MEDIEVAL HISTORY LIBRARYTHE EASTERN ROMAN EMPIRE (717-1453)
CHAPTER II.FROM NICEPHORUS I TO THE FALL OF THE PHRYGIAN DYNASTY
THE
religious policy of the Empress Irene, the concentrated and impassioned
devotion which she brought to the task of restoring the cult of images, had
produced, in the external affairs of the Empire no less than in its internal
condition, results which were largely injurious. Her financial policy, and the
considerable remissions of taxation which she had agreed to in the hope of
assuring her popularity and of recommending herself to the Church, had had no
better success. An onerous task was thus laid upon her successor. He had to
remedy the penury of the exchequer, to restore order to a thoroughly disturbed
State, by prudent administration to extinguish the memories of a bitter and
lengthy quarrel, and thus to quiet its last convulsive heavings.
Such was the
end aimed at, it would seem, from the opening of his
reign by the new Emperor Nicephorus I (802-811). From his opponents he has met
with hardly better treatment than the great iconoclast sovereigns of the eighth
century. Theophanes declares “that on all occasions
he acted not after God but to be seen of men”, and that in all his actions “he
shamelessly violated the law”, and he severely blames his “unmeasured love of
money”, comparing him to “a new Ahaz, more
covetous than Phalaris and
Midas”. In reality, Nicephorus seems to have been a talented ruler, anxious to
fulfill his duties as Emperor, a man of moderate temper and comparatively
tolerant. He renounced the violent courses adopted by the Iconoclast Emperors,
but he was determined to maintain the great work of reform which they had
carried out. A good financier—before his accession he had filled the high
office of Logothete-General—he
desired to restore to the treasury the supplies of which it stood in need, and
in the very first year of his reign he reimposed the greater part of the taxes
imprudently abolished by Irene, until in 810 he had thought out a comprehensive
scheme of financial reorganization, of which the most essential feature was the
abrogation of the numerous fiscal exemptions enjoyed by Church property. A man
very jealous of his authority—he bitterly reproaches his predecessors with
having had no idea of the true methods of government—he would never tolerate
the idea of any person being more powerful than himself, and claimed to impose
his will upon the Church as well as the State. His adversaries the monks
forgave nothing of all this, and have depicted him as a tyrant, oppressive,
cruel, hypocritical, and debauched, while it is also plain that, owing to the
harshness of his financial measures, he was highly unpopular. “Everybody” as
one of his courtiers said to him, “exclaims against us, and if any misfortune
happens to us, there will be general rejoicing at our fall”. Yet it would
appear that Nicephorus, in difficult times, possessed some of the qualities
which go to make a good Emperor.
But passions
were still so much heated that everything offered matter for strife. The monks
were outraged at the idea of ecclesiastical property being liable to taxation
and Church tenants subject to a poll-tax. They vehemently denied the right of
the Emperor to interfere in religious matters. They even resisted the authority
of the Patriarch Nicephorus, who in 806 had succeeded Tarasius. Yet Nicephorus brought to his high office
a fervent zeal for the reform of the monasteries and the destruction of heresy,
and thus would have seemed likely to be acceptable to the monks of the Studion
and their fiery Abbot Theodore. But, before attaining to the patriarchate,
Nicephorus had been a layman, and it was necessary to confer all the grades of
holy orders on him at the same time. Consequently the Studite monks violently protested against his
election. But above all the new Patriarch was, like the Emperor, a statesman of
opportunist tendencies desirous of pacifying men’s minds and of obliterating
the traces of recent struggles. At the request of the Basileus,
he summoned a Synod to restore to his sacerdotal functions the priest Joseph,
who had formerly been excommunicated for having solemnized the marriage of the
Emperor Constantine VI and Theodote.
The assembly, despite the protests of Theodore of Studion, complied with the
Patriarch’s wish, and even restored Joseph to the dignity of Grand Oeconomus (807). This was
the origin of the long quarrel called the “Moechian controversy” (from mixós, adulterer, whence
the name Moechiani given
to the supporters of Joseph’s rehabilitation).
The monks of
the Studion resolutely withdrew from communion with the Patriarch. “We shall
endure everything”, Theodore declared, “death itself, rather than resume
communion with the Oeconomus and
his accomplices. As to the Patriarch, he makes us no answer, he refuses to hear
us, he is, in everything, at the Emperor’s orders. For
my part, I will not betray the truth despite the threat of exile, despite the
gleaming sword, despite the kindled faggots”. And indeed the Emperor quickly
became impatient of an opposition which disturbed the peace of the Church
afresh, and which irritated him the more keenly in that it claimed to subject
the conduct and marriage of an Emperor to canonical rules. Another Synod, held
in 809, reiterated therefore the lawfulness. of Constantine VI's espousals, declared that the Emperors were above the law of
the Church, and pronounced sentence of excommunication upon all gainsayers. The
old Abbot Plato, Theodore of Studion, and his brother Joseph, Archbishop of
Thessalonica, were banished to the Princes Islands; the seven hundred monks of
the Studion, who vehemently refused to go over to the side of the temporal
power, were scattered, imprisoned, maltreated, driven into exile. For two whole years persecution raged. The
fact was, as Theodore of Studion truly wrote, “it was no longer a mere question
of ecclesiastical discipline that was at stake. A breach has been made in faith
and morals and in the Gospel itself”. And in opposition to the Emperor’s claim
to set himself above the laws of the Church and to make his will prevail,
Theodore boldly appealed to Rome, and to secure the liberty of the Eastern
Church he invoked the judgment of the Pope, “the first of pastors”, as he
wrote, “and our apostolic head”.
Thus,
despite the good intentions of the Emperor and his Patriarch, passions flared
up afresh; and such was the fanaticism of the devout party that they ignored
the grave dangers threatening the Empire, and even looked upon the death of the
Emperor, who fell fighting against the Bulgars on the
disastrous day of 25 July 811, as a just punishment from God upon their cruel
foe.
Michael I Rangabé
Michael
I Rangabé (811-813)
succeeded his father-in-law Nicephorus, after the short reign of Stauracius, the son of the late Emperor. He was a prince
after the Church’s heart, “pious and most orthodox”, writes Theophanes;
his chief anxiety was to repair all the injustices of the preceding reign, “on
account of which”, adds Theophanes, “Nicephorus had
miserably perished”. He recalled the Studites from exile, caused the Oeconomus Joseph to be
condemned anew, and at this cost succeeded in reconciling the monks with the
Patriarch. He showed himself a supporter of images, anxious to come to an
understanding with Rome, and firmly opposed to the iconoclasts. Such a policy,
at a time when the Bulgarian war was raging and the terrible Khan Krum
threatening Constantinople, was grossly imprudent. The iconoclasts, indeed,
were still strong in the capital, where Constantine V had settled numerous
colonists from the East, and where the Paulicians, in
particular, occupied an important place; besides which almost the whole army
had remained faithful to the memory of the illustrious Emperors who had
formerly led it to victory. Thus Constantinople was in a state of tense
excitement; plots were brewing against Michael; noisy demonstrations took place
at the tomb of Constantine V. When in June 813 Michael I was defeated by the Bulgars at Versinicia,
near Hadrianople, the
iconoclasts considered the opportunity favorable for dethroning the Emperor.
