READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE CHRISTIAN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TEUTONIC KINGDOMS 300-500CHAPTER XV.
THE KINGDOM OF ITALY UNDER ODOVACAR AND
THEODORIC
THE time between the years 476 and 526 is
a period of transition from the system of twin Empires which existed from the
time of Arcadius and Honorius to the separation of Italy from the rest of the
Empire. It is for this reason an interesting period. It marks the surrender by
Constantinople of a certain measure of autonomy to that portion of the Empire
which, finding that government under the faction set up after the death of
Theodosius was impossible, had ended by submission to rulers nominated from
Byzantium; it marks too, the progress achieved by the barbarians, who far from
wishing to destroy a state of things which had formerly been hostile, adapted
themselves to it readily when they had once risen to power, and showed
themselves as careful of its traditions as their predecessors; it marks
further, the preponderant part played in the affairs of the time by a growing
power—the Church—and the adaptability shown by her in dealing with kings who
were heretics and avowed followers of Arius.
The attempt to found an Italian kingdom
was destined to speedy failure. There were too many obstacles in the way of its
permanent establishment; Justinian it is true was to show himself capable of
giving effectual support to the claims of Byzantium and of making an end of the
Ostrogothic kingdom, but even his authority was powerless to bring about the
union of the two portions of the Roman Empire. Another barbarian race,
the Lombards, shared with the Papacy—the one
authority which emerged victorious from these struggles—the possession of a
country which, owing to the irreconcilable nature of the lay and religious
elements, was destined to recover only in modern times unity, peace and that
consciousness of a national existence which is the sole guarantee of permanence.
Cassiodorus writes in his chronicle: “In
the Consulate of Basiliscus and Armatus,
Orestes and his brother Paulus were slain by Odovacar; the latter took the
title of king, albeit he wore not the purple, nor assumed the insignia of
royalty”. We have here in the concise language of an annalist intent on telling
much in a few words, the history of a revolution which appears to us, at this
distance of time, to have been pregnant with consequences. The Emperor—that
Romulus Augustulus whose associated names have so often served to point a
moral—is not mentioned. It was left to Jordanes alone, a century later, to make
any reference to him. The seizure of the supreme power by leaders of barbarian
origin had become since the time of Ricimer a
recognised process; it is moreover Orestes who is attacked by Odovacar, and
Orestes was a simple patrician and in no sense clothed with the imperial
dignity. The Empire itself suffered no change, it was merely that one more
barbarian had come to the front. It was only when Odovacar was to set up
pretensions to independent and sovereign authority that annalists and chroniclers
were to accord him special mention on the ground that his claim was without
precedent. Up to that point his intervention was only one among many similar
events which occurred at this period.
Orestes was of Pannonian origin; he had
acted as secretary to Attila, and with Edeco had
taken a chief part in frustrating the conspiracy organized by Theodosius II
against the life of the king of the Huns. After the death of the barbarian
king, he entered the service of Anthemius, who
appointed him commander of the household troops. He took part—under what
circumstances we are ignorant—in the struggles which brought about the fall and
the murder of Anthemius, an emperor imposed from
Constantinople, the elevation and death of Olybrius,
the short-lived rule of the Burgundian Gundobad and
the elevation of Glycerius. For the second time
the East imposed an Augustus on the West, and Leo appointed Julius Nepos to
bear rule at Rome. Under his reign Orestes, who had been promoted to the rank
of commander-in-chief, was charged with the task of transferring Auvergne to
the Visigoth king Euric, to whom it had been
ceded by the Roman government.
How it came about that Orestes, instead of
leading his army to Gaul, led it against Ravenna and who induced him to attack
Nepos, we have no documentary evidence to show. Nepos fled and retired to
Salona, where he found his predecessor Glycerius,
whom he had appointed to be bishop of that place. Having achieved this success
Orestes proclaimed as the new Emperor Romulus Augustulus, his son by the
daughter of Count Romulus, a Roman noble (475). Even as Orestes had driven out
Nepos, another barbarian— Odovacar—was before long to drive out Orestes and his
son, and once more the contemporary documents afford no plausible explanation
of this fresh revolution.
Odovacar was a Rugian, the son of that Edeco,
Attila’s general and minister. Odovacar had followed his father’s colleague
into Italy where he occupied the humble position of spearman in the household
troop, from which he gradually rose to higher rank. Whether the ambition which
fired him was provoked by the spectacle of the internal conflicts in which he
took part, or whether by the prediction of St Severinus the Apostle of Noricum,
it is impossible to say. It is, however, certain at in the Lives of the Saints
there is a record to the effect that Severinus in his hermitage of Favianum was visited one
day by certain barbarians who asked for his benediction before going to seek
their fortunes in Italy, and one of them, scantily clad in the skins of beasts,
was of so lofty a stature that he was compelled to stoop in order to pass
through the low doorway of the cell. The monk observed the movement and
exclaimed: “Go, go forward into Italy. Today you are clothed in sorry skins but
ere long you shall distribute great rewards to many people”. The man whom
Severinus thus designated for supreme rule was Odovacar the son of Edeco. He appears to have enjoyed great popularity among
the mercenary troops, and profiting by their discontent at the failure of
Orestes to reward their devotion, he induced them to take active measures, and
gained to his side the barbarians of Liguria and the Trentino. Orestes declined
the combat offered by Odovacar in the plains of Lodi, retreated behind the
Lambro with the object of covering Pavia and shortly afterwards shut himself up
in that city. Odovacar laid siege to him there, and Pavia, which, as Ennodius tells us, had been pillaged by the soldiers
of Orestes, was sacked by the troops of Odovacar; Orestes was delivered up to
Odovacar, who had him put to death 8 August, 476. Odovacar next marched on
Ravenna which was defended by Paulus the brother of Orestes and where Romulus
had taken refuge. In a chance encounter which took place in a pine forest close
to the city Paulus was killed and Odovacar, occupied Ravenna, which had taken
the place of Rome as the favourite residence
of the Caesars of the West.
Romulus who had hidden himself and cast
off the fatal purple was brought before him. Odovacar taking pity on his youth
and moved by his beauty consented to spare his life. He moreover granted him a
revenue of 6000 gold solidi and assigned him as his residence the Lucullanum, a villa in Campania
hear Cape Misenum which
had been built by Marius and decorated by Lucullus.
In succession to three Emperors of the
West who still survived, Glycerius and
Nepos in Dalmatia and Romulus in Campania, Odovacar, styled by Jordanes King of
the Rugians, by
the Anonymus Valesii King of the Turcilingi, and by other
authorities Prince of the Sciri, now wielded
supreme power.
At this point certain questions arise as
to the nature of the authority which he exercised and to his relations with
Byzantium and the established powers in Italy. The documents which supply an
answer are scanty. The passages devoted to Odovacar give no details except such
as relate to the beginning and end of his reign; it is plain too, that the Latin
writers of the time were more intent on pleasing Theodoric than on recording
the facts of history.
