As early as 401 he
offended her by complaining of some act of oppression ; and not only
was he constantly preaching against the prevailing luxury and dissipation
among the ladies of fashion of whom she was leader, but he used the
names “ Herodias” and “ Jezebel,” and in one of his sermons employed
the word asofia, with an application that could not be mistaken.
offended her by complaining of some act of oppression ; and not only
was he constantly preaching against the prevailing luxury and dissipation
among the ladies of fashion of whom she was leader, but he used the
names “ Herodias” and “ Jezebel,” and in one of his sermons employed
the word asofia, with an application that could not be mistaken.
Cambridge Medieval History - v1 - Christian Roman Empire and Teutonic Kingdoms
CH.
xv.
## p. 450 (#480) ############################################
450
The Church
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 attempt-
ing 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 settle-
ment, 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 appear-
ance, 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
:
## p. 451 (#481) ############################################
Foreign Affairs
451
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 Burgun-
dians; 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 (sic, per circuitum placuit omnibus
gentibus, says the Anonymus); 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 despatched 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
CH. XV.
2942
## p. 452 (#482) ############################################
452
Theodoric's last years
[507–523
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 Es-
thonians 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 reestablishing 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 punish-
ments, 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
1 The following saying of Theodoric's should not be forgotten : “We cannot
impose a religion by force, since no one can be compelled to believe against his
will. ” Cass. Var. 11. 27.
## p. 453 (#483) ############################################
523]
Boethius
453
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 com-
mand 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 shewn a most bitter enmity towards heresy.
We have no certain knowledge as to whether the Senate was in sym-
pathy 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
CH. XV.
## p. 454 (#484) ############################################
454
Death of Theodoric
(523–534
-
--
+
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 criticise 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 despatched 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 immedi-
ately 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's 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 shewing 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
## p. 455 (#485) ############################################
534–536]
Death of Amalasuntha
455
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.
CH, XV.
## p. 456 (#486) ############################################
456
*
CHAPTER XVI.
THE EASTERN PROVINCES FROM ARCADIUS
TO ANASTASIUS.
care.
By the death of Theodosius the Eastern throne passed to his incapable
elder son, Arcadius, then 17 years old, while the practical administration
was in the hands of the praetorian praefect, Rufinus of Aquitaine, a man
of vigour and ability who in the pursuit of ambition and avarice was not
limited by scruples. Under these circumstances a conflict was likely to
arise between Rufinus and Stilicho, who was the guardian of the Western
Emperor Honorius, and husband of Theodosius' niece, who also asserted
that Theodosius had on his death-bed committed both his sons to his
Rufinus proposed to counterbalance the advantage which his rival
possessed in his connexion with the imperial family by marrying Arcadius
to his own daughter ; but, unfortunately for him, he had a rival at
Court in the eunuch Eutropius, a former slave who had risen to the
position of praepositus sacri cubiculi ; who now profited by the praefect's
absence to thwart his scheme. Lucian, whom Rufinus had made count
of the East, had refused a request of Eucherius, the Emperor's great-
uncle; and, upon Arcadius complaining of this, the praefect, to shew his
own loyalty, made a hasty journey to Antioch and put Lucian to a cruel
death. Meanwhile Eutropius induced Arcadius to betroth himself to
Eudoxia, daughter of Bauto the Frank, who had been brought up by a
son of Promotus, an enemy of Rufinus; who thus had the mortification
of seeing his master united not to his own daughter but to one who from
her upbringing would be bitterly opposed to him (27 Apr. 395).
The inferiority of Rufinus was increased by the fact that the best of
the Eastern troops had accompanied Theodosius to the West, and of
these only some of the less efficient had been sent back. The Visigothic
foederati had however returned to Moesia ; and their leader Alaric, who
was now proclaimed king, was quick to profit by the weakness of the
government. Professing indignation at not being appointed magister
militum, he invaded Thrace and advanced to Constantinople, while
Rufinus, having also to meet an incursion of Caucasian Huns into
Asia Minor and Syria (July), where Antioch was threatened and Old
## p. 457 (#487) ############################################
395–396]
Murder of Rufinus
457
another way.
Tyre abandoned by its citizens, had no forces to oppose to him. He
therefore went to the Gothic camp, and, after some negotiations, Alaric
withdrew to Macedonia, and after a check from local forces at the Peneus
passed into Thessaly. Stilicho, who, besides desiring to overthrow
Rufinus, wished to re-unite eastern Illyricum to the Western power,
treated this as a pretext for interference; and, starting in early spring,
he marched with considerable forces to Thessaly, and met the Goths in
a wide plain. Probably, however, he did not wish to crush them ; and,
after some months had been spent in skirmishes or negotiations, Rufinus,
who feared Stilicho more than Alaric, sent him in the Emperor's name an
order to evacuate the dominions of Arcadius and send back the Eastern
troops. To break openly with the East at this time did not suit Stilicho's
purpose ; and, as the Eastern forces, which comprised a large Gothic
contingent, were devoted to him, he could attain his primary object in
He therefore returned at once, while the Eastern army
under Gaïnas the Goth marched to Constantinople. In accordance with
custom the Emperor, accompanied by Rufinus, came out to meet the
troops, and the soldiers, at a signal from Gaïnas, fell upon the praefect
and cut him in pieces (27 Nov. ).
The Emperor's chief adviser was now Eutropius, who appropriated a
large part of Rufinus' property and procured the banishment of the two
most distinguished generals in the East, Abundantius and Timasius
(396), while he entrusted positions of power to such obscure men as
Hosius the cook and Leo the wool-comber. He also gained much obloquy
by selling offices, though as the prices were fixed and there was no
system of public loans, this was only a convenient method of raising
money. As a eunuch, he could not hold any state office; but for this
he partly compensated by transferring some of the powers of the praefect
to the master of the offices and by interfering in matters altogether out-
side the functions of a chamberlain. Thus he is said to have acted as a
judge, probably on a special commission, and to have gone on embassies
to the Goths and Huns, from which he returned with military pomp.