The army proclaimed one of its generals, Leo the Armenian, Strategus of the Anatolics,
begging him “to watch over the safety of the State, and to defend the Christian
Empire”. On 11 July the usurper entered Constantinople. His accession was to be
the signal for a supreme effort to impose iconoclast ideas upon the Empire.
Leo V the Armenian
The new
Emperor, who was of Eastern origin, was, although secretly, an iconoclast at
heart. But so great was the peril from outside—the Bulgars were besieging Constantinople—that he was at first obliged to cloak his
tendencies, and to sign a confession of faith by which he pledged himself to
defend the orthodox religion and the veneration of the sacred icons. But when
he had inflicted a severe defeat on the barbarians at Mesembria (813), and when the death (14 April
814) of the terrible Khan Krum had led to the conclusion of a truce for thirty
years with his successor Omurtag,
Leo no longer hesitated to make his real feelings known. Drawing his
inspiration from the same ideas as those on which the resolutions of Leo III
had been based, he declared that if the Christians were always beaten by the
pagans, “it is because they prostrate themselves before images. The Emperors
who adored them” he proceeded, “have died in exile or in battle. Only those who
destroyed them have died on the throne and been buried in the Church of the
Holy Apostles. It is their example that I shall follow”. He therefore ordered
the learned John Hylilas,
surnamed the Grammarian, to collect the authorities favoring the condemnation
of images, and in particular to draw from the archives of the churches the acts
of the Council of 753. On the other hand, he attempted to win over the
Patriarch Nicephorus to his views, and, with the hope of shaking the resistance
of the party opposed to him, he summoned a conference at the imperial palace,
where under his presidency orthodox and iconoclasts might hold a debate. The
speech with which he opened the assembly was answered by courageous remonstrances from Theodore
of Studion. “Church matters” he boldly declared, “are the province of priests
and doctors; the administration of secular things belongs to the Emperor. This
is what the Apostle said: ‘God has instituted in His Church in the first place
the apostles, then prophets, then evangelists’, but nowhere does he make
mention of Emperors. It is to the former that it appertains to decide matters
of dogma and faith. As for you, your duty is to obey them and not to usurp
their place”. Leo, exasperated, suddenly brought the assembly to a close, and
next day a decree appeared forbidding thenceforward the discussion of religious
questions. The resistance of the opposition party only gathered strength. “For
my part” declared Theodore of Studion, “I had rather have my tongue cut out,
than fail to bear testimony to our Faith and defend it with all my might by my power
of speech. What! are you to have full liberty to
maintain error, and are we to keep silence concerning the truth! That we will
never do. We will not give our tongue into captivity, no, not for an hour, and
we will not deprive the faithful of the support of our words”. Did the Emperor
dread the influence of the Studites?
At all events, he pretended to yield, and at the Christmas festival 814 he
solemnly did reverence to the icons at St Sophia. But before long he took his
resolve.
In the month
of March 815 the Patriarch Nicephorus was banished, and in his place was set up
an official of the palace, Theodotus Cassiteras, wholly devoted to
the Emperor’s policy. It was in vain that the monks of the Studion arranged
solemn demonstrations in honor of the holy images, and that on Palm Sunday 815
more than a thousand religious walked in procession round the monastery, each
bearing an icon in his hands and singing the canticle: “We venerate your sacred
images, 0 blessed Saints”. The Emperor retorted by convoking a Council at St
Sophia (815), which confirmed the canons of the Synod of 753, proscribed images
after its example, declaring that they were mere “idols” and recommended
“worship in spirit and in truth”. Nor did the assembly resist the temptation to
cast parenthetic reproach on the memory of Irene, recalling the happy state of
the Church “up to the day when the imperial scepter had fallen from the hands
of men into those of a woman, and when, through the folly of that woman, the
Church of God was ruined”. It was the controversy over images breaking out
afresh. But while the earlier iconoclast movement had lasted more than half a
century, the second was to endure barely twenty-five years (815-842). This time
the enemies of icons were to find confronting them, particularly in the monks
of the Studion, a resistance better organized, more vigorous, and more
dangerous also. In its defence of images the
Byzantine Church now really aspired to something beyond. She openly aimed at
casting off the authority of the State and winning her freedom, and in order to
secure her independence she did not hesitate to appeal to the Pope against the
Emperor and, despite her former repugnance, to recognize the primacy of the
Roman Church. This is the characteristic feature distinguishing the second
phase of the great controversy. Between Church and State, then, there was waged
at Constantinople much the same conflict which, in the West, took later on the
form of the struggle over Investitures.
However, Leo
V at first tried moderate methods. But the Studites were immovable, and the opportunists,
fearful of seeing the struggle reopened, lent their support to the
uncompromising monks. Theodore of Studion was banished (815) and his monks
scattered, while against images as well as their defenders persecution was let
loose. “The altars have been overthrown” writes Theodore of Studion, “and the
temples of the Lord laid waste; a lamentable sight it is to see the churches of
God despoiled of their glory and disfigured. Among my brethren, some have had
trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, others of chains and
prison on a little bread and water, some have been condemned to exile, others
reduced to live in the deserts and mountains and in dens and caves of the
earth, others after receiving many stripes have gone hence to the Lord as
martyrs. Some there are who have been fastened in sacks and thrown by night
into the sea”. Again, he says, “The holy vessels are melted down, the sacred
vestments cast to the flames, with the pictures and the books which contain
anything concerning images. Inquisition is made, and questions put from house
to house, with threats and terrorism, so that no single picture may escape the
heretics. He who most signalizes himself by his rage against Christ is judged
worthy of the most honor. But for those who
resist—scourges, chains, prison, the tortures of famine, exile, death. They
have only one thought—to compel everyone to yield. The persecution we endure is
beyond any persecution by the barbarians”.
Accession
of Michael the Amorian
From his
distant exile, Theodore, without truce or intermission, valiantly encouraged
the resistance. “Are we to yield” he wrote, “are we to keep silence, and out of
fear give obedience to men and not to God? No, never. Until a door is opened unto
us by the Lord, we shall not cease to fulfill our duty as much as in us lies”.
He renewed and repeated, therefore, the letters and exhortations which he
addressed to Pope Paschal, appealing for justice and help: “Listen to us, 0
Apostolic Head, charged by God with the guidance of Christ’s sheep, porter of
the heavenly kingdom, rock of the Faith on which is built the Catholic Church,
for you are Peter, you are the successor of Peter, whose throne you honorably
fill”. The Pope, with no great success, attempted to intervene, and the
struggle went on, becoming ever more embittered. In the face of the Emperor’s
severities many ended by giving way. “Nearly all spirits quail” writes Theodore
of Studion himself, “and give attestations of heresy to the impious. Among the
bishops, those of Smyrna and Cherson have fallen;
among abbots, those of Chrysopolis,
of Dios, and of Chora,
with nearly all those of the capital”. Leo the Armenian seemed to have won the
day.