Cassiodorus has been careful to point out
that Odovacar refused altogether to assume the imperial insignia and the purple
robe and was content with the ‘title of king’. These events took place when
Basiliscus having driven Zeno from power was reigning as Emperor of the East,
that is, at a moment of dynastic trouble in the other half of the Empire. The
possession of Ravenna, the exile of Romulus, and the death of Orestes did not
suffice to secure to Odovacar the lordship of Italy; it was only after his
formal entry into Rome and his tacit recognition by the Senate, that he could
look upon his authority as finally established.
He was not however satisfied with this,
but desired a formal appointment by the Emperor and the recognition of his
authority by Constantinople. A palace conspiracy which broke out in 477 having
replaced Zeno on the throne of Byzantium, the ex-sovereign Romulus Augustulus,
in spite of the fact that never having been formally recognized by the Emperor,
he had no legal claim to take such a step, sent certain Senators as an embassy
to Zeno. The representatives of the Senate were instructed to inform the
Emperor that Italy had no need of a separate ruler and that the autocrat of the
two divisions of the Empire sufficed as Emperor for both, that Odovacar
moreover, in virtue of his political capacity and military strength, was fully
competent to protect the interests of the Italian diocese, and under these
circumstances they prayed that Zeno would recognize the high qualities of
Odovacar by conferring on him the title of Patrician and by entrusting him with
the government of Italy.
The Emperor’s reply was truly diplomatic.
After severely censuring the Senate for the culpable indifference they had
shown with respect to the murder of Anthemius and
the expulsion of Nepos, two sovereigns who had been sent by the East to rule in
Italy, he declared to the ambassadors that it was their business to decide on the
course to be pursued. Certain members of the legation represented more
especially the interests of Odovacar, and to them the Emperor declared that he
fully approved of the conduct of the barbarian in adopting Roman manners, and
that he would forthwith bestow on him the well-merited title of Patrician if
Nepos had not already done so, and he gave them a letter for Odovacar in which
he granted him the dignity in question. Zeno in short had to recognize the fait
accompli, the more so as the ambassadors from Rome to Byzantium had there found
themselves in the presence of another mission sent from Dalmatia by Nepos to
beg for the deposed sovereign the assistance of the newly restored Emperor. He
however could only condole with him on his lot and point out its similarity to
that from which he himself had just escaped.
There is yet another proof of the tacit
recognition of Odovacar’s authority. In 480 Nepos was assassinated by the
Counts Victor and Ovida (or Odiva) and in 481, as if he had
been the legitimate heir of a predecessor whose death it was his duty to
avenge, Odovacar led an expedition against the murderers, defeated and
slew Ovida and
restored Dalmatia to the Italian diocese. More than this, Odovacar looked upon
himself as the formally appointed representative of Zeno, for at the time of
the revolt of Illus, he refused to aid the
latter, who had applied to him as well as to the kings of Persia and Armenia
for assistance against the Emperor. He had already exercised sovereign power in
the cession of Narbonne to the Visigoths of Euric and
in the conclusion of a treaty with Gaiseric in 477, by the terms of which the
king of the Vandals restored Sicily to the Italians, subject to the payment of
a tribute and retaining possession of a castle which he had built in the island.
This is all we know, till Theodoric
appears upon the scene, of the achievements of Odovacar; with respect to his
relations with the inhabitants of Italy we are better informed. In and after
482 the regular record of consuls, interrupted since 477, was resumed. The
Roman administration continued to work as in the past; there was a praetorian
praefect Pelagius who, like so many of his predecessors, contrived to exact
contributions on his own behalf as well as on behalf of the State. The relations
between Odovacar and the Senate were so intimate that together and in their
joint names they set up statues to Zeno in the city of Rome. Between the Church
and Odovacar, albeit he was an Arian, no difficulties arose, the Pope Simplicius (468-483) recognized
the authority of Odovacar, and the king preserved excellent relations with
Epiphanius, bishop of Pavia, and with St Severinus, whose requests he was
accustomed to treat with marked deference and respect. On the death of Simplicius in March 483, a
meeting of the Senate and clergy took place and on the proposition of the
praetorian prefect and patrician Basilius,
it was resolved that the election of a new pope should not take place without
previous consultation with the representative of King Odovacar, as he is styled
without addition in the report of the proceedings. Further, future popes were
bidden in the name of the king and under threat of anathema to refrain from
alienating the possessions of the Church.
The picture of Italy under the government
of Odovacar is difficult to trace. We have no Cassiodorus to preserve for us
the terms of the decrees which he signed. Our only source of information, the
works of Ennodius, is by no means free from
suspicion. If we are to believe the bishop of Pavia, it was the evil one in
person who inspired Odovacar with the ambition to reign, that he was a
destroyer—populator intestinus—
that his fall was a veritable relief and that Theodoric was a deliverer; in
short that Odovacar was a tyrant in the full sense of the word.
It must be remembered that it is the
panegyrist of Theodoric who speaks in these terms. The word tyrant which he
employs must be understood, as the Byzantine historians understood it, in its
Greek sense, that is, in the sense of an authority set up out of the ordinary
course. The specific charges of tyranny which are made against Odovacar are
unconvincing, especially the accusation that he distributed amongst his
soldiers a third of the land of Italy. We will deal later with the part played
by Theodoric.
It is not among these events that we must
look for the cause of the fall of Odovacar; the only possible explanation lies
in the fact that the Italians obeyed with alacrity, so soon as they were made
clear, the orders of Constantinople on domestic affairs—holding themselves free
to disobey them later on—and it was by the formal and specific authority of the
Emperor that Theodoric was sent into Italy.
Theodoric, an Amal by birth, was the son
of Theodemir king of the Goths and his
wife Erelieva. His
father had discharged the duties of a paid warden of the marches on the
northern frontiers of the Empire of the East. Theodoric having been sent to
Constantinople as a hostage spent his childhood and youth in that city; he
stood high in the favour of the Emperor Leo and became deeply imbued with Greek
civilization; his education cannot however have advanced very far, as when he
reigned in Italy he was unable to sign his name and was compelled therefore to
trace with his pen the first four letters cut out for the purpose in a sheet of
gold.
On the death of his father, having in his
turn become king, Theodoric established his headquarters in Moesia and found
himself involved in a chronic struggle with a Gothic chief Theodoric ‘the
Squinter’ (Theodoric Strabo), who aspired to the kingly dignity. To accomplish
this purpose Theodoric Strabo relied on the good will of the Eastern Emperors.
Having thrown in his lot with Basiliscus, he helped him to drive Zeno from the
throne and. received rewards in the shape of money and military rank; but when
Zeno returned to power it was Theodoric the Amal who in virtue of his fidelity
stood highest in the imperial favour. Adopted by the Emperor, loaded with
wealth and raised to patrician dignity, he enjoyed from 475 to 479 great
influence at the Byzantine Court. He was given the command of an expedition
sent to chastise Strabo who had risen in revolt, and found his rival encamped
in the Haemus; the men of each army were of kindred race and Theodoric the Amal
was compelled by his soldiers to form a coalition with the enemy. Till the
death of Strabo, which occurred in 481, the two Theodorics intrigued together against the
Emperor and with the Emperor against each other and there followed a series of
reconciliations and mutual betrayals. From that time forward Theodoric the Amal
became a formidable power, he held Dacia and Moesia and it was necessary to
treat him with respect. Zeno nominated him for Consul in 483 and in 484 he
filled that office; it was in this capacity that he subdued the rebels Illus and Leontius,
and on this ground he was granted in 486 the honor of a triumph and an equestrian statue in
one of the squares of Byzantium.