Finally he was made a patrician and assumed the consulship (399),
though his name was not admitted to the Western Fasti. At first he
was necessarily on good terms with the army, and therefore with Stilicho;
but he was no more inclined than Rufinus had been to allow the Western
regent to direct Eastern affairs, and the previous position therefore soon
recurred.
After Stilicho's retreat Greece lay at Alaric's mercy, for, perhaps
because the army was too much under Stilicho's influence, no force was
sent against him, and through the unguarded Thermopylae he marched
plundering into Boeotia. Thebes indeed was too strong to take, and
Athens he entered only under a capitulation. Megara however was
taken, and, the Isthmus being left undefended, Corinth, Argos, and
Sparta also. During 396 Peloponnesus lay under his heel ; but early
a
OH. XVI.
## p. 458 (#488) ############################################
458
Rebellion of Tribigild
(397–399
in 3971 Stilicho, secure in the support of the Eastern army, thought
that the time had come for another campaign. This time he came by
sea to Corinth, and, marching westwards, blockaded the Goths at Pholoe
in Elis. But Eutropius opened negotiations with Gildo, count of
Africa, whose loyalty had long been doubtful, to induce him to transfer
his allegiance to Arcadius; and, the threatening state of affairs making it
necessary for Stilicho to return, he allowed Alaric to withdraw to Epirus,
probably on the understanding that he would keep the Eastern Court
occupied. Eutropius however preferred to satisfy him by the post of
magister militum in Illyricum, and on these terms peace was concluded.
Such being the relations between the two Courts, it is not surprising to
find that some of the eunuch's enemies conspired with the Gothic soldiers,
the allies of Stilicho, against his life, and that, with the fate of Rufinus
before him, he tried to prevent such plots by a law of extraordinary
severity (4 Sept. ). Perhaps for the same reason that no army was sent
against Alaric no support was given to Gildo ; but his revolt occupied
Stilicho's attention during most of 398. The pacification of Africa was
however soon followed by Eutropius' fall.
Gaïnas, now magister militum, had been strengthening his own
position by filling the army with Goths from Moesia ; and in spring
399 an opportunity for action presented itself. Tribigild, commander
of the Gothic colonists in Phrygia, having been refused a donative by
Eutropius, revolted and ravaged the country, upon which Eutropius
offered the money; but Tribigild raised his demands and insisted upon
the eunuch's deposition. Gaïnas, with Leo, the satellite of Eutropius,
was sent against him; but, while Leo advanced toward the disturbed
district, Gaïnas remained at the Hellespont. Tribigild on hearing of
Leo's approach marched through Pisidia into Pamphylia, where a large
part of his army was cut to pieces by a rustic force under Valentinus,
a citizen of Selga, and the rest blockaded between the Eurymedon and
the Melas. Leo moved to the support of the local force: but, as he
was too indolent and dissolute to maintain discipline, Tribigild was able
by an unexpected attack to make his way through, while the disorderly
force scattered in all directions, Leo himself perishing in the flight.
Tribigild then returned to Phrygia, which he again plundered. Nor
was he the only enemy with whom the Empire had to contend; for,
besides the constant incursions of the desert tribes into Egypt and Libya,
the Huns were ravaging Thrace, and Vram Shapuh of Armenia was, at
the instigation of the Persian king, attempting to annex the five satrapies
north of the Tigris.
Accordingly Gaïnas with much show of reason represented to
Arcadius that his best course was to grant Tribigild's demand; and,
1 I cannot resist Koch's argument for 397 rather than 396. The connexion with
Gildo's revolt is then obvious.
? I take this to be the meaning of “Mesopotamia” in Mos. Chor. In. 52.
## p. 459 (#489) ############################################
399–400]
Fall of Eutropius
459
as Eudoxia urged the same, his consent was easily obtained. Eutropius
was deposed from his office, and, though he had abolished by legal
enactment the right of sanctuary possessed by the churches, fled to the
altar of St Sophia, where the bishop, John Chrysostom, who owed his
appointment to the eunuch, made use of his presence to preach on the
vanity of earthly things, but resisted all attempts to remove him.
Finally he left the church on a promise that his life should be spared,
but was deprived of property and honours, and banished to Cyprus
(July or Aug. )! As however Gaïnas insisted upon the necessity of his
)
death, he was, on the pretext that the promise applied only to Con-
stantinople, brought back to Chalcedon, tried on a charge of using
imperial ornaments, and beheaded (Nov. or Dec. )”.
The fall of Eutropius had been effected by a combination between
Eudoxia and Gaïnas ; and during the absence of the Goth, who had
returned to Phrygia, the Empress secured the appointment of Aurelianus
to the praefecture in preference to his brother Caesarius, who was
supported by Gaïnas. After Eutropius' death she further had herself
proclaimed Augusta (9 Jan. 400); and by an innovation which called
forth a protest from Honorius her busts were sent round the provinces
like those of emperors. But Gaïnas had not designed to set Eudoxia in
the place of Eutropius ; accordingly he sent Tribigild, with whom he had
joined forces, to Lampsacus, while he himself returned to Chalcedon, and
demanded the surrender of three of the principal supporters of the empress,
Aurelianus the praefect, Saturninus an ex-consul, and Count John,
her chief favourite. Resistance was useless; and Aurelianus and Saturninus
crossed to Chalcedon, while John hid himself, probably in a church; but
his hiding-place was discovered, and the bishop's enemies afterwards
asserted that he had betrayed him. The three men were ordered to
prepare for death; but, when the executioner's sword was at their necks,
Gaïnas stayed his hand and had them conveyed by sea towards the Adriatic,
perhaps intending to place them in the hands of Stilicho or Alaric.
