarchy would not only remove a great danger, but give the very help which
the Empire needed. On the other hand, it was a serious thing to break with the
past and brave the terrors of heathen magic. Moreover, the Christians were a
minority even in the East, and he could not openly go over to them without risk
of a pagan reaction. So he moved cautiously. Christianity differed forsooth
very little from the better sort of heathenism. They could both be brought
under the broad shield of monotheism, if the heathens would give up their idols
and immoral worships, and the Christians would not insist too rudely on that
awkward doctrine of the deity of Christ. On these terms the lion of
Christianity might lie down with the lamb of Eclecticism, and the guileless
emperor would be the little child to lead them both.
The problem of
Church and State was new, for the old religion of Rome was never more than a
department of the State, and the worshippers of Isis and Mithras readily
“conformed to the ceremonies of the Roman people”. But when Christianity made a
practical distinction between Caesar's things and God's, the relation of Church
and State became a difficult question. Constantine handled it with great skill
and much success. He not only made the Christians thoroughly loyal, but won the
active support of the churches, and obtained such influence over the bishops
that they seemed almost willing to sink into a department of the State. But he
forgot one thing. The surface thought of his time, Christian as well as
heathen, tended to a vague monotheism which looked on Christ and the sun as
almost equally good symbols of the Supreme: and this obscured the deeper
conviction of the Christians that the deity of Christ is as essential as the
unity of God. After all, Christianity is not a monotheistic philosophy,
but a life in Christ.
When this conviction
asserted itself with overwhelming power at the Council of Nicaea, Constantine
gave way with a good grace. As it had been decided at Saxa Rubra that the Empire was to fight beneath the cross of God, so now it was
decided at Nicaea that the cross was to be the cross of Christ, and not the
Sun-god's cross of light.
We may doubt
whether Constantine took in the full meaning of the decision: but at any rate
it meant that the Christians refused to be included with others in a
monotheistic state religion. If the Empire was to have their full friendship,
it must become definitely Christian: and this is the goal to which Constantine
seems to have looked forward in his later years, though he can hardly have
hoped himself to reach it. Heathenism was still strong, and he continued to use
vague monotheistic language. Only in his last illness did he feel it safe to
throw off the mask and avow himself a Christian. “Let there be no ambiguity”,
said he, as he asked for baptism; and then he laid aside the purple, and passed
away in the white robe of a Christian neophyte (22 May 337).
This would seem
to be the general outline of Constantine’s religious life and policy. We can
now return to the morrow of Chrysopolis, and take it
more in detail. Now that he was master of the empire, he made his alliance with
the Christians as close as he could without abandoning the official neutrality
of his monotheism. His attitude is well shown by his coins. Mars and Genius
P. R. disappear after Saxa Rubra, or at latest by
317: Sol invictus by 315, or at any rate 313.
Coins of Jupiter Aug. seem to have been struck only for Licinius. Later on, the heathen inscriptions are replaced
by phrases as neutral as the cross itself, like Beata tranquillitas or Providentia Augg.,
or Instinctu Divinitatis on his triumphal arch at Rome. His laws keep pace with the coins. In form they
are mostly neutral; an increasing leaning to Christianity. Thus his edict for
the observance of “the venerable day of the Sun” only raised it to the rank of
the heathen feriae by closing the law-courts; and the Latin prayer he
imposed on the army (the first case known of prayer in an unknown tongue) is
quite indeterminate as between Christ and Jupiter. So too when before 316 he
sanctioned manumissions in churches, he was only taking a hint from the
manumissions in certain temples. Yet again, when in 313 (and by later law) he
exempted the clergy of the Catholic Church—not those of the sects—from the decurionate and other burdens, he gave them only the
privileges already enjoyed by some of the heathen priests and teachers. But the
relief was great enough to cause an ungodly rush for holy Orders, and with it
such a loss of taxpayers that in 320 he had to forbid the ordination of anyone
qualified for the curia of his city. None but the poor (and an occasional
official) could now be ordained, and those only to fill vacancies caused by
death. The second limitation may not have been enforced, but the first
remained. To save the revenue, the Church was debased at a stroke.