This accumulation of dignities conferred
by Zeno concealed the distrust which he felt, and which before long he made
manifest by sending Theodoric into Italy.
Jordanes maintains that it was Theodoric
himself who conceived the plan of the conquest of Italy and that in a long
speech addressed to the Emperor, he depicted the sufferings of his own nation
which was then quartered in Illyria and the advantages which would accrue to
Zeno in having as his vicegerent a son instead of a usurper, and a ruler who
would hold his kingdom by the imperial bounty. Certain authors such as
the Anonymus Valesii and Paulus Diaconus have transformed
this permission granted by the Emperor into a formal treaty giving to Theodoric
the assurance, says the former, that he should ‘reign’ in the place of
Odovacar, and recommending him, says the latter—after formally investing him
with the purple—to the good graces of the Senate. The explanation given by
Procopius and adopted by Jordanes in another passage is, however, more
plausible. Zeno, better pleased that Theodoric should go into Italy than that
he should remain close at hand and in the neighbourhood of Byzantium, sent him
to attack Odovacar; a similar method had been pursued with Widimir and Ataulf in order to remove them to a distance from
Rome. In any case it was in the name of the Emperor that Theodoric acted, and
he held his power by grant from him.
The title which he bore when he started
from Constantinople, that of Patrician, sufficed in his own opinion and that of
Zeno to legalize his power and to clothe him with the necessary authority: it
was the same rank as that borne by Odovacar. Later, like Odovacar, he aspired
to something higher and like him he was to fail in his attempts to obtain it.
Zeno had no intention of yielding up his rights over Italy, and recognized no
one other than himself as the lawful heir of Theodosius.
In 488 Theodoric crossed the frontier at
the head of his Goths; it was the first step in the conquest which took five
years to complete. Odovacar opposed him at the head of an army not less
formidable but less homogeneous than that of his adversary. He was defeated on
the Isonzo; he retreated on Verona, was once more beaten and fled to Ravenna.
Theodoric profited by this error of tactics to make himself master of Lombardy,
and Tufa, Odovacar’s lieutenant in that district, came over to his side. This
was merely a stratagem, as when Tufa was sent with a picked body of Goths to
attack Odovacar, he rejoined him
with his Ostrogoths at Faventia.
In 490 Odovacar again took the offensive; he sallied from Cremona, retook Milan
and shut up Theodoric in Pavia. The latter would have been destroyed if the
arrival of the Visigoths of Widimir,
and a diversion made by the Burgundians in Liguria, had not left him free to
rout Odovacar in a second battle on the Adda and to pursue him up to the walls
of Ravenna. In August 490 Theodoric camped in the pine forest which Odovacar
had occupied in his campaign against Orestes and a siege began which was to
last three years. In 491 Odovacar made a sortie in which, after a first
success, he was finally defeated and the siege became a blockade.
Theodoric, while keeping the enemy under
observation, proceeded to capture other towns and to form various alliances. He
seized Rimini and so destroyed the means of provisioning Ravenna, after which
he opened negotiations with the Italians.
Without asserting that Theodoric owed all
his success to the Church, the facts show pretty clearly that she afforded
him—Arian though he was, like Odovacar—valuable assistance. It was Bishop
Laurentius who opened for him the gates of Milan and it was he who, after the
treason of Tufa, held for him that important city; Epiphanius bishop of Pavia
acted in similar fashion. In a letter written in 492, Pope Gelasius takes
credit to himself for having resisted the orders of Odovacar, and finally it
was another bishop, John of Ravenna, who induced Odovacar to treat.
Theodoric like Clovis understood to the
full the advantages which would accrue to him from the good offices of the
Church. From his first arrival in Italy he showed in his attitude towards her
the greatest consideration and tact. He was lavish in promises, he took pains
to conciliate and he did not despise the use of flattery. Thus when he saw
Epiphanius for the first time he is said to have exclaimed: “Behold a man who
has not his peer in the East. To look upon him is a prize, to live beside him
security”. Again, he entrusts his mother and his sister to the care of the
bishop of Pavia, an act of high policy by which he added to the friendly
feelings already exhibited towards him. The conquest of Italy was practically
achieved between 490 and 493, and the various members of the nobility such as
Festus and Faustus Niger and the chief senators rallied to his cause; with the
capitulation of Odovacar, which took place at this latter date, the victory of
Theodoric was complete.
On 27 February 493, through the good
offices of John bishop of Ravenna who acted as official intermediary and
negotiated the terms of the treaty, an agreement was concluded between Odovacar
and Theodoric. It was arranged that the two kings should share the government
of Italy and should dwell together as brothers and consuls in the same palace
at Ravenna. Odovacar as a pledge of good faith handed over his son Thela to Theodoric, and on
5 March the latter made his state entry into Ravenna.
Theodoric broke the agreement by an act of
the basest treachery. A few days later he invited Odovacar, his son and his
chief officers to a banquet in that part of the palace known as the Lauretum. At the end of the
feast Theodoric rose, threw himself on Odovacar and slew him together with his
son. The chief officers of Theodoric’s army followed his example and massacred
the Rugian leaders
in the banqueting hall, while in the interior of the palace and as far as the
outskirts of Ravenna the Gothic soldiery attacked the soldiery of Odovacar. It
was clear that all acted on orders from headquarters.
Theodoric had now no rival in Italy: he
was not however equally successful in his attempts to obtain recognition as
king by the Emperor. He had already, during the first year of the siege of
Ravenna, dispatched Festus to Constantinople, hoping that his position as chief
of the Senate would favour the success of
his mission. On the completion of his conquest, Festus having in the meantime
failed, Theodoric sent a fresh envoy, Faustus Niger; the second enterprise was
however no less abortive than the first. The Anonymus Valesii tells us, indeed, that “peace
having been made” (had Theodoric then in the eyes of the Emperor been guilty of
disobedience?), “Anastasius sent back the royal
insignia which Odovacar had forwarded to Constantinople”; nowhere, however, do
we find it stated that the Emperor had authorized Theodoric to assume them. In
a letter written to Justinian to beg for his friendship, Athalaric records the benefits conferred by the Court
of Byzantium on his ancestors, he mentions adoption and the consulate and in
referring to the question of government he merely recalls that his grandfather
had been invested in Italy with the toga palmata, the ceremonial robe of clarissimi of
consuls who triumphed. However that may be, Theodoric took that which was not
conferred upon him. He abandoned military dress and assumed the royal mantle in
his capacity of “governor of the Goths and the Romans” (Jordanes); but
officially he was not, any more than Odovacar had been, king of Italy. Even his
panegyrist Ennodius who styles him “our
lord the king”, refers to the Italians as “his subjects”, accepts him as “lord
of Italy” and de facto “Imperator” and speaks of him as clothed with the imperialis auctoritas, nowhere calls
him king of Italy or king of the Romans. He was at once a Gothic king and a
Roman official: Jordanes has called him quasi Gothorum Romanorumque gubernator.