But his fall
was at hand. Even in his own circle plots were
hatching against him, and one of his old companions in arms, Michael the Stammerer, Count of the Excubitors, was at the head of the conspirators. Leo V had
him arrested, and to save him his friends hazarded a bold stroke. On 25
December 820, while the Emperor was attending the morning office of the
Nativity, mingling, as was his custom, his voice with those of the choristers,
the plotters, who had contrived to slip in among the congregation, struck him
down at the foot of the altar. Michael, instantly set at liberty, was
proclaimed, and, while his feet were still loaded with fetters, was seated on
the imperial throne. With him began the Phrygian dynasty (Michael was a native
of Amorium), which for three generations, from 820 to
867, was to rule the Empire.
The new
sovereign (820-829) was, it would appear, somewhat indifferent in religious
matters. “I have not come” he said to the former Patriarch Nicephorus, “to
introduce innovations in matters of faith and dogma,
nor to question or overthrow what is fixed by tradition and has gained
acceptance. Let every man, then, do as seems him good and right; he shall have
no vexation to undergo, and no penalty to fear”. He
began, therefore, by recalling the exiles; he set at liberty the victims of the
preceding reign, and flattered himself that by assembling a conference, in
which the orthodox and the iconoclasts should deliberate together over the
question of images, he could bring them to an agreement and restore peace.
Theodore of Studion, who had returned to Constantinople, flatly refused to
enter into any relations with the heretics, and, faithful to the doctrine which
he had always maintained, he declared to the prince: “There is no question here
of human and temporal things in which kings have power to judge; but of divine
and heavenly dogmas, which have been entrusted to those only to whom God has
said: ‘Whatsoever thou shall bind on earth shall be bound also in heaven, and
whatsoever thou shall loose on earth shall be loosed also in heaven’. Who are
they who have received this power? The Apostles and their
successors. As to emperors and sovereigns, their part is to lend their
support and approbation to what has been decreed. No power has been granted
them by God over the divine dogmas, and if they exercise such, it will not be
lasting”.
The Emperor
was ill-inclined to accept these admonitions. He signified his pleasure by
setting on the patriarchal throne, at the death of Theodotus Cassiteras (821), not the former Patriarch
Nicephorus, whose restoration the Studites demanded,
but an avowed enemy of images, Anthony, Bishop of Syllaeum. Much displeased also at the negotiations
which his opponents were carrying on with Rome, he gave a very ill reception to
the monk Methodius who brought him letters from Paschal I; he caused him to be
scourged, and imprisoned him for more than eight years in a little island in
the Gulf of Nicomedia. It is true that, when in 822 the formidable insurrection
of Thomas broke out in Asia Minor, Michael thought it prudent to recall to Constantinople
the monks, whom he had again banished from it; “it was by no means”, says the
biographer of Theodore of Studion, “from any tenderness towards them, but in
dread lest some should espouse the cause of Thomas, who passed for a supporter
of image-worship”. But on the ending of the civil war by the defeat of the
rebel (823), Michael thought himself in a position to act more vigorously.
Convinced that it was above all the support of Rome which encouraged the
uncompromising temper of his adversaries, he began a correspondence with the
Emperor of the West, Louis the Pious, and, in a curious letter of 824,
denounced to him the abuses of image worship, and requested his intervention at
Rome, in order to induce the Papacy to put an end to them. Under these
conditions it became difficult for the defenders of icons to remain at
Constantinople. Theodore of Studion withdrew to a convent in Bithynia and died
there in 826. The iconoclast policy was triumphant; but, faithful to the
promises of toleration made on the morrow of his accession, Michael refrained
from all violence against his opponents; while personally constant to his
resolve to render no worship to images, he left those who thought otherwise
freedom to cling to what seemed to them the orthodox faith.
Theophilus: revival of persecution
Theophilus,
his son and successor (829-842), showed more zeal in combating icons. Sincerely
pious, and delighting, like the true Byzantine prince he was, in theological
discussions, of a systematic turn of mind, and obstinate to boot, it was not
long before he came to consider Michael II’s politic tolerance inadequate, and,
under the influence of his former tutor, John Hylilas, whom he raised to the patriarchal throne
in 832, he resolved to battle vigorously with the iconodule party. Severe measures were ordered
to prevent its propaganda and to strike at its leaders; to banish, especially
from Constantinople, the proscribed pictures, and to punish any painter who
dared to produce them. Once again terror reigned: convents were closed, the
prisons were filled with victims, and some of the punishments inflicted were of
extraordinary cruelty. The two Palestinian monks, Theodore and Theophanes, who stand out, after the death of Theodore of
Studion, as the foremost champions of the icons, were first banished, then recalled to Constantinople, where the Emperor caused to
be branded on their foreheads with red-hot irons certain insulting verses which
he had composed for the purpose. Hence the name of Graptoi, bestowed on them in
hagiographical writings. Lazarus, the painter of icons, was also
imprisoned and barbarously tortured; Theophilus ordered, it is said, that his
hands should be burned with red-hot irons. Other supporters of pictures were
exiled. But the work of the iconoclast Emperor was ephemeral. Even in the
palace, the sympathies of the prince's own circle were secretly with the
forbidden images: the Empress Theodora and her mother Theoctiste hardly concealed their feelings,
and the Basileus was not unaware of it. He also realized
that the whole Empire besides was weary of an interminable struggle leading to
no result. It was vain for him to exact on his deathbed from his wife
Theodora, whom he left Regent, and from the ministers who were to assist her, a
solemn oath to make no change in his policy, and not to disturb in his office
the Patriarch John, who had been its chief inspirer (842). Rarely has a last
injunction been made more utterly in vain.
II
Civil Wars (802-823)
While the
second phase of the quarrel of the images was thus developing, events of grave
importance were taking place within the Empire as well as without.
Irene’s
crime against her son, by diverting the succession from the Isaurian dynasty, had reopened the chapter of revolutions. The old Empress had been
overthrown by a plot; other conspiracies were constantly to disturb the reigns
of her successors.
First in
time (803) came the rising of Bardanes Turcus, who, originally strategus of the Anatolics, had been placed by Nicephorus in supreme
command of all the troops in cantonments in Asia Minor. Intoxicated by this
great position and by his popularity among the soldiers, Bardanes proclaimed himself Emperor. But the insurrection was short-lived. The rebel leader,
betrayed by his chief partisans and unable to take Constantinople, threw up the
game and entered the cloister. In 808 another plot was set on foot to place on
the throne the Patrician Arsaber,
who held the high office of quaestor; in 810 there was an attempt to
assassinate the Emperor. Things were much worse after the death of Nicephorus.