Other laws
however lean more to a side, like the edict of 319 which threatens to burn the
Jews if they stone “a convert to the worship of God”. No doubt such converts
needed protection; and Roman law was not squeamish about burning criminals, if
they were of low rank. Upon the whole, this policy of official neutrality and
personal favor powerfully stimulated the growth of
the churches. The time-servers were all Christians now, and Eusebius plainly
denounces their “unspeakable hypocrisy”. At least in later years, Constantine
himself had to rebuke bishops for flattery. The defeat of Licinius enabled him to come forward more openly as the patron of the churches. His
letter to the provincials of the Empire (Eusebius naturally gives the copy
which went to Palestine) begins with high praise of the confessors and strong
denunciation of the persecutors, whose wickedness is shown by their miserable
ends. They would have destroyed the republic, if the Divinity had not raised up
me, Constantine, from the far West of Britain to destroy them. He then restores
rank and property to all the victims of persecution in the islands, the mines,
and the houses of forced labor, and finishes with an
earnest exhortation to the worship of the one true God.
But after all,
the Church was not quite what Constantine wanted it to be. He was not more
attracted to it by its lofty monotheism than by the imposing unity which
promised new life to the weary State. For six hundred years the world had been
in quest of a universal religion. Stoicism was no more than a philosophy for
the few, the worship of the emperor was debased by officialism, and by this
time quite outworn, and even Mithraism had never shown such living power as
Christianity. Here then was something that could realize the religious side of
the Empire in a nobler form than Augustus or Hadrian had ever dreamed of—a
universal Church that could stand beside the universal Empire and worthily
support its labors for the peace and welfare of the
world. But for this purpose unity was essential. If the Church was divided
against itself, it could not help the Empire. Worse than this; it could hardly
be divided against itself without being also divided against the Empire. One of
the parties was likely to appeal to the emperor; and then he would have to
decide between them and make an enemy of the defeated party; and if he tried to
enforce his decision, they were likely to resist him as stubbornly as the whole
Church had resisted the heathen emperors. This would bring back the whole
difficulty of the persecutions, though possibly on a smaller scale. To put it
shortly, the Christians had a conscience in matters of religion, and sometimes
mistook self-will for conscience.
Constantine had
experience of Christian self-will in Africa soon after the defeat of Maxentius.
When Diocletian commanded the Christians to give up their sacred books, all
parties agreed in refusing to obey. Those who did obey were called traditores. But the officers did not always care
what books they took: might apocryphal books be given up? So thought Mensurius of Carthage, while others counted it apostasy to
give up any books at all. The controversy became acute at the death of Mensurius in 311, when Felix of Aptunga consecrated his successor Caecilian. But that right was claimed by Secundus of Tigisis, the senior
bishop of Numidia, who consecrated a rival bishop of Carthage. It was some time
before the Donatists (as they soon came to be called) got their position clear.
They held that Felix was a traditor, that the ministrations of a traditor are null and void, and that a church which has communion with a traditor is apostate.
After the
battle of Saxa Rubra Constantine sent money to
Caecilian for the clergy “of the catholic church”; and as he “had heard that
some evil-disposed persons were troubling them”, he directed Caecilian to refer
them to the civil authorities for punishment. Thereupon they appealed to him.
Constantine seems to have contemplated a small court to try the case—Miltiades
of Rome, three Gaulish bishops, and apparently the
archdeacon of Rome: but a small council met instead (Oct. 313) at Rome, which
pronounced for Caecilian. The Donatists were furious and appealed again. This
time Constantine summoned as many bishops as he could, directing each to bring
so many clergy and servants with him, and giving him power to use the state
post for the journey. So a large council of the Western churches met at Arles
in August 314 (possibly 315). Even Britain sent bishops from London, York, and
some other place. It destroyed the Donatist contention by deciding that Felix
was not a traditor. It also settled some more outstanding controversies,
in favor of the Roman date of Easter, and the Roman
custom of not repeating heretical baptism, if it had been given in the name of
the Trinity. The decisions were sent to Sylvester of Rome for circulation—not
for confirmation. We can recognize in Arles the pattern of the Nicene Council.
Still the Donatists were not satisfied. They asked the emperor to decide the
matter himself, and he unwillingly consented. He heard them at Milan (Nov. 316)
and once more decided against them. Then they turned round and said, “What
business has the emperor to meddle with the Church?”
A vigorous
persecution was begun, but with small success. A band of Donatist fanatics
called Circumcelliones ranged the country,
committing disorders and defying the authorities to make martyrs of them. Even
in 317 Constantine ordered that their outrages were not to be retaliated; and
when they sent him a message in 321 that they would in no way communicate with
“that scoundrel, his bishop”, he stopped the persecution as useless, and
frankly gave them toleration. Africa was fairly quiet for the rest of his
reign.