He next demanded a meeting with the Emperor ; which took place at
Chalcedon, where they gave mutual oaths of good faith in the church of
St Euphemia. Both the Gothic leaders then crossed to Europe. Caesarius
was made praefect, and in consequence of the recent troubles was com-
pelled to increase the taxation ; but in systematising the sale of offices
by limiting the tenure of each he seems to have performed an act of
advantage to the State and justice to the purchasers. Meanwhile Gaïnas
was so distributing the Roman troops in the city as to place them at the
mercy of the Goths; and then, thinking his will law, he asked that a
a
1 The change in the praefecture, which must be connected with his fall, seems
from the dates in the Code to have occurred at this time.
2 Claudian heard reports of the movements of Yezdegerd (who dated his years
from 14 Aug. 399) before hearing of Eutropius' death, while Asterius knew of it
on 1 Jan.
CH. XVI.
## p. 460 (#490) ############################################
460
Overthrow of Gainas
[400—403
a
church within the walls should be given to the Arians. This time how-
ever the strong orthodoxy of Arcadius and the influence of the bishop
caused the demand to be refused. The violent hostility aroused by these
events made men believe that the Goths intended to attack the palace ;
while they on their side were seized with a panic which led them to
expect an attack from forces which did not exist. Accordingly Gaïnas,
alleging ill-health, retired to the suburban church of St John, instructing
his men to come out singly and join him. After the greater part had
left the city, a trivial occurrence brought on a scuffle between the Goths
and the citizens, who attacked the already panic-stricken barbarians with
any weapons they could find, and at last the gates were shut, and the
Goths enclosed within the city, without cohesion and without leaders,
offered little resistance and were mercilessly massacred, while Arcadius
,
found courage to declare Gaïnas a public enemy and send his guards to
support the populace. Next day the survivors, who had fled to a church
that the bishop had given to the orthodox Goths, were surrounded by
the soldiers; and, though none dared to attack them in the church,
the roof was stripped off and burning wood thrown in until all perished,
in spite of the appeals of Caesarius for a capitulation (12 July).
The Roman troops were now collected and placed under Fravitta,
a loyal pagan Goth who had distinguished himself in the time of
Theodosius. The attempts of Gaïnas on the Thracian cities failed,
Tribigild was killed, and lack of provisions compelled the Goths to
withdraw to the Chersonese in order to cross to Asia ; but Fravitta had
already placed a fleet on the Hellespont to intercept them. They were
however forced to attempt the passage in rafts, and, these being sunk,
most of them were drowned, while Gaïnas with the survivors retreated
across the Danube, where he was attacked and killed by Uldin the Hun
(23 Dec. )', who sent his head to Constantinople, where it was carried
through the city (3 Jan. 401). Shortly before the victory Aurelianus and
the other hostages escaped from their guards in Epirus, and returned to
the capital; and early in 401 Caesarius was deposed and imprisoned, and
Aurelianus restored. Some deserters and fugitive slaves, who continued
to ravage Thrace, were put down by Fravitta. But he was accused of
not pressing his advantage against the Goths, and, though acquitted,
incurred Eudoxia's enmity, and afterwards fell a victim to the machina-
tions of her satellites.
Stilicho's hopes of directing Eastern affairs through the army were
thus destroyed; and soon afterwards the government was delivered from
Alaric, who, having exhausted eastern Illyricum, invaded Italy, and
after an indecisive battle at Pollentia (402) was established in western
Illyricum as magister militum, probably on the understanding that he
would help Stilicho to annex eastern Illyricum when opportunity arose.
In other directions things went less fortunately. By the annihilation
1 Seeck in Pauly-Wissowa, 11. 1150.
## p. 461 (#491) ############################################
403–408]
Banishment of John Chrysostom
461
of the Goths the East was left almost without an army; and the Isaurian
robbers terrorised eastern Asia Minor and Syria, where they took Seleucia
(Feb. 403), and even crossed to Cyprus. Arbazacius the Armenian
indeed gained some successes ; but he was suspected of corruption and
recalled, though by the influence of the empress he escaped punish-
ment (404).
The chief power in the State was now Eudoxia ; but there was one
man who dared to oppose her, John Chrysostom.
As early as 401 he
offended her by complaining of some act of oppression ; and not only
was he constantly preaching against the prevailing luxury and dissipation
among the ladies of fashion of whom she was leader, but he used the
names “ Herodias” and “ Jezebel,” and in one of his sermons employed
the word asofia, with an application that could not be mistaken. His
popularity was so great that she would hardly have attacked him on
this ground alone; but, with the help of the ecclesiastical jealousy of
the bishop of Alexandria and the discontent which his high-handed
proceedings in the cause of discipline aroused among some of the clergy,
she procured his deposition (c. July 403). Popular clamour however and
a building-collapse in the imperial chamber frightened her into recalling
him after a few days and excusing herself by throwing the blame upon
others. This reconciliation did not last long. Two months later a
statue of Eudoxia was erected on a spot adjoining the church of St Irene
during divine service, and John, regarding the festivities as an insult to
the church, preached a violent sermon against those responsible for them,
which the empress took as an attack upon herself. The bishops were
therefore again assembled; but the proceedings were protracted, and
Arcadius, who in religious matters had something like a will of his own,
was hard to move. On 20 June 404 however the bishop was finally
expelled. That night some of his fanatical partisans set fire to St Sophia,
which was destroyed with the adjoining Senate-house, in which many
ancient works of art perished.
Less than four months afterwards Eudoxia died from a miscarriage
(6 Oct. ); and the period of active misrule from which the East had
suffered since 395 came to an end. The praefecture was now entrusted
to the capable hands of Anthemius: but the government had still no force
to
repress the incursions of the Libyan tribes or the Isaurian brigands,
whose raids continued to the end of the reign. The relations with the
West had been further embittered by the affair of John Chrysostom;
and, while Stilicho lived, a good understanding was impossible. After
delays not easy to explain Stilicho prepared to carry out his compact
with Alaric, and, as an earnest of his intention, closed the ports against
Eastern ships, while Alaric invaded Epirus. But, hearing that the
usurper Constantine had crossed to Gaul, Stilicho again postponed his
Eastern expedition, and Alaric in anger evacuated the dominions of
Arcadius and threatened Italy. At this juncture Arcadius died (1 May
a
CH. XVI.