We have proof of this double position in
the two letters which he wrote to Anastasius and
which are quoted by Cassiodorus. In the first Theodoric expresses to the
Emperor the respect which he feels for the latter’s counsels and especially for
the advice which he had given him to show favour to the Senate. If he uses the
word regnum (a word which may also mean nothing more than government) it is to
tell the Emperor that his object is to imitate the latter’s system of
governing. In the second letter, his tone is that of a lieutenant who begs his
superior officer to approve the choice of a consul. It is the tone neither of a
rebel on the one hand, nor of an independent sovereign on the other.
As the Anonymus Valesii saw very clearly, Theodoric made
no attempt to found a new State: he ruled two nations together without seeking
to blend them, to allow one to absorb the other, or to make either subordinate.
The Goths retained their own rights, their own laws, and their own officials;
the Italians continued to be governed as they had been in the past, and the
rule of Theodoric offers us the spectacle of a government purely Roman in
character.
The Goths had established themselves
almost imperceptibly in Italy, as their king had been careful to maintain
continuity of government, and Theodoric appears in the pages of contemporary
writers as a sovereign whose habits and traditions were altogether Roman. The
works of Ennodius abound in evidence of
this: his Panegyric in particular, in which he represents Italy and Rome as
loud in their praise of Theodoric because he had revived the old tradition and
because he himself was a Roman prince whose ambition it was to place Italy I in
harmony with her past; this is the idea which dominates the pages of the famous
prosopopoeia of the Adige.
The government of Theodoric was then
wholly Roman; he published laws and appointed consuls. He maintained and
enforced Roman law and the edictum Theodorici was derived
exclusively from Roman sources. He even imitated the imperial policy of
encouraging barbarians in Italy, as when, for example, he established the
Alemanni as guardians of the frontier. He also had a Court, officials and an
administrative organization similar to that of Byzantium; he respected the
Senate, restored the consular office, and though himself an Arian intervened as
arbitrator, much as a Caesar would have done, in the affairs of the Church.
Theodoric had a royal palace at Ravenna and there held his Court (Aula)
surrounded by the chief men of Italy and his Gothic nobles. To enjoy interest
at Court was all-important. No career was open to the man who did not attend
there. “He was unknown to his master”, says Ennodius.
The Court was at once the home of good manners and the source of enlightenment,
the centre of state affairs and a school of administration for the younger men.
The Court and the service of the palatium
entailed certain functions nearly all of which were discharged by Romans: the comes
rerum privatarum (Apronianus held the office
in the time of Ennodius) had charge of the
privy purse, and in his double capacity of censor and magistrate was
responsible for the preservation of tombs and the administration of private
justice: the comes patrimonii (Julianus)
as steward of the royal domains, had under his orders the troublesome band of
farmers of the revenue (conductores)
and inspectors (chartularii);
he had moreover supreme charge of the royal commissariat. The palace with its
magnificent gardens and sumptuously decorated apartments was thronged with
Roman nobles who came there in search of preferment. It was guarded by picked
troops, and Ravenna was the head-quarters of an important military district
where the chief commands were filled by such men as Constantius, Agapitus and Honoratus.
There was not a Goth among them.
If from the Court we turn to the officials
we find again that they are all Romans. Among the ministers of the Court of
Theodoric, as would have been the case under the Roman administration, the most
important was the praetorian praefect Faustus, a personage of high consequence
who in right of his office enjoyed a considerable police authority and
extensive patronage; he was at the head of the postal administration, and to
him was the final appeal in all criminal matters which arose in the provinces.
His powers were almost legislative in character; in the forum his jurisdiction
was supreme and his person sacred. The comes sacrarum largitionum discharged the duties of
finance minister; the quaestor, Eugenetes,
was responsible in matters relating to jurisprudence and the framing of laws.
Then came the treasury counsel Marcellus, who filled a position coveted by the
rising members of the Bar, and who acted as a sort of attorney-general with
respect to the estates of intestates and unclaimed assets; next came the
magister officiorum and then the peraequator whose
business it was to adjust the incidence of taxation in the royal cities.
Finally the vicarius,
the deputy in each diocese of the praetorian praefect.
We have here only specified some of those
officials whose personal characters have been depicted for us in the letters
of Ennodius. If we complete—and with the help
of Cassiodorus it is possible to do so—the catalogue of government departments,
both administrative and provincial, which existed in Italy under Theodoric we
might well imagine it to be a record, not of the reign of a barbarian king, but
of the times of Valentinian and Honorius. It was the Romans alone who
struggled—and they did so with the greatest eagerness to obtain these posts.
Did, for example, the office of Treasury Counsel fall vacant, the whole
province was agitated by intrigues, and even bishops joined in the contest. The
crowd of candidates for a minor office such as peraequator was so great that Ennodius could not refrain from bantering Faustus on
the subject.
The cursus honorum of the principal officers of
state, during the forty years from Odovacar to the death of Theodoric, proves
that very little was altered in Italy during that period, except the
nationality of the ruler of the country. We find, for instance, that Faustus
was successively Consul, Quaestor, Patrician, and Praetorian Praefect, and was
moreover entrusted with missions to Anastasius;
while Liberius, who
had remained faithful to Odovacar, and had even refused to surrender Caesena to Theodoric, was
nevertheless employed by the latter sovereign, who made him a Patrician and
Praefect of Ligurian Gaul. Senarius, again, was employed first as a soldier,
and then as a diplomatist, and Count of the patrimonium; Agapitus, another official, obtained the rank of
Patrician, held a military appointment at Ravenna, and was in turn Consul,
Legate in the East, and Praefect of the city; while Eugenetes, whom Ennodius styles
‘the honour of Italy’, became a vir illustris, and was employed
as an advocate, a Quaestor, and as Master of the Offices; other examples might
also be quoted. The readiness of these Italian noblemen to serve successively
under both Odovacar and Theodoric arose from no feeling of indifference on
their part, but must rather be attributed to the fact that these rulers were in
no sense hostile to tradition, and because they continued the form of
administration established by the Roman Empire.
The Senate and the consulate, those two
institutions with which the whole history of the past had been so intimately
connected, especially engaged the attention of Theodoric. Ever since the time
of Honorius, the part played by the Senate in the government of Italy had been
growing more and more important. After the death of Libius Severus, it had asked Leo for an
emperor; while both Augustulus and Odovacar had entrusted it with a similar
mission to Zeno. In a well-known novel, Majorian may
be found thanking the Senate for his election, and promising to govern
according to its counsels; and when Anthemius was endeavouring to involve Ricimer in
the struggle that was to end so fatally for himself, he leant for support upon
the Curia. Examples such as these show that the Senate represented tradition;
it was the single authority that remained unchanged through every vicissitude,
and to it accordingly Theodoric at once made overtures. He entrusted a mission
of considerable importance to two Senators, Festus and Faustus, the former of
whom occupied the position of chief of the Senate; and on making his entry into
Rome his first visit was to the Senate-house. In fact, to make use of a saying
of his own, as recorded by his panegyrist, he adorned the crown of the Senate
with countless flowers. He enrolled a few Goths among its members, but he only
did this on rare occasions, for he preferred, as a rule, to recruit the
senatorial ranks from among the old aristocracy of the country. During his
reign men became senators in three ways; they might either be co-opted, or else
selected from a list of candidates nominated by the king, or they obtained the
rank because they had been advanced to some dignity which conferred the title
of ‘illustrious’. In Rome indeed the Senate at this time was the supreme power.