After the
defeat of Licinius, Constantine found several
disputes in the Eastern churches. The old Easter question was still unsettled,
the Meletian schism was dividing Egypt, and there was no knowing how far the
Arian controversy would spread. Unity must be restored at once, and that by the
old plan of calling a council. The churches had long been in the habit of
conferring together when difficulties arose. They could refuse to recognize an
unsatisfactory bishop; and cir. 269 a council
ventured to depose Paul of Samosata, and Aurelian had enforced its decision.
The weak point of this method was that rival councils could be got up, so that
every local quarrel had an excellent chance of becoming a general controversy.
Arianism in particular was setting council against council. Constantine
determined to go a step beyond these local meetings. As he had summoned the
Western bishops to Arles, so now he summoned all the bishops of Christendom. If
he could bring them to a decision, it was not likely to be disputed; and in any
case he could safely give it the force of law. An ecumenical council would be a
grand demonstration, not only of the unity of the Church, but of its close
alliance with the Empire. So he issued invitations to all Christian bishops to
meet him at Nicaea in Bithynia in the summer of 325, to make a final end of all
the disputes which rent the unity of Christendom. The programme was even wider
than at Arles; but the Donatists were not included in it. Constantine could let
sleeping dogs lie. We note here the choice of Nicaea for its auspicious
name—the city of victory—and convenience of access; and we see in it one of
many signs that the true centre of the Empire was settling down somewhere near
the Bosphorus.
We need not
closely analyze the imposing list of bishops present
from almost every province of the Empire, with a few from beyond its frontiers
in the Far East and North. Legend made them 318, the holy number of the cross
of Jesus. We have lists in sundry languages, none of them giving more than 221
names; but these are known to be incomplete. The actual number may have been
near 300. All the thirteen great dioceses of the Empire were represented except
Britain and Illyricum, though only single bishops came from Africa, Spain,
Gaul and Dacia. Only one came in person from Italy, though two presbyters
appeared for the bishop of Rome. So the vast majority came from the Eastern
provinces of the Empire. The outsiders were four or five—Theophilus bishop of
the Goths beyond the Danube, Cathirius (the name is
corrupt) of the Crimean Bosphorus, John the Persian, and Restates the Armenian,
the son of Gregory the Illuminator, with perhaps another Armenian bishop.
Eusebius is full of enthusiasm over his majestic roll of churches far and near,
from the extremity of Europe to the furthest ends of Asia. It was a day of
victory for both the Empire and the Church. The Empire had not only made peace
with the stubbornness of its enemies, but been accepted as its protector and
guide. The Church had won the greatest of all its victories when Galerius
issued his edict of toleration: but its mission to the whole world has never
been so vividly embodied as by that august assembly. We miss half the meaning
of the Council if we overlook the tremulous hope and joy of those first years
of worldwide victory. Athanasius shows it even more than Eusebius. One thing at
least was clear. The new world faced the old, and the spell of the Holy Roman
Empire had already begun to work.
Constantine
took up at once the position of a moderator. He began by burning unread the
budget of complaints against each other which the bishops had presented to him.
He then preached them a sermon on unity; and unity was his text all through. He
was much more anxious to make the decisions unanimous than to influence them
one way or another. His one object was to make an end of division in the churches.
So whatever pleased the bishops pleased the emperor too. Easter was fixed
according to the custom of Rome and Alexandria for the Sunday after the full
moon following the vernal equinox. It is the rule we have now, and though it
did not produce complete unity till the lunar cycle was quite settled, it
secured that Easter should come after the Passover, “for” said Constantine,
“how can we who are Christians keep the same day as those ungodly Jews?” The
Meletian schism was peacefully settled—to the disgust of Athanasius in later
years —by giving the Meletian clergy a status next to the orthodox, with a
right of succession if found worthy. So far well: but the condemnation of
Arianism may have been something of a trial to Constantine, who could not quite
see why they thought it worthwhile to be so hot on such a trifling question as
the deity of Christ. However that may be, Arianism was politically impossible.
He must have known already from Hosius that the West
would not accept it, and the first act of the Council meant its almost
unanimous rejection by the East. As soon as there was no doubt what the
decision would be, he did his best to make it quite unanimous. All the arts of
imperial persuasion were tried on the waverers, till in the end only two stubborn
recusants remained to be sent into exile.
To some wider
aspects of the Council we shall return hereafter. For the moment it may be
enough to say that Constantine had won a great success. He had not only got his
questions settled, but had himself taken a conspicuous part in settling them.