## p. 462 (#492) ############################################
462
Administration of Anthemius
[408–414
1
!
408), leaving a son, Theodosius, aged seven, who since 10 Jan. 402
had been his father's colleague, and three (perhaps four) daughters;
and Stilicho, thinking the time come to carry out his old project of
bringing the East under his rule, proposed to send Alaric to Gaul and
go himself to Constantinople as the representative of Honorius; but a
hostile party secured the Emperor's ear, and he was put to death (Aug.
408). The ports were then opened and amity restored.
The care of the Emperor's person was in the hands of Antiochus, a
eunuch with Persian connexions ; but the direction of affairs fell to
Anthemius, whose chief adviser was the sophist Troilus; and the period
of his administration was one of the most fortunate in the history of the
East. The danger from the West had been removed by Stilicho's fall;
and on the eastern side the best relations were maintained with Yezdegerd
the Persian king, with whom a commercial treaty was made. The military
power of the Empire had suffered too much to be quickly restored ; but
we hear no more of Isaurian raids, and it was found possible to send a
small force to support Honorius against Alaric. It was only however
by a combination with subject tribes that the Huns were driven across
the Danube, while their tributaries the Sciri were captured in vast
numbers, and enslaved or settled as coloni in Asia Minor (409). To
prevent such incursions the fleet on the Danube was strengthened (412).
Other salutary measures were the relief given to the taxpayers of Illyricum
and the East (413-14), the restoration of the fortifications of the Illyrian
cities (412), and the re-organisation of the corn supply of Constantinople
(409). But the work for which the name of Anthemius was most
remembered is the wall built from the Propontis to the Golden Horn
to enclose the portion of the city that had grown up outside the wall
of Constantine, a wall which substantially exists to this day (413).
In 414 the administration of Anthemius came to an end, probably
by death; and on 4 July Pulcheria, the daughter of Arcadius, was
proclaimed Augusta, a title that had not been granted to an emperor's
sister since Trajan's time; and henceforth, though only two years
older
than Theodosius, she exercised the functions of regent, and her bust was
placed in the Senate-house with those of the emperors (30 Dec. ). At the
same time Antiochus was removed from the palace.
The Court of Pulcheria was a strange contrast to her mother's. For
political rather than religious reasons she took a vow of perpetual virginity
and induced her sisters to do the same, and the princesses spent their
time in spinning and devout exercises. She herself was a ready speaker
and writer in Greek and Latin; and she had her brother trained in
rhetoric, as well as horsemanship and the use of arms, in ceremony
and deportment, and the observances of religion. Hence he grew up &
strict observer of ecclesiastical rules, a fair scholar with a special interest
in natural science and medicine, a keen huntsman, an excellent penman,
exemplary in private life, mild and good-tempered ; but, as everything
4
## p. 463 (#493) ############################################
414–420]
Regency of Pulcheria
463
likely to make him a capable ruler was excluded from his education,
the Emperor remained all his life a puppet in the hands of his sister, his
wife, and his eunuchs.
The transference of the regency to a girl of 15 could not be effected
without a change in the methods of administration, and it is therefore
not surprising to find the government accused of fiscal oppression,
while the sale of offices, which was restricted under Anthemius, became
again a matter of public notoriety. In Alexandria, which, being almost
equally divided between Christians, Jews, and heathens, was always
turbulent, the change gave occasion for a serious outbreak. After
prolonged rioting between Jews and Christians the bishop Cyril instigated
his followers to expel the Jews. This the praefect Orestes reported to
the Emperor, while Cyril sent his own account; and, Orestes refusing to
yield, some fanatical monks attacked and stoned him. The chief perpe-
trator was tortured to death, whereupon Cyril treated him as a martyr,
and both parties appealed to Constantinople. It now came to be
believed among Cyril's partisans that Orestes was acting under the
influence of the celebrated mathematician and philosopher, Hypatia,
who was in constant communication with him : accordingly a party of
parabolani (sick-attendants) pulled her from her chariot, dragged her
into the church called Caesarium, and beat or scraped her to death with
tiles (Mar. 415). At first the government acted with some vigour. No
personal punishment was inflicted, but the parabolani were limited to
500, and the selection made subject to the approbation of the Augustal
and praetorian praefects, while they were forbidden to appear in the
council-house or law-courts or at public spectacles (29 Sept. 416). It
was not long however before the influence or bribes of Cyril procured
the restoration of the freedom of selection (3 Feb. 418). · The increase
of anti-pagan feeling was also shewn by a law excluding pagans from
high administrative office and from the army (7 Dec. 416). Other dis-
turbances were the rebellion of Count Plintha in Palestine (418), an
attack on the city praefect Aëtius (23 Feb. 419) and a mutiny in the
East (420). In Armenia, Yezdegerd having appointed his brother as
king, the Roman portion of the country was definitely annexed and
placed under a count (415–16).
It was now time for Theodosius to marry; and it was Pulcheria's
object to prevent the choice of a wife with powerful connexions, who
would be likely to endanger her ascendancy. She had by some means
made the acquaintance of Athenais, daughter of the Athenian sophist
Leontius, a woman of high education and literary ability, who had come
to Constantinople through a dispute with her brothers about their
father's property. As a friendless girl dependent on herself, yet fitted
by education for the part of an empress, she seemed exactly suited for
the purpose. The Augusta therefore introduced her to Theodosius,
who declared himself willing to make her his wife; Athenais made no
CH. XVI.