During the few months that his son Stauracius reigned
(after escaping wounded from the defeat inflicted by the Bulgars on the Byzantines) unending intrigues went on with the object of raising his
brother-in-law, Michael Rangabé,
to power, and the Patriarch Nicephorus himself took part with the Emperor’s
ministers in fomenting the revolution which dethroned him (October 811). Less
than two years afterwards, the disasters of the Bulgarian war, the discontent
of the army after the defeat of Versinicia,
and the great danger threatening the Empire, caused the fall of Michael; the
soldiers proclaimed their general, Leo the Armenian, Emperor. Entering
Constantinople he seized upon supreme power (July 813). It has already been
seen that, thus raised to the throne by an
insurrection, Leo fell a victim to plotters who assassinated him on Christmas
morning 820.
Under
Michael II, there was, for two years, little or no improvement in the state of
things; the Empire was convulsed by a terrible civil war let loose by the
insurrection of Thomas the Slavonian, an old
brother-officer of the Emperor. Professing to be Constantine VI, the dethroned
son of Irene, Thomas had won over the whole iconodule party, proclaiming himself its
defender; he appealed to the lower classes, whose social claims he supported,
and, in this almost revolutionary movement, he gathered round him all who were
discontented. Finally, he had secured the support of the Arabs: the
Caliph Mamun had
recognized him as Emperor, and authorized the Patriarch of Antioch to crown him
with all solemnity. Master of nearly the whole of Asia Minor, leader of an army
of more than eighty thousand men, Thomas had now only to get possession of
Constantinople. He succeeded in leading his soldiers into Europe, and the fleet
of the themes of the Aegean and of the Cibyrrhaeots being at his disposal, he
attacked the capital by land and sea. A first attempt failed (December
821—February 822), but in the spring of 822 Thomas returned to the charge, and
reinforced by contingents supplied to him from the European provinces which
were warmly in favor of images, he pushed on the siege throughout the year 822
with so much vigor that the fall of Michael II seemed merely a question of
days. Only the intervention of the Bulgars saved the
Emperor. In the spring of 823 the Khan Omurtag made a descent upon Thrace. Thomas had
to bring himself to abandon Constantinople to go to meet this new enemy, by
whom he was completely beaten. Some weeks later, having been defeated by the
imperialist troops, he was compelled to throw himself into Arcadiopolis, where he held out
until the middle of October 823. In Asia Minor also, where the troops of
the Armeniac and Opsician themes had
remained unshakably loyal to the Emperor, the last attempts at resistance were
crushed. But the alarm had been great, and if the defeat of Thomas' rising had
made the Phrygian dynasty safe for long years to come, on the other hand it is certain
that the continual outbreaks, coming one after another from 802, had notably
impaired the strength and exhausted the resources of the Empire.
Recognition of the Western Empire (812)
This was
plainly to be seen in the disasters both in the East and in the West
encountered by the foreign policy of the State.
From the early days of his reign Nicephorus had made
efforts to come to a settlement of the Italian question with Charlemagne, and
the treaty of 803, which left to the Eastern Empire Venice, the Dalmatian
coast, Naples, Calabria, and Sicily, abandoned, per contra, Istria, the
interior of Dalmatia, the Exarchate of Ravenna, the Pentapolis,
and Rome to the Franks. But, as Constantinople refused to recognize the Emperor
of the West, it was not long before hostilities broke out afresh, and Frankish
intrigues in the Venetian lagoons decided Nicephorus on taking energetic steps.
A Greek fleet appeared at the head of the Adriatic (807) without, however,
enabling the Byzantines to hinder Pepin, the young Frankish King of Italy, from
taking, after a long siege, the islands of the lagoon (810). Negotiations were
therefore reopened with Aix-la-Chapelle, and the treaty of 812, while restoring
Venice to the Eastern Empire and in other respects renewing the convention of
803, provided for the recognition by Constantinople, although reluctant, of
Charlemagne's imperial title. Thus the Greeks accepted the events of 754 and
renounced their historic rights to Italy; thus, as Charlemagne wrote, the
Western Roman Empire officially took its place side by side with the Eastern
Empire; thus, as Einhard expressed
it, every occasion of stumbling was definitively removed between them. But for
Constantinople it was a deep humiliation to have been forced to recognize even
momentarily, even with the secret intention of withdrawing the concession, the
event which, on Christmas Day 800, had taken place in St Peter's at Rome.
Still
heavier blows fell upon the Empire in the East. The resolution arrived at by
Nicephorus, immediately upon his accession, to refuse the tribute which Irene
had been forced to pay to the Arabs, had renewed the war between the Empire and
the powerful Caliphs of the Abbasid dynasty. It proved disastrous to the
Byzantines, at least for the first ten years; from 814 to 829, however,
internal disturbances in the Mohammedan world restored to the Greeks some
degree of tranquility in Asia. But elsewhere the Musulmans gained alarming advantages. In 826
some Arabs, who had been driven from Spain, seized upon Crete, and founded the
stronghold of Chandax.
All the efforts of the Byzantines in the reign of Michael II to reconquer the island proved useless, and the
Mussulman corsairs, masters of so excellent a strategic position, were to
become, for a century and a half, the terror of the Eastern Mediterranean.
About the same time, the rising of Euphemius in
Sicily had consequences no less serious for Constantinople. In 827 the rebel
called the Mussulmans of Africa to his help, and
the Aghlabid Emir, Ziyadatallah, landed in the island.
The Arabs were not to evacuate it before the end of the eleventh century. It is
true that they failed at first before Syracuse, but then the troops dispatched
from Constantinople were completely defeated at Mineo (830), and soon after that the great town
of Palermo fell into the hands of the infidels (831). And if more than a
quarter of a century, up to 859, was still needed to complete the conquest of
Sicily, yet the Arabs, from this time onward, held in Western waters a position
analogous to that which the possession of Crete gave them in the East, and were
soon from thence to menace Southern Italy.
The war
which had been waged against the Empire, during the early years of the ninth
century, by Krum, the Khan of Bulgaria, ran an even more terrible course. Let
loose by the imprudent offensive of Nicephorus, it was marked by sanguinary
disaster. In 809 Sardica fell into the hands of the Bulgars, and its garrison was massacred. In 811 the great
expedition which Nicephorus led into Bulgaria came to an end in the Balkan
passes with a severe defeat, in which the Byzantine army, surrounded on all
sides, was cut to pieces, and the Emperor himself slain. Thereupon Krum
committed frightful ravages in Thrace and Macedonia, and Michael I, attempting
to check him, was completely defeated at Versinicia near Hadrianople (June 813). Even Constantinople
was threatened. Krum appeared under the walls of the capital, which was saved
by the energy of Leo V, though the surrounding districts were fearfully wasted
by the exasperated Bulgarian prince. Hadrianople fell into his hands; but Leo's
victory at Mesembria (Autumn
813) restored the fortunes of the Empire, and the death of Krum (April 814)
just as he was preparing a fresh onslaught upon Constantinople, sufficed to
reassure the Byzantines. Shortly afterwards a peace for thirty years was
concluded between the Empire and the new ruler of Bulgaria, Omurtag: the frontier of Thrace,
dividing the two states, was now marked by a line of fortifications running
from Develtus to Makrolivada, between Hadrianople and Philippopolis. The fact was that the Bulgars had, at that moment, more pressing anxieties on their western frontier; the
Frankish threat was sufficiently engrossing to make them ready to live on good
terms with the Byzantine Empire.