More than this. He had established formal relations, no longer with bishops or
groups of bishops, but with a great confederacy of churches. The churches had
long been tending to organize themselves on the lines of the Empire, as we see
in Cyprian’s theories; and now Constantine made the Church an alter ego of the
State, and gave it a concrete unity of the political sort which it never had
before. Henceforth the holy Catholic Church of the creeds was more and more
limited to the confederation of churches recognized by the State, so that it
only remained to compel all men to come into these, and prevent the formation
of any other religious communities. In this way the Church became much more
useful to the State, and also perhaps fitter to resist the shock of the
barbarian conquests which followed; but surely something was lost in freedom
and spirituality, and therefore also in practical morality.
We pass from
the Council of Nicaea to a family tragedy. So far Constantine may pass as
fairly merciful to the plotters of his own house. Maximian, Bassianus and Licinius had
all tried to assassinate him; and if he put to death Bassianus,
he had spared Maximian till he plotted again, and so
far he had spared Licinius also. But now in a few
months from Oct. 325 he puts to death not only Licinius but his own son Crispus and the younger Licinius,
then his own wife Fausta, and then a number of his
friends. The facts are certain, but their exact meaning is obscure. It must however
be noticed that the dynastic policy of Diocletian had given a new political
importance to members of an imperial family. The widows of the third century
emperors fall into obscurity; but the widow of Galerius is first sought in
marriage by Maximin Daza, then executed by Licinius, who also put to death the children of Severus, Daza and Galerius. Now Constantine married twice; and there
may well have been a bitter division in his family. Minervina was the mother of Crispus, whom we have seen greatly distinguishing himself in
the war with Licinius: and there seems no serious
doubt that the three younger sons were children of Fausta,
though the eldest of them was not born till 315-6, eight years after her
marriage. So we come to the questions we cannot answer. Was Constantine jealous
of his eldest son, or anxious to get him out of the way of the others? Or was
Crispus a plotter justly put to death? And how came Fausta to share his fate a little later? They are not likely to have been accomplices
in a plot or connected by a guilty passion, though the story of Zosimus is not
impossible, that she accused him falsely, and was herself put to death for it
when Helena convicted her. We have not material enough for any decided opinion.
The worst point, it may be, against Constantine is that he did not spare the
young Licinius. If he was the son
of Constantia, he cannot have been more than twelve years old. But the
allusions to him suggest that he was something more than a boy, and we know
that Constantia was on the best of terms with her brother when she died a
couple of years later. If Constantine suspected the elder Licinius,
the new sultanism would involve the younger in his fate; and if Crispus had
married Helena his daughter, suspicion might attach to him too. Fausta’s fate is the mystery. Or was Constantine more or
less out of his mind that winter, as despots occasionally are? One or two of
his laws may point that way, and the possibility may help to explain a good
deal.
Constantine
kept his Vicennalia at Rome in the summer of 316. It
was an unhappy visit, even if the domestic tragedy had already taken place.
Rome was the focus of heathenism, and of Roman pride. She expected to see her
sovereigns at the ceremonies, and to treat them with something of republican
familiarity. Constantine scandalized her with his Eastern pomp, and gave deep
offence to the senate and people by refusing to join the immemorial procession
of the knights of Rome to the Capitol. When he left the city in September, he
left it forever.
Rome indeed had
long ceased to be a good capital. It was too far from the frontier for military
purposes, too full of republican survivals for such sultans as the emperors had
now become, too heathen for Christian Caesars. So Maximian held his court at Milan, while Diocletian gradually shifted his chief resort
eastward from Sirmium to Nicomedia. There were many
signs now that the seat of empire ought it to be somewhere near the Bosphorus.
The chief dangers had always come from the Danube and the Euphrates; and about
the Bosphorus was the only point which commanded both. If these were watched by
the emperor himself, the Rhine might be left in charge of a Caesar. This was
much the best course for the present; but in the long run the problem was
insoluble. The Rhine and the Danube might be guarded, or the Danube and the
Euphrates; but now that Rome had failed to make a solid nation of her empire,
she could not permanently guard all three together. Sooner or later it must
come to a choice between the Rhine and the Euphrates, between Italy and Greece,
between Europe and Asia. Constantine is not likely to have seen clearly all
this; but he did see that he commanded more important countries from the
Bosphorus than he could from Rome or Milan. These might control the Latin West
and the upper Danube; but at the Bosphorus he had at his feet the Greek world
from Taurus to the Balkans, flanked northward by the warlike peoples of
Illyricum, and eastward by the great barbarian fringe of Egypt, Syria and
Armenia, reaching from the Caucasus to the cataracts of the Nile. Nobody could
yet foresee that by the seventh century nothing but the Greek world would be
left. But where precisely was the new capital to be placed? Nicomedia would
have been Diocletian's city, not Constantine's, and in any case it lay at the
far end of a gulf, some fifty miles from the main line of traffic. Constantine
may at one time have dreamed of his own birthplace Naissus,
or of Sardica, and at another he began buildings on
the site of Troy, before he fixed upon the matchless
position of Byzantium.