## p. 464 (#494) ############################################
464
Persian War
[ 421-441
-
a
objection to accepting Christianity, and was baptised under the name of
Eudocia, Pulcheria standing sponsor; and on 7 June 421 the marriage
was celebrated. The new empress bore no malice against her brothers,
but summoned them to Court, where one became praefect of Illyricum
and the other master of the offices; in this however she perhaps shewed
worldly wisdom rather than Christian charity. After the birth of a
daughter she received the title of Augusta (2 Jan. 423).
About the time of the marriage the peace with Persia was broken.
Yezdegerd had always shewn himself friendly to the Christians; but at
the end of his reign the fanatical act of a bishop drove him to severe
measures. Some Christians fled to Roman territory, and when their
surrender was refused, the position became so critical that permission
was given to the inhabitants of the exposed provinces to fortify their
own lands (5 May 420). After Yezdegerd's violent death (late in 420)
a more extended persecution was begun by Warahran V; and the Court
of Constantinople began the war by sending the Alan Ardaburius through
Roman Armenia into Arzanene, where he defeated the Persian Narsai
(Aug. or Sept. 421), who retreated to Nisibis. Ardaburius with numerous
prisoners advanced to Amida to prevent an invasion of Mesopotamia ;
and here, as the prisoners were starving, Bishop Acacius melted the
church plate, ransomed them with the price, gave them provisions, and
sent them home. Ardaburius then besieged Nisibis, and Warahran
prepared to march to its relief, while he sent Al Mundhir, sheikh of
Al Hira, to invade Syria. Many of the Arabs were however drowned
in the Euphrates, and the rest defeated by the general Vitianus. On the
king's approach Ardaburius burnt his engines and retreated, and the
Persians, crossing the frontier, vainly attacked Rhesaina for over
a month; but, though the Romans gained some successes, no decisive
victory was obtained, and Theodosius thought it best to propose terms.
Warahran was also inclined for peace; but, wishing to gain a success
first, he ordered an attack upon a Roman force, while he kept the
ambassador with him. The Romans were surprised; but during the
battle another division under Procopius, the son-in-law of Anthemius,
unexpectedly appeared, and the Persians, taken on both sides, were
defeated. Warahran then took up the negotiations in earnest; and, on
his undertaking to stop the persecution and each party binding itself
not to receive the Arab subjects of the other, peace was made for 100
years (422). This victory was celebrated by Eudocia in an epic poem.
It was probably a result of the transference of troops from Europe to
meet the Persians that the Huns this year invaded Thrace, though in
consequence of the prudent measures of Anthemius the Danubian
frontier was rarely violated before 441. The provinces had however
not recovered from the calamities of Arcadius' time, and constant
remissions of taxation were necessary.
The relations with the West were again disturbed through the refusal
## p. 465 (#495) ############################################
421-441]
Elevation of Valentinian III
465
of Theodosius to recognise the elevation of Constantius (421); and when
after the death of Honorius (Aug. 423) the obscure John was proclaimed
emperor in prejudice of the claims of the young Valentinian the son of
Placidia, there was an open breach. When John's envoys arrived to
for recognition, Theodosius threw them into prison. Placidia now received
anew the title of Augusta (424), which Theodosius had before ignored,
Valentinian was declared Caesar at Thessalonica, mother and son were
sent to Italy with a large army under Ardaburius, his son Aspar, and
Candidianus; and, John having been overthrown, Valentinian was in-
vested with the empire (Oct. 425).
The concord between the two
divisions of the Empire was confirmed by the betrothal of Valentinian to
Theodosius' daughter Eudoxia, and the victory celebrated by the building
of the Golden Gate, through which the emperors made their formal
entries into Constantinople. In 431, when Placidia needed assistance
against the Vandals, an army under Aspar was sent to Africa ; but Aspar
returned three years later without success, probably after an under-
standing which made him ever after a friend of the Vandals.
In 427 some Ostrogoths who had seceded from the Huns were
settled in Thrace, and other tribes were received in 433; while a raid
was made by the Huns, and a more serious attack only prevented by
abject submission to their demands (434). At sea a pirate fleet entered
the Propontis, but in 438 the pirate Contradis was captured. At home
stones were thrown at Theodosius in a riot after a famine in 431, and
there were bitter complaints of the extortion of the eunuchs.
Two matters of internal administration deserve special mention—the
codification of the law (438), and the foundation of a university at
Constantinople as a counterpoise to the schools of Athens (27 Feb. 425).
In this university there were 28 professors of Greek and Latin grammar
and rhetoric, and two of law, but only one of philosophy, and all other
public teaching in the city was forbidden.
Eudocia was at first of necessity subservient to her sister-in-law ;
but that she would always accept this position was not to be expected.
A difference appeared at the time of the synod of Ephesus (431), when
Pulcheria was victorious; but afterwards her influence declined, and at
last a palace intrigue drove her to retire from court. Under Eudocia's
patronage a large share in the administration fell to Cyrus, an Egyptian
poet and philosopher, who became city-praefect in 435, and in 439
combined this office with the praetorian praefecture. Cyrus was the
first praefect who published decrees in Greek, and he also distinguished
himself by renovating the buildings of the city, especially by an extension
of the sea-wall to join the wall of Anthemius, which the capture of
Carthage by the Vandals had made desirable (439). Antiochus, the
emperor's old guardian, was restored to favour and made praepositus.
The capture of Carthage caused the despatch of a fleet to Sicily in
1 I assign Codex Just. 11. vii. 5 to this year.
C. MED. H. VOL. I. CH. XVI.
30
## p. 466 (#496) ############################################
466
Fall of Eudocia
[437–460
441 : but in consequence of an irruption of Huns into Illyricum the
force was recalled in 442 and peace made; but not before the ex-
pedition had led to a war with Persia. Under the capable direction
of Anatolius, the magister militum per Orientem, the defence of the
eastern frontier had been strengthened by stricter rules of discipline in the
army (25 Feb. 438) and by the building of the fortress of Theodosiopolis
in Armenia. This last the new king, Yezdegerd II, probably considered
a menace ; and he therefore took advantage of the troubles in the
West to begin war, crossing the frontier from Nisibis and sacking
several towns, while another force raided Roman Armenia (441). He
was however hampered by bad weather and threatened by the Ephthalites
beyond the Caspian ; hence, though the Romans had no army to oppose
to him, Anatolius and Aspar by a large sum of money and a promise to
surrender some Christian refugees persuaded him to make a truce for a
year. As the troubles with the Ephthalites continued, this was followed
by a definite peace on the terms that neither party should build a fort
within a certain distance of the frontier, and the Romans should renew
an undertaking made by Jovian to contribute to the defences of the
Caucasian Gates. One of the last acts of Cyrus was to provide that the
Armenian frontier lands should be held on condition of supplying horses,
wagons, and pikemen for the army (26 June 441).