In conjunction with the praefect, it had the control of the municipal police;
it organized the games in the circus; and exercised authority over the city
schools and working men's corporations. Without abandoning any of its
legislative power it assumed the functions of the Aediles; nor could a royal
edict become law until it had received the senatorial sanction. The Varia of
Cassiodorus are full of letters from Theodoric to the Senate. Indeed, he never
made a nomination of any consequence, or filled up an important office, without
immediately communicating the fact to the senators in the most deferential terms,
and even soliciting their advice and approbation. A great deal of this
deference was no doubt a mere form, but to a certain extent it was also
sincere. The king's respect could hardly have been altogether feigned, for he
invariably addressed even those senators who held aloof from his government in
a kindly manner. Festus, for instance, although he remained in Rome and never
visited Ravenna, obtained the rank of Patrician, and received no less than four
letters from Theodoric, all expressed in the most flattering terms; while
Symmachus, another Patrician who refused to leave his native city, was favoured with a royal letter praising the buildings
which he had erected.
In spite of these friendly relations, some
opposition was aroused in the Curia by the question of the Arian schism; indeed
towards the end of the king’s reign, the behaviour of
the senators over this matter even provoked against him the hostility of
Byzantium. Not only was this opposition a source of serious trouble to
Theodoric, but it rendered him suspicious and cruel, and caused him to act with
great severity against some of the senatorial families, and several victims,
among whom Boethius was the most illustrious, were executed by his command.
In the opinion of Theodoric, the
consulship was as valuable as ever, though in reality it had lost a great deal
of its former importance. As Justinian justly observes in an Authenticus, this office had
originally been created to defend the State in time of war, but since the
emperors had undertaken the business of fighting, the consulship had
deteriorated into a means of distributing largess among the people. Under these
circumstances, candidates for the office were not very numerous. Ennodius mentions the small number of aspirants for
the consulship; while Marcian, in an official
communication, expresses his indignation at the stinginess of the men holding
this high office, and obliges them to contribute a hundred pounds weight of
gold, for the purpose of repairing the aqueducts. The consulship indeed at this
period had degenerated into a mere name. A formula of nomination, which has
been preserved for us by Cassiodorus, merely recalls the fame of this
magistracy in the past, and then goes on to point out that a consul's sole duty
is to be magnanimous, and not to be sparing with his money. However, the consul
has no more authority. “By the grace of God”, the formula declares, “we govern,
while your name dates the year. Your good fortune, indeed, is greater than that
of the prince himself, for though endowed with the highest honours, you have
been relieved of the burden of power”. On the other hand, as if to make up for
this loss of authority, the dress of a consul was sumptuous and magnificent; a
spreading cloak hung from his shoulders; he carried a sceptre in
his hand, and wore gilded shoes. In addition, he possessed the right of sitting
in a curule chair, and was allowed to make the seven processions in triumph
through Rome of which Justinian speaks in one of his novels.
Theodoric would have liked to restore the
consulship to a somewhat more respected position. An eloquent letter on the
subject of this magistracy was addressed by him to the Emperor Anastasius, and when Avienus, the son of Faustus, became consul in
501, Ennodius, who shared the opinion of his
master, wrote as follows: “If there are any ancient dignities which deserve
respect, if to be remembered after death is to be regarded as a great
happiness, if the foresight of our ancestors really created something so
excellent that by it humanity can triumph over time, it is certainly the
consulship, whose permanence has overcome old age, and put an end to
annihilation”. In his Panegyric, moreover, Ennodius praises
Theodoric because, during his reign, “the number of consuls exceeded the number
of candidates for the office in previous times”.
The main outlines of Theodoric’s
government have now been described: and it will be seen that they were all of
Roman origin. We must next inquire in what manner he administered this
government. A judicious policy and gentle means had been employed to supplant
Odovacar, and at the beginning of his reign he governed by similar methods. He
endeavoured to help the Italian officials with whom he had surrounded himself ,
and to whom he had entrusted the high offices of State, in their task of
pacifying and reorganizing the country. When Epiphanius described the miserable
plight of Liguria to him, and told him in moving terms how the land there lay
uncultivated owing to its husband-men having been carried away captive by the
Burgundians, the king replied: “There is gold in the treasury, and we will pay
their ransom, whatever it may be, either in money or by the sword”. He then
suggested that the bishop should himself undertake negotiations for ransoming
the captives. Epiphanius accepted this mission; and, the king having placed the
necessary funds at his disposal, triumphantly brought home six thousand
prisoners, whom he had either ransomed or whose liberty he had obtained by his
eloquent pleading in their behalf. The effect produced in Italy by such an act
of liberality, followed by so satisfactory a result, can be imagined. The
king’s aim, indeed, as he told Cassiodorus, was to restore the old power of
Italy, to re-establish a good government, and to extend the influence of that
Roman civilitas upon
which he desired to model his own administrations.
As ministers, he selected men capable of
inspiring confidence, such as Liberius,
for instance, whose official work had been attended with such excellent
results. In his opinion, fidelity to a vanquished patron was a virtue, nor was
he afraid of praising it; indeed, in his administration, the value of a post
given to a son would be in proportion to the deserts of the father. He
attracted young men capable of making good officers of state to his Court; in a
word, he acted like a sovereign who desires to be loved by his subjects, and at
the same time to give stability to his rule. As Ennodius remarks:
“No man was driven to despair of obtaining honours;
no man, however obscure, had to complain of a refusal to his demands provided
that they rested on substantial foundations; no man, in fact, ever came to the
king without receiving liberal gifts”; but at this point we detect the
panegyrist.
As we shall see before long, the end of
his reign differed from the beginning, but during the chief part of it, at any
rate, he governed with singular prudence. When Laurentius begged Theodoric to
pardon some rebellious subjects, the king answered him as follows: “Your duty
as a bishop obliges you to urge me to listen to the claims of mercy, but the
needs of an Empire in the making shut out gentleness and pity, and make
punishments a necessity”. Nevertheless, we find that he allowed some mitigation
to be made in the punishment of the culprits.