Europe and Asia
are separated by the broad expanses of the Euxine and Aegean seas, together
stretching nearly a thousand miles from the Crimea to the mountains of Crete,
and in ancient times almost fringed round with Greek cities. It is not all a
land of the vine and the olive, even in Aegean waters, for the Russian wind
sweeps over the whole region except in sheltered parts, as where Trebizond is
protected by the Caucasus, Philippi by the Rhodope, or Sparta by Taygetus, or where Ionia hides behind the Mysian Olympus and the Trojan Ida. For all its heat in
summer, Constantinople is quite as cold in winter as London, and the western
ports of the Black Sea are more cumbered with ice than the north of Norway. But
the Aegean and the Euxine are not a single broad sheet of water. In the narrows
between them the coasts of Europe and Asia draw so close together that we can
sail for more than two hundred miles in full view of both continents. Leaving
the warm South behind at Lesbos (Mitylene) we pass
from the Aegean to the Propontis (Marmora) by the
Hellespont (Dardanelles) a channel of some fifty miles in length to Gallipoli,
and two or three miles broad. Then a voyage of a hundred and forty miles
through the more open waters of the Propontis brings
us to the Bosphorus, which averages only three-quarters of a mile wide, and has
a winding course of sixteen miles from Byzantium to the Cyanean rocks at the
entrance of the Euxine. It follows that a city on the Propontis is protected north and south by the narrow passages of the Bosphorus and the
Dardanelles, and that all traffic between the Aegean and the Euxine must pass
its walls. Moreover, the Bosphorus lay more conveniently than the Dardanelles
for the passage from Europe to Asia. Thus two of the chief trade-routes of the
Roman world crossed each other at Byzantium.
The Megarians
may have had some idea of these things when they colonized Chalcedon (674 BC)
just outside the south end of the Bosphorus, on the Asiatic side of the Propontis. But the site of Chalcedon has no special
advantages, so that its founders became a proverb of blindness for overlooking
the superb position of Byzantium across the water, which was not occupied till
657 BC. At the south end of the Bosphorus, but on the European side, a
blunt triangle is formed by the Propontis and the
Golden Horn, a deep inlet of the Bosphorus running seven miles to the
north-west. On the rising ground between them was built the city of Byzantium.
Small as its extent was in Greek times, it played a great part in history. Its
command of the corn trade of the Euxine made it t one
of the most important strategic positions in the Greek world, so that its
capture by Alexander (it had repulsed Philip) was one of the chief steps of his
advance to empire. It formed an early alliance with the Romans, who freed it
from its perpetual trouble with the barbarians of Thrace, whom neither peace
nor war could keep quiet. Vespasian (73 AD) took away its privileges and
threw it into the province of Thrace. In the civil wars of Septimius Severus it
took the side of Pescennius Niger, and held out for
two years after Niger’s overthrow at Issus in 194. Severus destroyed its walls,
and made it a subject-village of Perinthus. Caracalla
made it a city again, but it was sacked afresh by Gallienus.
Meanwhile the Gothic Vikings came sailing past its ruined walls to spread
terror all over the Aegean and to the shores of Italy. Under the Illyrian
emperors it was fortified again. Even then it was taken first by Maximin Daza and then by Constantine in the first Licinian war, so that its full significance only came out
in the second. Licinius was a good general, and
pivoted the whole war upon it after his defeat at Adrianople. He might have
held his ground indefinitely, if the destruction of his fleet in the Hellespont
had not driven him from Byzantium.
The lesson was
not lost on Constantine. He began the work some time after his visit to Rome, and pushed it forward with impatience. He traced his
walls to form a base two and a half miles from the apex of the triangle.