After her daughter's marriage (21 Oct. 437), for which Valentinian
came to Constantinople, Eudocia went on pilgrimage to Jerusalem (438),
and on the way gained much popularity at Antioch by a speech in which
she boasted of her Greek blood. She returned in 439; and meanwhile
some hostile influence seems to have been at work, for in 440 Paulinus,
ex-master of the offices, was beheaded at Caesarea in Cappadocia on
suspicion, as was popularly believed, of an intrigue with her, and soon
afterwards she asked leave to retire to Jerusalem, and left Constantinople
for ever (441 ? ). With her fell Cyrus, who through the popular
acclamation, “Constantine founded, Cyrus restored,” had incurred the
Emperor's jealousy. Being charged with paganism, he took orders to
save his head, and was made bishop of Cotyaeum, where four bishops
were said to have been murdered. By his discreet conduct he succeeded
in retaining his see till the time of Leo, when on some unknown charge
he was deprived and came back to Constantinople, where he remained
in possession of large property. Antiochus was also deposed and com-
pelled to take orders. Pulcheria returned to Court; but the chief
influence was for the rest of the reign exercised by the eunuch Chrysaphius.
Eudocia was not left in peace at Jerusalem; but Saturninus, count of the
domestici, was sent to spy upon her, and for some reason beheaded two
clergymen who attended upon her (444). She in revenge assassinated
Saturninus and was deprived of her imperial train, though she still
disposed of ample revenues, which she spent on the erection of churches
and monasteries. She composed several poems, of which large portions
are extant, and died in 460 (20 Oct. ).
## p. 467 (#497) ############################################
447–453]
Accession of Marcian
467
The good administration introduced by Anthemius had been in
some measure maintained under the ascendancy of Pulcheria and Eudocia;
but under Chrysaphius the days of Arcadius seemed to have returned.
The Huns overran Thrace and Illyricum, and the murder of the magister
militum of Thrace, John the Vandal, (apparently by order of Chrysaphius)
did not strengthen the resistance. The Romans suffered a severe defeat
(447), and Chrysaphius could only grant Attila's terms and send emissaries
to assassinate him. In 447 the walls of Constantinople were shattered by
an earthquake, and in consequence of the terror caused by the Huns the
praefect Constantine rebuilt them in 60 days, and the Isaurians, who had
renewed their raids in 4+1, were called in under their leader Zeno to
defend the city. Zeno afterwards extorted the office of magister militum
per Orientem, and demanded the surrender of Chrysaphius; and, though
this was not granted, the danger from the Huns prevented an intended
campaign against the marauders. Bands of Tzani, Saracens, and
Caucasian Huns had invaded the Empire during the Persian war, and we
hear of Saracen raids again several years later (448), while Yezdegerd
shewed signs of a desire to renew hostilities. Libya too was again
harassed by the frontier tribes, and the Vandals terrorised the Ionian sea.
On 26 July 450 Theodosius broke his spine by a fall from his horse
while hunting, and died two days later. The appointment of a successor
was left to the Augusta Pulcheria; and her choice fell upon Marcian,
a veteran soldier from Thrace of high character who had held the post
of domesticus (chief of the staff) to Aspar, to whose influence the selection
must be ascribed. Pulcheria crowned Marcian in the presence of the
Senate (24 Aug. ), and gave him her hand in nominal marriage.
The first act of the new rulers was to put Chrysaphius to death. The
sale of offices was prohibited, though it is unlikely that the prohibition
was strictly carried out; and attempts were made to lighten the burden
of taxation by a remission of arrears, by reducing the number of praetors
to three and relieving non-resident senators from the burden of the office
(18 Dec. 450), and by enacting that the consuls instead of squandering
money on the populace should make a contribution towards the repair
of the aqueducts (452), an obligation which was extended to honorary
consuls by the Emperor Zeno. Marcian also put an end to a system
under which the possessors of certain lands which had been sold by the
State in the time of Valens escaped their share of taxation. The
popularity of his rule is shewn by the words “ Reign like Marcian,”
,
with which the citizens in 491 greeted Anastasius.
In external relations the reign was a fortunate one.
As Attila was
preparing for his western expedition, his demands for money could
safely be refused; and, when after his return he repeated them with
threats, death prevented him from carrying these out (453). From
Zeno, who was appealing to heathen support, the Emperor was delivered
by his death following a fall from his horse. Envoys from the Armenian
CH. XVI.
30—2
## p. 468 (#498) ############################################
468
Accession of Leo I
[452–471
insurgents had come before Theodosius' death to ask for help; but
Marcian refused to break the peace with Persia. With the Vandals also
peace was maintained ; for, though after the sack of Rome (455) Marcian
tried to obtain the release of Eudoxia and her daughters, the possession
of these hostages as well as Aspar's influence secured Gaiseric from
attack. In Syria the magister militum, Aspar's son Ardaburius, was in
452 fighting with Arab raiders near Damascus, after which negotiations
were begun, but with what result is not known. At the same time
Egypt was suffering from incursions of the Blemmyes, who gave hostages
to the imperial envoy Maximin, and made peace for 100 years, but on
,
his sudden death recovered the hostages by force and renewed their raids
till put down by Florus, praefect and count of Egypt. A more serious
position arose on the Danubian frontier, where after the collapse of the
Hun empire (454) some of the Huns and other tribes were settled in the
north of Nlyricum and Thrace as foederati. Of these the most important
was a body of Ostrogoths, who under three brothers of the Amal family,
Walamir, Theodemir, and Widimir, settled in eastern Pannonia, of
which they received a grant from Marcian, who did not recognise
Valentinian III's successors: they also received pay as foederati.