Theodoric could be a just as well as a
politic ruler, and he showed is sense of justice when he had to deal with
financial questions. At the request of Epiphanius, he remitted two-thirds of
the taxes for the current year to the inhabitants of Liguria; levying the
remaining third, it is said, “in order that the poverty of his treasury might
not impose fresh burdens on the Romans”. During his reign even the Goths were
obliged to submit to taxation, and he also made them respect the public
finances. At Adria, for instance, he forced them to give back what they had
taken from the fiscus; in Tuscany he ordered Gesila to make them pay the land tax. Moreover, if
in any province the servants of the Gothic Count or his deputy behaved
violently to the provincials, we find Severianus giving
information against them; while in Picenum and
Samnium we find him ordering his compatriots to bring grants made to the king
to Court, without keeping back any portion of them.
Nevertheless, contemporary chroniclers
have all declared that Theodoric, like Odovacar, distributed a third part of
the land in Italy among his soldiers. Their statement appears to have been
almost invariably accepted by later historians, who have repeated it one from
another. A theory, that the barbarians despoiled the conquered people of their
estates, is commonly believed, and indeed has hardly ever been contradicted.
But in addition to the fact that such a proceeding would certainly have led to
some disturbance, of which we can find no evidence in any part of the country,
another circumstance renders such a conclusion unreasonable. This is that
neither Odovacar's soldiers, nor Theodoric’s, were in reality sufficiently
numerous to occupy a third part of the land in Italy. Greek chronicles, it is
true, speak of the “tritimorion ton
argon”, Latin writers of the tertiae.
But what are we to understand by these expressions? Among the few scholars who
have attempted to dispute the current theory, some, like de Rozière, believe that the
chronicler's words denote an act of confiscation for which compensation was
made to the owners by a tax levied at the rate of one-third of the annual
value. Others, like Lécrivain,
consider that they mean a surrender of unappropriated land, in return for which
a tribute was exacted equal to a third of the annual produce. At no period, not
even during the agrarian troubles in the far away days of the Republic, had it
ever been the custom to eject legal proprietors from their estates. On the
contrary, on every occasion when land had been required for the purpose of
making grants to the plebeians, to veterans or praetorians, or even to
barbarians, it had invariably been taken from land owned by the community, that
is to say from the land around the temples, from unoccupied land, or from the
property of the Treasury. Whenever indeed a distribution of land took place, it
was made exclusively from the lands belonging to the Treasury, which, at
certain periods, multiplied exceedingly owing to escheated successions or
confiscations. In our own opinion, it was a third of these state lands, this ager publicus, that was assigned
to the barbarians during the reigns of Odovacar and Theodoric. In addition to
the fact that not one of the texts actually contradicts this theory, it appears
to be sufficiently proved by the following words, addressed by Ennodius to Liberius, when the latter was ordered to allot the
land of Liguria to the Goths: "Have you not enriched innumerable Goths
with liberal grants, and yet the Romans hardly seem to know what you have been
doing." Even the courtier-like Ennodius would
not have expressed himself in this manner in a private letter, or even in an
official communication, if private estates had been attacked for the benefit of
the conquerors.
During the early years of the Roman
Empire, the annual food supply of Italy had always been one of the government's
chief anxieties; and the writings of Cassiodorus constantly show us that
Theodoric was not free from a similar care. His orders to his officials,
however, on this subject, appear to have been attended with excellent results.
During his reign, according to the Anonymus,
sixty measures of wheat might be purchased for a solidus, and thirty amphorae
of wine might be had for a like sum. Paul the Deacon has remarked the joy with
which the Romans received Theodoric's order for an annual distribution of
twenty thousand measures of grain among the people. It was, moreover, with a
view to making the yearly food supply more secure, that the king caused the
seaports to be put into good repair; and we find him especially charging Sabiniacus to keep those in
the vicinity of Rome in good order.
At the same time, Theodoric gratified the
ruling passion of the Italians for games in the circus; and Ennodius, the Anonymus,
and Cassiodorus, are unanimous in praising him for reviving the gladiators.
From their pages, we learn that he provided shows and pantomimes, that he
endeavoured to shield the senators from the abusive jests of the comedians, and
that he brought charioteers from Milan for the Consul Felix. But, in the eyes
of his contemporaries, the most striking of all Theodoric characteristics seems
to have been his taste for monuments, for making improvements at Rome and
Ravenna, and for works of restoration of every kind. Such a taste, indeed, was
very remarkable in a barbarian. According to the Anonymus he was a great builder. At
Ravenna, the aqueducts were restored by his order; and the plan of the palace
which he constructed there has been preserved for a mosaic in Sant Apollinare Nuovo. At
Verona, also, he erected baths and an aqueduct. Cassiodorus tells us how the
king sought out skilled workers in marble to complete the Basilica of Hercules;
how he ordered the Patrician Symmachus to restore the theatre of Pompey; how he
bade Artemidorus rebuild
the walls of Rome, and how he desired Argolicus to repair the drains in that city.
We find him, moreover, requesting Festus to send any fallen marbles from
the Pincian Hill
to Ravenna; and giving a portico, or piece of ground surrounded by a colonnade,
to the Patrician Albinus, in order that he may build houses on it. Count Suna received directions to
collect broken pieces of marble, in order that they might be used in
wall-building; while the magistrates of a tributary town were required to send
to Ravenna columns, and any stones from ruins that had remained unused. In
fact, Ennodius' statement that “he rejuvenated
Rome and Italy in their hideous old age by amputating their mutilated members”,
is perfectly correct in spite of its rhetorical style. Not a few of his orders,
moreover, bear witness to a care for the future: the Goths of Dertona, for instance, and of
Castellum Verruca, were commanded to build fortifications; the citizens of
Arles were directed to repair the towers that were falling into decay upon
their walls; and the inhabitants of Feltre were ordered to build a wall round
their new city. He even looked forward to his own death, building that strange
mausoleum now become the Church of Santa Maria della Rotonda,
whose monolithic roof is still an object of wonder.
Ennodius also tells us that Theodoric encouraged a
revival of learning, nor is this eulogy by any means undeserved, for a real
literary renaissance did in fact take place during his reign. In addition to
Cassiodorus himself, to Ennodius, who was at
once an enthusiastic lover of literature, an orator, a poet, and a
letter-writer, and to Boethius, the most illustrious and popular writer of his
day, quite a number of other distinguished literary men flourished at that
time. Rusticus Helpidius, for instance, the king's physician, has
left a poem entitled the Blessings of Christ; Cornelius Maximianus wrote idyllic
poetry; while Arator of
Milan translated the Acts of the Apostles into two books of hexameters. The greatest
poet of this period was Venantius Fortunatus, who became bishop of Poitiers; and mention
should also be made of the lawyer Epiphanius, who wrote an abridgment of the
ecclesiastical histories of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret.
Theodoric was himself an Arian, yet he was
always ready to extend is protection o the
Catholic Church. Indeed, as we have already noticed, it was his policy to win
over the bishops of northern Italy. Accordingly he granted complete liberty of
worship to all Catholics; while so long as papal elections were quietly
conducted, as in the cases of Gelasius and Anastasius II,
he took no part in them. But should a pontifical or episcopal election lead to
disturbances of any kind, more especially if such disturbances were likely to
end in a schism, Theodoric at once intervened in them, in the character of
arbitrator or judge. For he claimed to be dominator rerum, that is to say the
sovereign, responsible for the maintenance of order in the State; the
successor, indeed, of the Caesars, who had always considered the task of
maintaining the integrity of the faith as their most especial prerogative. And
he assumed such a position at the time of the Laurentian schism.