Byzantium stood on a single hill, but he took in five, and his successors
counted seven, according to the number of the hills of Rome. The market-place
was on the second hill, where his camp had been during the siege. He erected
great buildings, and gathered works of art from all parts to adorn it. The
temples of Byzantium remained, though they were overshadowed by the great
cathedral of the Twelve Apostles. Some heathen ceremonies also were used, for
Constantinople was the last and greatest colony of Rome, and for centuries
retained the flavor of a Latin city. He gave it a
senate also, and brought over many of the senators of Rome to be senators of
the New Rome—for such was its official title, though it has always been known
as the City of Constantine. The Northmen called it simply Miklagard,
the Great City. It never had much in the way of amphitheatre or beast-fights:
amusement more Christian and humane was provided by a circus and horse-races.
Its corn largesses were like those of Rome, and the
corn of Egypt was diverted to its use, leaving that of Sicily and Africa for
Rome. The New Rome stood next to the Old in rank and dignity, being separated
from the province of Europa, and governed by proconsuls till it received a Praefectus Urbi like Rome in 359.
The bishop also soon shook off his dependence on Perinthus,
and was recognized as standing next to the bishop of Rome, “because
Constantinople is New Rome”, by the Council of 381. This ousted Alexandria from
the second place, and the jealousy thereupon arising had important
ecclesiastical consequences. The work was complete, so far as the hasty
building would allow, by the spring of 330: and 11 May of that year is the
official date for the foundation of Constantinople.
It would be
hard to overestimate the strength given to the Empire by the new capital. So
long as the Romans held the sea, the city was impregnable. If it was attacked
on one side, it could draw supplies from the other; and when it was attacked on
both sides in 628, Persians and Avars could not join
hands across the Bosphorus. Even when the command of the sea was lost, it still
remained a fortress of uncommon strength. So stood Constantinople for more than
a thousand years. Goths and Avars, Persians and
Saracens, Bulgarians and Russians, dashed in vain upon its walls, and even the
Turks failed more than once. It was often enough taken in civil war by help
from within; but no foreign enemy ever stormed its walls till the Fourth
Crusade (1204 AD). The Arian controversy first made it clear that the
heart of the Empire was in the Greek world, or more precisely in Asiatic Greece
between the Taurus and the Bosphorus; and of the Greek world Constantinople was
the natural capital. It did not however at once become the regular residence of
the emperors. Constantine himself died in a suburb of Nicomedia, Constantius
led a wandering life, Jovian never reached the city, and Valens in his later
years avoided it. Theodosius was the first emperor who made it his usual
residence. But the commercial supremacy of Constantinople was assured from the
outset. The centre of gravity of Asia Minor had shifted northward since the
first century, and the Bosphorus gave an easier passage to Europe than the
Aegean. So the roads which had converged on Ephesus now converged on
Constantinople. It dominated the Greek world; and the Greek world was the solid
part of the Empire which resisted all attacks for ages. The loss was more
apparent than real when first the Slavic lands were torn away, then Syria and
Egypt, and lastly Sicily and Italy. The Empire was never struck in a vital part
till the Seljuks rooted out Greek civilization from the highland of Asia Minor
in the eleventh century. Even after that it was still a conquering power under
the Comnenians and the house of Lascaris;
and its fate was never hopeless till its last firm ground in Asia was destroyed
by the corrupt and selfish policy of Michael Palaeologus.
We know little
of Constantine’s declining years, except that they were generally years of
peace. The civil wars were ended at Chrysopolis: now
there was not even a pretender, unless we count as such Calocerus the camel-driver in Cyprus, who was put down without much difficulty, and duly
burned in the market-place of Tarsus (335). If the Rhine was not entirely
quiet, the troubles there were not serious. The Jews, to be sure, were never
loyal, and the Christian Empire had already shown marked hostility to them. A
rising mentioned only by Chrysostom is most likely a legend: but there may have
been already some signs of the great outbreak put down by Ursicinus in 352. However, upon the whole there was peace. The old emperor never again
took the field in person. His last war was with the Goths; and that was
conducted by the younger Constantine.