One last
incident had disturbed the reign of Nicephorus. In 807 the Slays of the
Peloponnesus had risen and laid siege to Patras.
Legend relates that the town was miraculously saved by its patron, St Andrew
the Apostle. At any rate, it seems that, after this outbreak, the Slav tribes
were compelled to adopt more regular habits of life, less dangerous to the
security of the country.
In face of
the difficulties which they had had to overcome, the early Emperors of the
ninth century had not been devoid of real merit. Nicephorus was an energetic
and courageous prince and a capable administrator. Leo V was a skillful
general, solicitous for the military defence of the
Empire and for the sound organization of justice, whose great qualities his
very enemies acknowledged. The Patriarch Nicephorus said of him on the morrow
of his assassination: “The Empire has lost an impious prince, but a great
defender of the public interest”. The second sovereign of the Phrygian dynasty
was no less remarkable, and his reign (820-829) was marked by decided
improvement in the situation at home as well as abroad.
Struggle with the Caliphs
In the East,
the Caliphate had for several years been greatly disturbed and weakened by the
insurrection of Babak and
the communistic sect of the Khurramites of
which he was the leader. Theophilus, from the moment of his accession, turned
these conditions to good account. He entered into negotiations with the rebels,
and gave a hearty welcome to those of them who, under the command of Theophobus, a Persian officer,
came (it is said, to the number of thirty thousand) to ask leave to serve in
the imperial army (830). The war with the Arabs immediately broke out again. As
long as the Caliph Mamun lived,
it was marked by varying success, and the Emperor was more than once obliged to
bring himself to make overtures for peace. But after Mamun’s death (833) he assumed the offensive
more boldly. The campaign of 837 on the Euphrates proved fortunate. Zapetra and Samosata were taken, and Theophilus celebrated his
victory by a triumphal entry into his capital. The following year, however, the
Byzantines met with a serious defeat at Dazimon, now Tokat, and Amorium, the
cradle of the royal house, was taken by the Mussulmans and sacked. The Emperor had to submit to negotiate and a truce was signed
(841). Fortunately the death of the Caliph Mutasim, who was already meditating an attack on
Constantinople (842), and a disaster suffered by the Arab fleet attempting the
enterprise, caused a temporary cessation of the struggle.
About the
same time the Byzantine Empire, through its diplomatic relations, was extending
its influence and increasing its reputation. In 833, at the request of the Khan
of the Chazars, a
Byzantine officer built at the mouth of the Don the fortress of Sarkel. It was intended to
protect the district against the attacks of the Patzinaks,
and especially of the Russians, who were beginning to threaten the shores of
the Black Sea, and who for the first time sent ambassadors to Constantinople in
838. The Byzantine court was, besides, on good terms with the Western Emperors;
in 839 Theophilus applied to Louis the Pious for his support in an attack on
Syria or Egypt. Similar negotiations took place with the Umayyad Emirs of
Cordova, at all times the enemies of the Abbasid Caliphs. Thus from the shores
of the Crimea to the limits of the West, Byzantine diplomacy, after a long time
of isolation, resumed its earlier activity.
But it is
especially on account of his home government that Theophilus is still
remembered. The chroniclers picture this prince much as the Arab tales
represent Harun ar-Rashid, as a ruler ever anxious to render
absolute justice to all his subjects, accessible to every comer, willingly
taking part in the life of the people in order to gain more accurate
information, severe towards the guilty, and eager to redress all injustices. A
good administrator, he applied himself to bringing the finances into order, and
at his death left a large reserve; the financial prosperity enjoyed by the
Empire is proved most clearly by the fact that the gold coins (solidi, bezants)
of Byzantium were current throughout the world.
Theophilus
set himself with no less energy to secure the defensive organization of the
Empire. In Asia, besides the ancient ‘five themes’ there were the new themes
of Paphlagonia and Chaldia, without reckoning the
small military governments, or clisurae,
of Seleucia, of Charsianum,
of Cappadocia, and of Colonea.
On the Black Sea, the free town of Cherson was also
made into a theme, in order to strengthen the defence against the Patzinaks and the Russians. Finally, in
the European territories where, from 813, the Peloponnesus had been constituted
a separate theme, Theophilus created the themes of Thessalonica, of Cephalonia,
and of Dyrrachium, in order to ward off the Bulgarian
threat to Macedonia and the Arab danger in the Adriatic. Thus the military defence of the Empire was completed and perfected.
Lastly,
Theophilus was a great builder. He loved pomp and splendor and all that might
enhance the prestige of his throne. On two occasions, in 831 and 837, he
dazzled Constantinople by the magnificence of his triumphs. He added to the
beauty of the imperial palace by wonderful buildings, in which he plainly
sought to rival the glories of Baghdad. Around the new throne-room, the Triconchus, to which the
Sigma terrace led, he raised numerous and sumptuous pavilions, glorious with
many-colored marbles, and glittering with golden mosaics.
Still
further to emphasize the beauty of his palace, he adorned it with admirable
specimens of the goldsmith’s art. In the great hall of the Magnaura was a plane-tree
made of gold, shading the imperial throne, on the branches of which golden
birds were perched; at the foot of the throne were lions couchant of gold, and
on either hand golden griffins stood sentinel; opposite was set up a golden
organ, adorned with enamels and precious stones. These masterpieces of splendor
and luxury were at the same time marvels of mechanical skill. On audience-days,
when foreign ambassadors entered the hall, the birds in the plane-tree
fluttered and sang, the griffins sat up on their pedestals, the lions arose,
lashed the air with their tails, and gave forth metallic roars. Elsewhere, a
great coffer of gold, the Pentapyrgion,
served to hold the imperial insignia and the crown jewels. Again, Theophilus
had renewed the imperial wardrobe with unheard-of splendor, the gala robes worn
on days of ceremony by the Basileus and the Augusta,
the cloth of gold or gold-embroidered garments which adorned the great
dignitaries of the court when they walked in solemn procession. He also, at
great cost, restored the ramparts of Constantinople. All this conveys a strong
impression of wealth (it is estimated that Theophilus spent more than a million
a year on his building operations), of magnificence, and of beauty. Certainly
Theophilus was lacking in several of the outstanding qualities of a statesman;
his religious policy was ill-judged, and his wars not always successful.
Nevertheless, his reign is conspicuous as a time of unusual brilliancy, a proof
of the moral and material revival of the Byzantine Empire towards the middle of
the ninth century.