In 453 Pulcheria died, leaving all her property to the poor, a bequest
which Marcian faithfully carried out. By a former wife Marcian had a
daughter, whom he had given in marriage to Anthemius, grandson of the
praefect Anthemius; but, when he died (27 Jan. 457) at the age of 65, he
had taken no steps to secure his son-in-law's succession, and the throne
lay at the disposal of Aspar the patrician and magister militum, who
as an Arian and barbarian could not himself assume the crown, but
might reign in the name of some puppet-emperor. He therefore chose
Leo, a military tribune from Dacia and his own steward, a man of some
capacity but little education; and the choice was ratified by the Senate.
As there was no elder emperor or Augusta to perform the coronation,
Leo was crowned by the patriarch Anatolius (7 Feb. ). This precedent
was henceforth followed whenever an emperor was not merely being
associated with a senior colleague.
One of the first acts of the new reign was the recognition of Majorian
(April), after whose death (461) Leo, though not recognising Severus,
accepted the Western consuls, and, while sending an embassy to Gaiseric
to secure the liberation of the widow and daughters of Valentinian,
urged him to cease attacking Italy and Sicily. Gaiseric refused to make
peace with the West or to release Eudoxia, whom he married to his son,
but on receiving a share of Valentinian's property released his widow and
her other daughter Placidia, who came to Constantinople. Some years
later Eudoxia escaped (471) and ended her days at Jerusalem. Leo also
induced Marcellinus, who had set up an independent power in Dalmatia,
to keep peace with the Western Emperor; but further embassies to
Gaiseric effected nothing.
About this time the migration of the Avars from the east caused a
## p. 469 (#499) ############################################
489–468]
Affairs of Lazica
469
movement among the Hunnic tribes of the Caucasus, in consequence of
which the Saragurs asked for Roman protection, and obtained it, though
some trouble with the fugitive peoples followed. But when the Saragurs
invaded Persian territory, an embassy arrived from King Piroz to complain
of the treatment of Magians in the Empire and the reception of fugitives,
and to ask for the stipulated contribution in money or men towards the
defence of the Caucasian Gates, and money for the war against the
Ephthalites; to which an answer was sent through the ex-praefect
Constantine that the complaints were unfounded and the contribution
could not be given. Meanwhile Gobazes, king of Lazica (Colchis), had
offended the government, and a campaign in his country was under-
taken (464), the troops returning to Roman territory for the winter.
The coast-road was however so difficult that the Romans were thinking
of asking leave to pass through Persian territory ; accordingly on receiving
an embassy from Gobazes Leo granted peace on the nominal condition
that he and his son should not reign conjointly; and Gobazes, having
failed to obtain help from Piroz on account of the Ephthalite war, con-
sented to retire in his son's favour. A certain Dionysius, who was known
to Gobazes from previous negotiations, was at his request sent to Lazica
and brought the king back with him to Constantinople (466), where by
plausible words and the wearing of Christian emblems he obtained favour,
so that his abdication was not insisted on. His submission drew upon
him the enmity of Piroz, and a force under Heraclius was sent to his
support; but, as the Persians were occupied elsewhere and the maintenance
of the troops was expensive, Gobazes sent them back. Leo was mean
while negotiating with Piroz through Constantine; but Piroz, having
overcome the Ephthalites, sent to announce the fact and turned against
Gobazes, who had meanwhile taken some forts from his north-eastern
neighbours, the Suani, who were in alliance with Persia. Gobazes asked
that part of the Armenian frontier force might be sent to his support;
but Leo, being occupied with the African expedition, refused assistance
(468).
Meanwhile the relations between Leo and Aspar had become strained.
A difference between them had arisen in 459, when Leo appointed Vivianus
praefect in preference to Aspar's candidate, Tatianus; and again in 460
Leo expelled the patriarch Timothy of Alexandria in spite of Aspar's
opposition. Another dispute arose over the affairs of Illyricum. The
Pannonian Ostrogoths, whose subsidy had been withheld by Leo, raided
Illyricum and took Dyrrachium (459), but were obliged to give
Theodemir's son, the boy Theodoric, as a hostage before obtaining the
pay which they claimed. They then turned against the neighbouring
tribes, and after a time became involved in a war with the Sciri. Both
parties appealed to the Emperor for help, and, though Aspar advised
neutrality, Leo insisted on supporting the Sciri, who gained a victory,
Walamir falling in the battle.
OH. XVI.
## p. 470 (#500) ############################################
470
Rise of Zeno
[ 460–470
The Emperor was alarmed by the condition of the West, which after
Majorian's death fell under the domination of Ricimer; and he de-
termined, if possible, to save the East from a similar fate: but, as
Aspar was surrounded by a large body-guard of Goths and other
dependents and the Thracian Goths, whose chief, Theodoric, son of
Triarius, was his wife's nephew, were in alliance with him, it was
necessary to raise a force from some other quarter to overthrow him.
Accordingly Leo turned his eyes towards the Isaurians, who had done
so much injury to the Empire in the days of Arcadius and Theodosius,
but might now be used to rescue it from more dangerous enemies. His
elder daughter, Ariadne, was therefore given in marriage to the Isaurian
Tarasicodissa, who in memory of his countryman of the time of Theo-
dosius took the name of Zeno and brought with him an Isaurian
body-guard to set against that of Aspar (467 ? ).