On a broad
view, the legions of the Danube faced the Germans in its upper course and the
Goths lower down, with the Sarmatians between them; and each of these names
stands for sundry tribes and groups of tribes, whose mutual enmities were
diligently fostered by the policy of Rome. In 331 the Sarmatians and the
Vandals had somehow got mixed up together, and suffered a great defeat from the
Goths. They asked Constantine for help, and he was very willing to check the
growth of the Gothic power. Araric the Gothic king
replied by carrying the war into the Roman province of Moesia, from which he
was driven out with heavy loss. The younger Constantine gained a great victory
over him, 20 April 332; and when peace was made, the Goths returned to their
old position as servants and allies of Rome. But when the Sarmatians themselves
made inroads on Roman territory, Constantine left them to their fate. They were
soon in difficulties with Geberic the new Gothic
king, and with their own slaves the Limigantes, who
drove them out of their country. Some fled to the Quadi, some found refuge
among the Gothic tribes, but 300,000 of them sought shelter in the Empire, and
were given lands by Constantine, chiefly in Pannonia.
The most
interesting circumstance of the Gothic war is the help Constantine received
from Cherson, the last of the Greek republics. It
stood where Sebastopol now stands. The story is told only by Constantine
Porphyrogenitus (911-959), but the learned emperor was an excellent
antiquarian, and used original authorities. Cherson and the Goths were old enemies, Rome and Cherson old
allies. The republic decided for war, and its first magistrate Diogenes struck
a decisive blow by attacking the rear of the Goths. Cherson received a rich reward from Constantine, and remained in generally friendly
relations to the Empire till its annexation in 829, and even till its capture
by the Russians in 988.
The settlement
of the Danube was the last of Constantine’s great services to the Empire. The
Edict of Milan had removed the standing danger of Christian disaffection in the
East, the defeat of Licinius had put an end to the
civil wars, the reform of the administration completed Diocletian's work of
reducing the army to permanent obedience, the Council of Nicaea had secured the
active alliance of the Christian churches, the foundation of Constantinople
made the seat of power safe for centuries; and now the consolidation of the
northern frontier seemed to enlist all the most dangerous enemies of Rome in
her defense. The Empire gained three hundred thousand
settlers for the wastes of the Gothic march, and a firm peace of more than
thirty years with the greatest of the northern nations. Henceforth the Rhine
was guarded by the Franks, the Danube covered by the Goths, and the Euphrates
flanked by the Christian kingdom of Armenia. The Empire was already dangerously
dependent on barbarian help inside and outside its frontiers; but the Roman
peace never seemed more secure than when the skilful policy of Constantine had
formed its chief barbarian enemies into a covering ring of friendly client
states.
At all events,
the years of peace were not a time of healthful recovery. The Empire had not
gained strength in the long peace of the Antonines;
and it had gone a long way downhill since the second century. When Diocletian
came to the throne in 284, he found three great problems before him. The first
was military—how to stop the continual mutinies which cut off the emperors
before they could do their work. This he solved, though at the cost of leaving
behind him a period of civil war. The second was religious—how to deal with the
Christians. Diocletian went wrong on this, and left his mistake to be repaired
by Constantine. The third and hardest was mainly economic—to restore the dwindled
agriculture, commerce, and population of the Empire. On this Diocletian and
Constantine went wrong together. They not only failed to cure the evil, but
greatly increased it. Not much was gained by remitting taxes that could not be
paid, and settling barbarian colonists and barbarian serfs in the wasted
provinces. Serious economic difficulties have moral causes, and there was no
radical cure short of a complete change in the temper of society. Yet much
might have been done by a permanent reduction of taxation and a reform of its
incidence and of the methods of collection. Instead of this, the machinery of
government (and its expense) was greatly increased. The army had to be held in
check by courts of Oriental splendor and a vast
establishment of corrupt officials. We can see the growth of officialism even
in the language, if we compare the Latin words in Athanasius with those in the
New Testament. So heavier taxes had to be levied from a smaller and poorer
population. Taxation under the Empire had never been light; in the third
century it grew heavy, under Diocletian it was crushing, and in the later years
of Constantine the burden was further increased by the enormous expenditure
which built up the new capital like the city in a fairy tale. We are within
sight of the time when the whole policy of the government was dictated by dire
financial need. We have already reached a state of things like that we see in
Russia. The strongest of the emperors had never been able to put down
brigandage; and now disorder was rampant in the mountains, and often elsewhere.
The greats army of officials was all-powerful for oppression, and very little
controlled by the emperor. He might displace an official at a moment's notice,
or “deliver him to the avenging flames”; but he could enforce no reform against
the passive resistance of the officials and the landowners. So things drifted
on from bad to worse.