In the year 498, two priests, Laurentius
and Symmachus, had been simultaneously elected by rival parties to the Roman
See. As neither prelate was willing to resign his claim to profit by the
election, the dispute was referred to the Gothic king, who decided that
whichever candidate had obtained a majority of votes should be proclaimed
bishop of Rome. This condition being fulfilled by Symmachus, he was accordingly
recognized as Pope, while Laurentius was given the bishopric of Nuceria as a compensation.
By this arrangement peace, it was believed, was again established; and, in the year
500, Theodoric paid a visit to Rome, where he was enthusiastically received by
Pope, Senate and people.
But the schism was by no means at an end.
On the contrary, the enemies of Symmachus lost no time in renewing their attack
with redoubled vigour; and accusations of adultery, of alienating church
property, and of celebrating Easter on the wrong date, were successively
brought against the Pope. Theodoric summoned the accused Pontiff to appear
before him, and when Symmachus refused to comply with this command, the case
was referred to an assembly, over which Peter of Altinum presided as visitor. No less than five
synods were convoked for the purpose of settling this question, and it was
eventually terminated by the acquittal and rehabilitation of Symmachus.
The debates held in these ecclesiastical
assemblies were very stormy. The partisans on both sides appear to have been
equally unwilling to give way, nor did they scruple to promote their cause by
exciting riots in the streets, or by slanderous libels. Both parties indeed
seem to have been mainly occupied with justifying themselves in Theodoric’s
eyes, in order that they might obtain his support; in fact, from the second
Synod onwards, the friends of Laurentius adopted the tactics of attempting to
prove that Symmachus and his adherents had disobeyed the orders of the king.
In every phase of this controversy, so
full of information respecting the relations of Church and State at that
period, Theodoric, it will be seen, occupies an important place. In Rome,
troubles were temporarily smoothed over by his presence, while his departure,
on the other hand, proved the signal for a fresh outbreak. Appeals for a
peaceful settlement, expressed with increasing vigour, and mingled with
reproofs of increasing sternness, fill his letters at this time. When the
hostile parties, unable to come to any decision on their own account, referred
the question to their sovereign, he reminded them of their duty in the
following severe words: “We order you to decide this matter which is of God,
and which we have confided to your care, as it seems good to you. Do not expect
any judgment from us, for it is your duty to settle this question”. Later, as a
verdict still failed to make its appearance, he writes again: “I order you to
obey the command of God”. And this time he was obeyed.
The fact that Theodoric was himself an
Arian never seems to have limited his influence in any way during this long
quarrel, so celebrated in the history of the Church. His prerogative as king
gave him a legitimate authority in ecclesiastical matters, nor does that
authority ever appear to have been called in question on the ground that he was
a heretic. On the contrary, we find him giving his sanction to canons and
decrees, exactly in the same manner as his predecessors had done in the days of
the dual Empire. But, though his words were sometimes haughty and peremptory,
he was careful not to impose his own will in any matters concerning faith or
discipline; indeed the most extreme action that can be laid to his charge is
the introduction into the Roman Synods of two Gothic functionaries, Gudila and Bedculphas, for the purpose of
seeing that his instructions were not neglected.
A similar wise impartiality, mingled with
firmness, distinguished his dealings with the clergy. When a priest named
Aurelianus was fraudulently deprived of a portion of his inheritance,
restitution was made to him by order of the king. He assisted the churches to
recover their endowments; he appreciated good priests, and did them honour.
Occasionally, indeed, he deposed a bishop for a time, on account of some action
having been brought against him, but he always had him reinstated in his see as
soon as he had proved his innocence. When he desired to give some compensation
to the inhabitants of a country over which his troops had marched, he placed
the matter in the hands of Bishop Severus, because that prelate was known to
estimate damages fairly; and when a dispute arose between the clergy and the
town of Sarsena he
ordered the case to be tried in the bishop's court, unless the prelate himself
should prefer to refer it to the king's tribunal. Finally, he made it a rule
that ecclesiastical cases were only to be tried before ecclesiastical judges.
The foreign policy of Theodoric was
conducted in the same masterly manner as his home government, or his dealings
with the Church. He appears to have exercised a kind of protectorate over the
barbarian tribes upon his frontiers, especially over those of the Arian
persuasion, nor did he hesitate to impose his will upon them, if necessary, by
force of arms. As he had only daughters he was obliged to consider the question
of his successor; and the marriages which he arranged for his children, or
other relations, were accordingly planned with a view to procuring political
alliances. Of his daughters the eldest, Arevagni, was married to Alaric, king of the
Visigoths; the second, Theudegotha,
became the wife of Sigismund, son of Gundobad,
king of the Burgundians; and the third, Amalasuntha, was given in marriage to one of
Theodoric’s own race, the Amal Eutharic.
Other alliances were formed by the marriage of his sister Amalafrida to Thrasamund, king of the Vandals,
and of another sister, Amalaberga,
to Hermanfred, king
of the Thuringians; while Theodoric himself wedded Childeric’s daughter Audefleda, the sister of Clovis.
These alliances were all made with the
definite object of extending Theodoric’s sphere of action; but when, as for
example in the case of the Franks, they failed to attain the end desired by the
king, they were never permitted to hamper schemes of an entirely contrary
nature.
A simple enumeration of Theodoric’s wars
is alone sufficient to prove the firmness of his will. When he found that
Noricum and Pannonia, two provinces on the Italian frontier, were not to be
trusted, he attacked and killed a chieftain of freebooters, named Mundo, in the
former province. As the Emperor Anastasius was
supporting Mundo, and had recently dispatched a fleet to plunder on the coasts
of Calabria and Apulia, such an attack gave Theodoric an opportunity of
asserting his independence. Moreover, in order to render his demonstration even
more effective, he collected a fleet of his own, which he sent to cruise in the
Adriatic. At the same time, he took Pannonia from the Gepid chief Trasaric, and thus effectually secured his
north-eastern frontiers. Those on the north-west next engaged his attention,
and here he protected the Alemanni from the attacks of Clovis, and eventually
settled them in the province of Rhaetia. Finally he took advantage of the wars
between the Franks and the Burgundians to secure the passes of the Graian Alps.
Theodoric had striven to prevent
hostilities from breaking out between the Franks and the Visigoths; but after
Alaric's death at the battle of Vouillé (507),
he found himself obliged to take the latter people under his own protection. In
the war that ensued, Ibbas,
one of his generals, defeated the eldest son of Clovis near Arles (511); took
possession of Provence; secured Septimania for
the Visigoths; and established Amalaric in
Spain. Among more distant nations we find the Esthonians on the shores of the
Baltic paying him a tribute of amber, while a deposed prince of Scandinavia
found a refuge at his Court.