III
Regency of Theodora.
Theophilus
at his death left the throne to a child of tender age, his son Michael III, who
was not more than three or four years old. The Empress Theodora, therefore,
assumed the regency during the minority of the young sovereign, her counselors
being her uncle the Magister Manuel, and the Logothete Theoctistus.
They were religious men, secretly attached, as was the Basilissa herself, to iconodule principles, men of good sense also,
who regarded with natural anxiety the long continuance of the religious strife
and the serious consequences that it might have for the dynasty. The execution
of the iconodule Theophobus, the successful
general, the Emperor’s own brother-in-law, which Theophilus had ordered from
his death-bed, looks like a recognition of the threatening appearance of the
situation, the champions of images waiting only for a leader to attempt a
revolution. The Regent's ministers, especially her brother Bardas, who had
great influence with her, strongly urged her to hasten the restoration of
orthodoxy. The Basilissa,
however, hesitated. She had been deeply attached to her husband and put great
faith in the correctness of his political views, she was unwilling to consign
his last instructions to oblivion, and, finally, she was much concerned at the
prospect of the anathema likely to be pronounced against the late Emperor if
iconoclasm were condemned. Nearly a year was needed to overcome the Regent’s
scruples. At last, however, fearing for the throne of her son, she came to a
decision.
It was of
the first importance, if the restoration of images was to be successfully
carried out, to get rid of the Patriarch John, a clever and formidable man,
whose enemies had created for him a sinister reputation as a magician, and who
was nicknamed Lekanomantis.
The prelate was therefore invited to sit on the council which had just been
convoked in order to restore images to honor. John refused, and was
consequently, not without some slight maltreatment, deposed and relegated to a
monastery. In his seat was installed the monk Methodius, in former days so
harshly persecuted by Michael II, but whom Theophilus, by a singular caprice,
had admitted to intimacy on account of his scientific attainments. Highly
favored by Theodora, the new Patriarch assumed full control of the council
which met in February 843. To please the Empress, the bishops hastened to
except Theophilus from the condemnation directed against heretics, admitting
without discussion the pious fraud which represented the Emperor as having, in
his last moments, repented of his errors. Thanks to this compromise, the
restoration of orthodoxy was accomplished without opposition. The pictures were
solemnly reinstated in honor; the exiles and the proscribed were recalled and
welcomed in triumph; the prisoners were set at liberty; the remains of the
martyrs who had died in the struggle were brought back in state to
Constantinople; and anathemas fell upon the most famous of the iconoclasts.
Then, the work of the council having been accomplished, on the first Sunday in
Lent (19 February 843) a triumphal procession, headed by the Empress herself,
marched through the streets of the capital, from the church of the Virgin
in Blachernae to
St Sophia, where the enthusiastic people returned thanks to the Most High. In the
evening, at the Sacred Palace, Theodora gave a great banquet, at which were
assembled the prelates and confessors and those who had suffered for the cause.
It was the festival of Orthodoxy, which from that time the Greek Church has solemnly celebrated on the first Sunday in Lent
every year, in commemoration of the reinstatement of images and of the blessed
Theodora.
Thus, after
more than a century of strife, peace was at last restored to the Empire. But
if, from the dogmatic standpoint, the victory of the iconodule party was complete, the Church, on
the other hand, was forced to give up the tendency towards independence which
some of her most illustrious champions had shown. One of the essential objects
to which the policy of the Iconoclast Emperors had been directed was the
reduction of the Church to entire dependence on the State. In spite of the
protests of their opponents, who, from Gregory II and John Damascene down to
the Fathers of the Council of 787 and Theodore of Studion, had with one voice
refused to the Emperor the right to rule the Church, it was this imperial
policy which now proved victorious. “In the struggle” writes Harnack, “which for a century
the Byzantine Church maintained against the State, not her religious
constitution alone, but her liberty was at stake. On the first point, she was
the victor; in the struggle for liberty, she yielded”. Thus, in spite of the
re-establishment of orthodoxy, the Studite party
and the freedom for which they had fought were defeated, and the work of the Iconoclast
Emperors proved not to have been in vain.
Persecution of the Paulicians
Theodora’s government, however, which lasted up to 856, assumed, as
might have been expected, somewhat of a religious complexion. The Empress, priding herself highly on having
restored orthodoxy, held it no less important to wage war upon heresy. From the
end of the seventh century, the Paulicians, so called
from the great respect which they professed for the Apostle Paul, had been
spreading their doctrines through Asia Minor, from Phrygia to Armenia. Their
progress had been furthered by the patronage of the Iconoclast Emperors, and
the Orthodox Church saw with great anxiety the growth of the influence and the
spread of the propaganda of sectaries whom she
characterized as Manichaeans. Theophilus, it is not
exactly known why, had allowed himself to be persuaded into persecuting them,
and part of the heretical community had from that time sought refuge in Arab
territory. Theodora was only too happy to be able in this point to continue her
husband's policy. By her orders, the Paulicians were
called upon to choose between conversion and death, and, as they refused to
yield, the imperial government set itself to break down their resistance. Blood
was shed in torrents in the parts of Asia Minor where they were settled; it is
said that one hundred thousand persons suffered death. The survivors, led
by Carbeas, one of
their chiefs, went to ask shelter from the Emir of Melitene,
and settling around Tephrice,
which became their main citadel, they soon made it clear to the Byzantines how
ill-advised they had been in thrusting into the arms of the Mussulman men who,
up till then, had valiantly defended the frontiers of the Empire. It has been
said with justice that the persecution of the Paulicians was “one of the greatest political disasters of the ninth century”.
The pious
zeal which inspired the Regent suggested to her more fortunate projects
elsewhere. She initiated the great missionary enterprise through which, some
years later, the Gospel was to be brought to the Chazars, the Moravians, and the Bulgars.
In order to subdue the ever restless Slav tribes of the Peloponnesus, she despatched thither the Strategus Theoctistus Bryennius (849) who, except
in the Taygetus region where the Milengi and the Ezerites kept their
autonomy, succeeded in establishing the imperial authority on a firm basis
throughout the province, and in preparing the way for the conversion of the
Slavs. Finally, Theodora, by her sound financial administration, did no small
service to the state. Unfortunately, as is often the case under feminine
government, the imperial palace was a hive of intrigue. The Logothete Theoctistus, the Regent's chief minister, had her entire
favor, and against him her brother Bardas sought support from the young Emperor
Michael, his nephew, who, as he grew up, showed deplorable tendencies. Bardas
used his influence to embitter the resentment of the young prince against
the Logothete, and in
856 a plot was concocted which ended in the murder of Theoctistus.
This was a blow aimed full at Theodora, and thus she understood it. For two
years more she lived in the palace, until in 858 she was requested to withdraw
into a convent. But her political career was already over. From the day after
the assassination of Theoctistus, Michael III had
taken power into his own hands; Bardas, appointed Magister and Domestic of
the Scholae, and at
last in 862 almost admitted to a share in the Empire under the title of Caesar,
was for ten years (856-866) to exercise supreme power in the name of his nephew.