Nor can we
doubt that Constantine himself grew slacker in the years of peace. Nature had
richly gifted him with sound health, strong limbs, and a stately presence. His
energy was untiring, his observation keen, his decision quick. He was a
splendid soldier, and the best general since Aurelian. If he had no
learned education, he was not without interest in literature, and in practical
statesmanship he may fairly rank with Diocletian. His general humanity
stands out clear in his laws, for no emperor ever did more for the slave, the
foundling, and the oppressed. If he began by giving the Frankish kings to the
beasts, he went on (325) to forbid the games of the amphitheatre. In private
life he was chaste and sober, moderate and pleasant. Yet he was given to
raillery, and his nearest friends could not entirely trust him. His ambition
was great, and he was very susceptible to flattery. So freely was it ministered
to him that he sometimes had to check it himself: but in his later years he was
more or less influenced by unworthy favorites, as Ablabius and Sopater seem to have
been. No doubt his Christianity is of itself an offence to Zosimus and Julian,
so that we may discount their charges of sloth and luxury: but upon the whole,
the judgment of Eutropius would seem impartial, that
Constantine was a match for the best emperors in the early part of his reign,
and at its end no more than average.
As Constantine
had won the Empire, so now he had to dispose of it. Constantine, Constantius,
and Constans, his three sons by Fausta, were born in
316, 317, 320, and received the title of Caesar in 317, 323, 333. In 335 their
inheritance was marked out. Constantine was to have the Gaulish prefecture, Constantius the Eastern, Constans the Italian and Illyrian. This is
the partition actually made after the emperor's death; but for the present it
was complicated by some obscure transactions. Constantine had made honorable provision for his half-brothers Delmatius and Julius Constantius, the sons of Theodora, and
they never gave him political trouble. Of their sisters, he married Constantia
to Licinius, Anastasia to Bassianus and Nepotianus, of whom the second certainly was a
great Roman noble, so that they too suffered no disparagement. Basilina also, the wife of Julius Constantius and mother of
the emperor Julian, belonged to the great Anician family. Now Delmatius left two sons, Delmatius and Hanniballianus. Of
these Delmatius must have been a man of mark, for he
held the high office of magister militum, and
was made Caesar in 335, while Hanniballianus was the
husband of Constantine’s daughter Constantina. But
they had no proper claim to any share in the succession, and we do not know why
they were given it. There may have been parties in the palace; and if so, Ablabius is likely to have had a share in the matter, for
he was put to death along with them in the massacre which followed
Constantine's death. Certain it is that shares were carved out for them from
the inheritance of their cousins. Delmatius was to
have the Gothic march, while Hanniballianus received
Pontus, with the astonishing title of rex regum—for
no Roman since the Tarquins had ever borne the name
of king.
The strange
title may point to some design upon Armenia, for the whole Eastern Question of
the day was raised when Persia threatened war. Four emperors in the third
century had met with disaster on the Persian frontier, but there had been forty
years of peace since the victory of Galerius in 297. The Empire gained
Mesopotamia to the Aboras, and the five provinces
which covered the southern slopes of the Armenian mountains; and in Armenia
itself, Roman supremacy was fully recognized by its great king Tiridates (287-314). If his adoption of Christianity led to
a short war with Maximin Daza, it only drew Armenia
closer to Constantine. But if the royal house was Christian and leaned on Rome,
there was a large heathen party which looked to Persia: and Persia was an
aggressive power under Sapor II (309-380). A vigorous persecution of Christians
was carried on, and war with Rome was only a question of time. Sapor demanded
back the five provinces and attacked Mesopotamia, while a revolution in the
palace threw Armenia into his hands.
How much of
this was done during Constantine's lifetime is more than we can say: but at all
events a Persian war was plain in sight by the spring of 337; and a war with
Persia was too serious a matter to be left to Caesars like a Frankish foray or
a Gothic inroad, so the old emperor prepared to take the field in person. He
never set out. Constantine fell sick soon after Easter, and when the sickness
grew upon him, he took up his abode at Ancyrona, a
suburb of Nicomedia. As his end drew near, he received the imposition of hands,
for up to that time he had not been even a catechumen. He then applied for
baptism, explaining that he had hoped some day to
receive it in the waters of the Jordan like the Lord himself. After the
ceremony he laid aside the purple, and passed away in stainless white (22 May
337). As all his sons were absent, the government was carried on for three
months in the dead emperor's name, till they had made their arrangements, and
the soldiers had slaughtered almost the entire house of Theodora. Constantine
was buried on the spot he had himself marked out in the cathedral of the Twelve
Apostles in his own imperial city. The Greek Church still calls him isapostolos - an equal of the Apostles.
THE
REORGANIZATION OF THE EMPIRE
|