History, as may be seen from these events,
fully corroborates the legends in which Theodoric is represented as a protector
of barbarian interests, and chief patron of the Teutonic races. In the
Nibelungenlied, for instance, we find him occupying a distinguished place under
the name of Dietrich of Bern (Theodoric of Verona). At the time of his death
his dominions included Italy, Sicily, Dalmatia, Noricum, the greater part of
what is now Hungary, the two Rhaetias (Tyrol
and the Grisons), Lower Germany as far north as Ulm, and Provence. Indeed, if
his supremacy over the Goths in Spain be also taken into account, it will be
seen that he had succeeded in re-establishing the ancient Western Empire for
his own benefit, with the exceptions of Africa, Britain, and two-thirds of Gaul.
So far as we have examined it, Theodoric’s
government has been found invariably broad-minded and liberal, but it was
destined to undergo a complete change during the latter years of his reign.
Whether this change was the consequence of a relapse into barbarism, or
whether, as seems more probable, it must be attributed to the persecution under
which the Arians were suffering in every part of the Empire, is not easy to
determine, for no definite information on this point is to be found in any of
the texts. In any case, however, there can be no doubt that it was the
religious question that produced this complete change of policy. On this point
the Anonymus is
perfectly clear; and if we disregard the severity and the cruelty of his punishments,
and at the same time make due allowance for intrigues of the Byzantine Court,
and of the Church itself, the precise nature of which cannot be determined, it
does not appear that the king was himself to blame.
During his reign we find the Jews enjoying
an extraordinary amount of protection; and, in one of his edicts, he testifies
with what obedience this people had accepted the legal position assigned to
them by the Roman law. His son-in-law Eutharic, however, appears to have been addicted to
persecution; and during his consulship the Christians of Ravenna made an
attempt to force all the Jews in their city to submit to the rite of baptism.
As the Jews refused to comply, the Christians flung them into the water, and in
spite of the king's decrees, and the orders of Bishop Peter, attacked and set
fire to the synagogues. Upon this, the Jews complained to the king at Verona,
who ordered the Christians to rebuild the synagogues at their own expense. This
command was carried out, but not before a certain amount of disturbance had
aroused Theodoric's suspicions; and in consequence the inhabitants of Ravenna
were forbidden to carry arms of any kind, even the smallest knife being
prohibited.
While these events were in progress, in
the year 523, the Emperor Justin proscribed Arianism throughout the Empire.
Such an action was a direct menace to the Goths, and Theodoric felt it very
acutely. The painful impression which it produced on him was probably much
increased by the fact that Symmachus' successors in the papal chair had not
been as tolerant as their predecessor; while one of them in particular, John I,
had shown a most bitter enmity towards heresy. We have no certain knowledge as
to whether the Senate was in sympathy with Theodoric on this occasion, or whether
it approved of Justin's measure, but the most probable theory seems to be that
the Curia was on Justin's side, and that Theodoric moreover was aware that this
was the case. At any rate, when the Senator Albinus was denounced by Cyprian
for carrying on intrigues with Byzantium the accusation found ready credence at
Court. The Anonymus declares,
besides, that the king was angry with the Romans; and it is difficult to see
why he should have been thus angry unless the Romans had been approving of
Justin's religious decrees. On the other hand, if any plot had existed in the
real sense of the term, it is not probable that such a man as Boethius, the
master of the offices, that is to say one of the chief officers of the Crown,
would have endeavoured to shield Albinus by saying, "Cyprian's accusation
is false, but if Albinus has written to Constantinople he has done so with my
consent and that of the whole Senate." He might perhaps have spoken in
such a manner for the purpose of expressing his own and his colleagues'
approval of a religious decree promulgated by a sovereign to whom they owed
allegiance. Boethius indeed had himself just published a work against Arianism,
entitled De Trinitate,
but it does not seem likely that he would have talked in this fashion had a
conspiracy really been brewing. In any case, he was at once thrown into prison;
and is said to have composed his work De Consolatione while in captivity. In the
end, after a brief trial, he was put to death with every refinement of cruelty,
while not long afterwards his father-in-law, Symmachus, met with a similar fate.
Theodoric, indeed, understood very well
that his whole life-work was likely to be compromised by this readiness on the
part of his subjects to accept Justin's edict. For what would become of his
authority if it became the fashion to criticize him on account of his faith? It
was in the hope of finding some remedy for this situation that he summoned Pope
John to Ravenna, and from thence dispatched him, accompanied by five bishops
and four senators, on an embassy to Constantinople. The king charged this
mission, among other things, with the task of requiring the Emperor to
reinstate the outcast Arians within the pale of the Church. But the Emperor,
though willing enough to make concessions on any other subject, would concede
nothing to the Arians, and the mission was forced to leave Constantinople
without obtaining any redress on this point. As for Pope John, he died almost
immediately after his return to Italy, and as his biographers tell us that he
worked numerous miracles after his death, we may conclude that this sectarian
quarrel must have been very acute. The failure of this embassy made Theodoric
so furious that he allowed an edict to be published during the consulship
of Olybrius by Symmachus, the chief
official in the Scholae, which stated that all Catholics were to be ejected
from their churches, on the seventh day of the Kalends of September. But on the
very day fixed upon by his minister for the execution of this act of banishment,
the king died, apparently from an attack of dysentery, in the year 526.
The Byzantine historian Procopius—though
he was himself an opponent of the king’s—has summed up Theodoric and his work
in the following verdict, which remains true in spite of the errors committed
by him during the latter years of his reign. “His manner of ruling over his
subjects was worthy of a great Emperor; for he maintained justice, made good
laws, protected his country from invasion, and gave proof of extraordinary
prudence and valour.”
Theodoric’ work was not destined to
survive his death. He left a daughter, Amalasuntha, the widow of Eutharic, who was not unlike him; and who now
became guardian to her son Athalaric, to whom
his grandfather had bequeathed the crown on his death-bed. She had been
educated entirely on Roman lines, and understood the value of her father's
work; but she had to reckon with the Goths. During Theodoric's lifetime this
people had done nothing to excite attention, and had lived side by side with
the Romans without showing any desire to obtain the upper hand; but under the
regency of a woman we find that they soon aspired to play a more important
part. Their first step was to take Athalaric from
the guardianship of his mother. He died, however, in 534. Amalasuntha was now
confronted once again with her former difficulties; and in the hope of
overcoming them, she attempted to share the crown with Theodoric's nephew Theodahad, a man of weak and
evil character. The new king's first care was to get rid of Amalasuntha, and he had her shut
up on an island, in the lake of Bolsena.
From her prison, she appealed to Justinian for assistance.
When this came to Theodahad’s ears, he had her strangled. But
her cry for help had not been unheeded. By the death of Anastasius the situation at Constantinople had been
completely changed; it was no longer the imperial policy to allow Italy to be
governed by a vassal, more especially if that vassal were an Arian; and
political and religious motives alike urged Justinian to intervene. A struggle
began accordingly which was to last from 536 to 553, which was to devastate
Italy with fire and bloodshed, and which ultimately opened the door for a new
invasion by the Lombards.
THE
EASTERN PROVINCES FROM ARCADIUS TO ANASTASIUS
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