Michael III and the Caesar Bardas
In spite of
the sedulous care which his mother had bestowed on his education, Michael III,
who was now about seventeen or eighteen years old, was a prince of the worst
type. Without taking too literally all that has been related of him by
chroniclers too much bent on excusing the murder which gave the throne to Basil
the Macedonian, and therefore disposed to blacken the character of his victim,
it is certain that the behavior of the miserable Emperor was calculated to
scandalize both the court and the capital. He cared for nothing but pleasure,
hunting, riding, racing, wrestling of athletes; he delighted in driving a
chariot on the palace race-course and in showing himself of before his
intimates. He frequented the lowest society, was ever surrounded by
charioteers, musicians, buffoons, and players; he spent part of his nights
drinking (history has bestowed on him the surname of Michael the Drunkard); he
amused himself and his unworthy favorites with coarse and indecent jests,
turning religion into ridicule, parodying the sacred rites, and in his low and
tasteless jests sparing neither the Patriarch nor the Empress-Mother. He wasted
the money amassed by his parents in ridiculous extravagances; public business
was to him an unwelcome infliction, a mere hindrance to his amusements, an
interruption to his course of folly; in fine, he was the natural prey of
favorites for ever contending for his good graces, and his court, where he
ostentatiously displayed his mistress, Eudocia Ingerina, was the home of
ceaseless intrigue.
Bardas, who
governed the Empire in the name of Michael III, was a man of another stamp.
Keenly ambitious, greedy of power and wealth, little troubled with scruples or
morals, he was, despite his vices, a man of unquestionable capacity. Even his
enemies have been unable to deny his great qualities. A good administrator, he
prided himself on his love of strict justice and on his incorruptibility as a
minister, and in this way he made himself highly popular. A man of great
talents, he loved letters and was interested in scientific studies. Theophilus
had already appreciated the importance of restoring Constantinople to its
intellectual pre-eminence in the Eastern world; he had been the patron of learned
men, and had heaped favors on the Patriarch John and on the great
mathematician, Leo of Thessalonica. Bardas did more. To him is due the honor of
having founded the famous school of the Magnaura, where he gathered the most illustrious
teachers of the day. Its direction was put into the hands of Leo of
Thessalonica, one of the greatest minds of the ninth century, whose universal
learning—he was equally versed in mathematics, medicine, and philosophy—had
gained for him among his contemporaries the reputation of a wizard and
magician. Around him were others teaching geometry, astronomy, and philology,
and to encourage the zeal of the professors and the eagerness of their pupils,
Bardas used to pay frequent and diligent visits to the school. He counted other
learned men among his intimates: Constantine, some years afterwards to become
the apostle of the Slavs, and then teaching philosophy at the University; Photius, the most distinguished and brilliant intellect of
the time as well as the man of most learning, who was shortly, by the favor of
the all-powerful minister, to attain the patriarchal throne of Constantinople.
Under the influence of Bardas, a great wave of intellectual revival was already
passing over the capital, presaging the renaissance of the tenth century, and
already, by its secular and classical character, arousing the anxiety of the
Church. It has been justly remarked that henceforward there was to be no more
interruption, no further period of darkness breaking into the literary
activities of the Byzantines, until the fall of Constantinople, and that one of
the most valid claims to glory of the Amorian dynasty
in the history of civilization is undoubtedly the interest which the court then
showed in education and learning.
Bardas had
still another honor, that of successfully accomplishing, with the help of the
Patriarch Photius, the great work of the conversion
of the Slavs. Two men were the renowned instruments in the work, Constantine,
better known under his name in religion, Cyril, and his brother Methodius, “the
Apostles of the Slavs”, as history still calls them today. Constantine, the
younger of the two, after having been at first a professor at the University of
Constantinople, had, about 860, successfully carried out a mission to Christianize
the Chazars; he was
thus marked out for the work when, towards 863, Rostislav, Prince of Great Moravia, requested of
the Byzantine court that his people might be instructed in the Christian Faith.
In 864 Cyril and Methodius set out, and they carried with them the means of
assuring the success of their undertaking. Natives of Thessalonica, and thus
quite familiar with the language and customs of the Slavs, who on all sides
dwelt around that great Greek city, the two missionaries well understood the necessity
of speaking to those whom they desired to convert in their own tongue. For
their benefit, therefore, they translated the Gospel into a dialect akin to
that spoken by the Moravians, and, in order to transcribe it, they invented an
alphabet from the Greek minuscule, the Glagolitic script. At the same time,
Cyril and Methodius introduced into Moravia a Slav liturgy, they preached in
the language, and did their utmost to train a Slav clergy. Thus it was that
their success was achieved, and after their first stay in Moravia, Rome herself
expressed her approbation of the methods they had employed in their undertaking
(868). It is true that later on, owing to the opposition and intrigues of the
German clergy, the work so magnificently begun was quickly ruined. But
nevertheless, the glory remained to Constantinople of having, at the same time
that she brought the orthodox faith to the Slays, created the alphabet and the
liturgical language in use amongst them today.
The
conversion of Bulgaria was another triumph for Constantinople. From the first
thirty years of the ninth century, Christianity had begun to make its way among
the Bulgars, and imperial policy watched its progress
with interest, seeing in it a means of strengthening Byzantine influence in
this barbarian kingdom. On his side, Tsar Boris, placed as he was between the
Greek Empire and that great Moravia which, at this very time, was accepting
Christianity, realized that he could no longer remain pagan. But he hesitated
between the orthodoxy of Constantinople and the Roman faith offered him by
Germany, whose ally he had become. Constantinople could not allow Bulgaria to
come within the Western sphere of influence. A military expedition recalled the
prince to discretion (863), and as his conversion, besides, was to be rewarded
by an increase of territory, he made his decision. He asked to be baptized into
the Orthodox Church, receiving the Christian name of Michael (864); and the
Patriarch Photius, realizing to the full the
importance of the event, delightedly hailed the neophyte as “the fairest jewel
of his efforts”. Despite the resistance of the Bulgarian aristocracy, the Tsar
compelled his people to adopt Christianity with him. But he was soon made
uneasy by the apparent intention of Constantinople to keep him in too strict a
dependence, and so turned towards Rome, requesting the Pope, Nicholas I, to set
up the Latin rite in his kingdom. The Pope welcomed these advances, and Roman
priests, under the direction of Formosus, began to
labor in Bulgaria (866-867). This did not suit Byzantine calculations; the
imperial government had no intention of loosing its hold upon Bulgaria. In the council
of 869 Rome was obliged to yield to the protests of the Greeks; the Orthodox
clergy were reinstated in Bulgarian territory, and the Tsar had to reconcile
himself to re-entering the sphere of action of the Greek Empire.
IV.
External dangers
The
government of Bardas had thus to a remarkable degree increased the prestige of
the Empire. Beyond the frontier, however, Arab successes provided the shadows
in the picture. The piracies of the Mussulmans of
Crete brought desolation to the Aegean, and the great expedition which
the Logothete Theoctistus led against them in person (843) had produced
no better results than did the enterprise attempted against Egypt, despite the
temporary success achieved by the capture of Damietta (853). In Sicily the infidels
were proceeding successfully with the conquest of the island; Messina fell into
their hands in 843, and Leontini in
847; Castrogiovanni,
the great Byzantine fortress in the middle of Sicily, yielded in 859, and the
Greek expedition sent to reconquer the
province (860) was completely foiled. In Asia, where the defection of the Paulicians had been a heavy blow to the Empire, affairs
prospered no better. It is true that, in 856, Petronas,
brother of the Empress Theodora, made his way into the country of Samosata and Amida, and
attacked Tephrice.
But in 859 the Byzantine army, commanded by the Emperor himself, was beaten
before Samosata, and not long afterwards (860)
at Chonarium,
near Dazimon. In 863
Omar, the Emir of Melitene, took Amisus. This time the Greeks
braced themselves for a great effort, and the brilliant victory won by Petronas at Poson, near the Halys (863), restored for the moment the reputation of the imperial arms.
Whilst these
events were taking place, a serious and unforeseen danger had menaced
Constantinople. While the Emperor was in Asia and the imperial fleet busied in
Sicily, some Russian pirates had unexpectedly crossed the Bosphorus and attacked the capital (860). In this emergency, the Patriarch Photius nobly sustained the spirit of the people, and it
was rather to his energy than to the supposed intervention of the Blessed
Virgin, that the capital owed its safety. Further, the approach of the army
from Asia Minor, returning by forced marches, determined the barbarians upon a
retreat which proved disastrous to them. And the treaty not long afterwards
concluded with the Russians, lately settled at Kiev, opened up, towards the
north, vast future prospects to the Empire.
One last
event, pregnant with future consequences, marked the administration of Bardas.
This was the breach with Rome. For some considerable time the chief minister
had been on bad terms with the Patriarch Ignatius, that son of the Emperor
Michael Rangabé who,
having been tonsured on the death of his father, had in 847 been raised to the
patriarchate. On the feast of the Epiphany (January 858) the prelate had
thought it his duty to refuse communion to Bardas, and this the latter never
forgave. He therefore set to work to implicate Ignatius in an alleged
treasonable plot. The Patriarch was arrested and deported to the Princes
Islands, while in his place the minister procured the election of Photius, a layman, who within six days received all the
ecclesiastical orders, and on 25 December 858 celebrated a Solemn High Mass at
St Sophia. The accession to the patriarchate of this man of mark, who was,
however, of consummate ambition, prodigious arrogance, and unsurpassed
political skill, was to bring about a formidable crisis in the Church.
Ignatius, in fact, though evil-intreated and
dragged from one place of exile to another, resolutely declined to abdicate,
and his supporters, above all the monks of the Studion, violently resisted the
usurpation of Photius. The latter, in order to compel
their submission, attempted to obtain recognition from Rome, and, by means of a
most diplomatic letter, entered into communication with Nicholas I. The Pope
eagerly seized the opportunity to interfere in the dispute. But the legates
whom he sent to Constantinople allowed themselves to be led astray by Photius, and the council which met in their presence at the
church of the Holy Apostles (861) summoned Ignatius before it, deposed him, and
confirmed the election of Photius. Nicholas I was not
the man to see his wishes thus ignored. Ignatius, besides, appealed to Rome
against his condemnation. At the Lateran synod (April 863) Photius and his partisans were excommunicated, and were called upon to resign their
usurped functions immediately; Ignatius, on the other hand, was declared
restored to the patriarchal throne.
It was the
wonderful astuteness of Photius which turned a purely
personal question into an affair of national importance. Most skillfully he
turned to account the ancient grudges of the Greek Church against the West, the
suspicion and dread always aroused in it by the claims of Rome to the primacy.
He made even greater play with the ambitious and imprudent designs of Nicholas
I upon the young Bulgarian Church; and he won over the whole of public opinion
to his side by posing as the champion of the national cause against the Papal
usurpers. The encyclical, which in 867 Photius addressed to the other patriarchs of the East, summed up eloquently the
grievances of the Byzantines against Rome. The council, which was held soon
after at Constantinople under the presidency of the Emperor, made the rupture complete (867). It replied to the condemnations pronounced
by Nicholas I by anathematizing and deposing the Pope, and condemning the
heretical doctrines and customs of the Western Church. The breach between Rome
and Constantinople was complete, the schism was consummated, and Photius, to all appearance, triumphant. But his triumph was
to be short-lived. The murder of Michael III, by raising Basil the Macedonian
to the throne, was suddenly to overthrow the Patriarch’s fortunes.
While these
events, portending such serious consequences, were taking place, Michael III
continued in his course of pleasure, folly, and debauchery. By degrees,
however, he became weary of the all-powerful influence wielded by Bardas. From
the year 858 or 859 the Emperor had a favorite. This was an adventurer, the son
of a poor Armenian family which circumstances had transplanted to Macedonia, a certain Basil, whose bodily strength and skill in breaking
horses had endeared him to Michael III. This man became chief equerry, and in
862 grand chamberlain and patrician. His obliging conduct in marrying the
Emperor's mistress, Eudocia Ingerina, put the finishing touch to the favor he
enjoyed. His rapid advance could not fail to disquiet Bardas, all the more
because Basil was unquestionably clever, and obviously extremely ambitious.
Thus it was not long before the two men were engaged in a bitter struggle.
It ended in
866 by the murder of Bardas, who, during a campaign in Asia, was slaughtered by
his enemies under the very eyes of the Emperor. Thus Basil was victorious. Some
weeks later the Emperor adopted him and raised him to the dignity of Magister;
soon after, he associated him in the Empire (May 866). But with a prince such
as Michael III favor, however apparently secure, was still always uncertain,
and Basil was well aware of it. The Emperor, more addicted than ever to wine,
was now surpassing himself in wild follies and cruelties. Basil, knowing that
many were jealous of him and attempting to undermine him with the Emperor, must
have been perpetually in fear for his power and even for his life. An incident
which revealed the precariousness of his situation decided him on taking
action. On 23 September 867, with the help of some faithful followers, Basil,
in the palace of St Mamas, murdered the wretched Emperor who had made him
great, and, next morning, having gained possession of the Sacred Palace, seized
upon power. It seems plain that the Empire joyfully acquiesced in the
disappearance of the capricious and cruel tyrant that Michael III had become.
But Basil was more than a skillful and lucky aspirant, he was a great
statesman; by setting a new dynasty on the throne, he was destined, through his
vigorous government, to usher in for the Empire two centuries of glory and
renown.
CHAPTER III.THE MACEDONIAN DYNASTY FROM 867 TO 976 AD
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