Meanwhile disturbances had arisen in Thrace. From about 460 the
command there was held by Ardaburius, but it was afterwards transferred
to Basiliscus, brother of Leo's wife Verina. In 467 trouble arose with
Attila's son Dengizic, and a force of Huns crossed the Danube with a
large body of Goths; but the two nations were surrounded by a Roman
army, and induced by a trick to fight one another, so that a general
slaughter followed, from which only a few escaped.
In 467 Ricimer, requiring the Eastern fleet for protection against
the Vandals, asked Leo to nominate an emperor; whereupon he chose
Marcian's son-in-law, Anthemius, and, having persuaded Marcellinus to
submit to the new emperor, prepared a great expedition by land and
sea (468): but the fleet was by the mismanagement of Basiliscus almost
annihilated ; and Aspar, the Vandals' friend, was believed to have induced
him to betray his trust. After his return he took refuge in St Sophia,
but at Verina's intercession escaped punishment.
Meanwhile Zeno was sent to Thrace; and the soldiers, instigated, as
was supposed, by Aspar, tried to murder him, and he with difficulty
escaped to Sardica. The command was then given to Anagast, who soon
afterwards rebelled (469).
## p. 450 (#480) ############################################
450
The Church
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 attempt-
ing 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 settle-
ment, 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 appear-
ance, 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
:
## p. 451 (#481) ############################################
Foreign Affairs
451
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 Burgun-
dians; 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 (sic, per circuitum placuit omnibus
gentibus, says the Anonymus); 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 despatched 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
CH. XV.
2942
## p. 452 (#482) ############################################
452
Theodoric's last years
[507–523
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 Es-
thonians 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 reestablishing 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 punish-
ments, 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
1 The following saying of Theodoric's should not be forgotten : “We cannot
impose a religion by force, since no one can be compelled to believe against his
will. ” Cass. Var. 11. 27.
## p. 453 (#483) ############################################
523]
Boethius
453
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 com-
mand 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 shewn a most bitter enmity towards heresy.
We have no certain knowledge as to whether the Senate was in sym-
pathy 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
CH. XV.
## p. 454 (#484) ############################################
454
Death of Theodoric
(523–534
-
--
+
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 criticise 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 despatched 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 immedi-
ately 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's 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 shewing 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
## p. 455 (#485) ############################################
534–536]
Death of Amalasuntha
455
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.
CH, XV.
## p. 456 (#486) ############################################
456
*
CHAPTER XVI.
THE EASTERN PROVINCES FROM ARCADIUS
TO ANASTASIUS.
care.
By the death of Theodosius the Eastern throne passed to his incapable
elder son, Arcadius, then 17 years old, while the practical administration
was in the hands of the praetorian praefect, Rufinus of Aquitaine, a man
of vigour and ability who in the pursuit of ambition and avarice was not
limited by scruples. Under these circumstances a conflict was likely to
arise between Rufinus and Stilicho, who was the guardian of the Western
Emperor Honorius, and husband of Theodosius' niece, who also asserted
that Theodosius had on his death-bed committed both his sons to his
Rufinus proposed to counterbalance the advantage which his rival
possessed in his connexion with the imperial family by marrying Arcadius
to his own daughter ; but, unfortunately for him, he had a rival at
Court in the eunuch Eutropius, a former slave who had risen to the
position of praepositus sacri cubiculi ; who now profited by the praefect's
absence to thwart his scheme. Lucian, whom Rufinus had made count
of the East, had refused a request of Eucherius, the Emperor's great-
uncle; and, upon Arcadius complaining of this, the praefect, to shew his
own loyalty, made a hasty journey to Antioch and put Lucian to a cruel
death. Meanwhile Eutropius induced Arcadius to betroth himself to
Eudoxia, daughter of Bauto the Frank, who had been brought up by a
son of Promotus, an enemy of Rufinus; who thus had the mortification
of seeing his master united not to his own daughter but to one who from
her upbringing would be bitterly opposed to him (27 Apr. 395).
The inferiority of Rufinus was increased by the fact that the best of
the Eastern troops had accompanied Theodosius to the West, and of
these only some of the less efficient had been sent back. The Visigothic
foederati had however returned to Moesia ; and their leader Alaric, who
was now proclaimed king, was quick to profit by the weakness of the
government. Professing indignation at not being appointed magister
militum, he invaded Thrace and advanced to Constantinople, while
Rufinus, having also to meet an incursion of Caucasian Huns into
Asia Minor and Syria (July), where Antioch was threatened and Old
## p. 457 (#487) ############################################
395–396]
Murder of Rufinus
457
another way.
Tyre abandoned by its citizens, had no forces to oppose to him. He
therefore went to the Gothic camp, and, after some negotiations, Alaric
withdrew to Macedonia, and after a check from local forces at the Peneus
passed into Thessaly. Stilicho, who, besides desiring to overthrow
Rufinus, wished to re-unite eastern Illyricum to the Western power,
treated this as a pretext for interference; and, starting in early spring,
he marched with considerable forces to Thessaly, and met the Goths in
a wide plain. Probably, however, he did not wish to crush them ; and,
after some months had been spent in skirmishes or negotiations, Rufinus,
who feared Stilicho more than Alaric, sent him in the Emperor's name an
order to evacuate the dominions of Arcadius and send back the Eastern
troops. To break openly with the East at this time did not suit Stilicho's
purpose ; and, as the Eastern forces, which comprised a large Gothic
contingent, were devoted to him, he could attain his primary object in
He therefore returned at once, while the Eastern army
under Gaïnas the Goth marched to Constantinople. In accordance with
custom the Emperor, accompanied by Rufinus, came out to meet the
troops, and the soldiers, at a signal from Gaïnas, fell upon the praefect
and cut him in pieces (27 Nov. ).
The Emperor's chief adviser was now Eutropius, who appropriated a
large part of Rufinus' property and procured the banishment of the two
most distinguished generals in the East, Abundantius and Timasius
(396), while he entrusted positions of power to such obscure men as
Hosius the cook and Leo the wool-comber. He also gained much obloquy
by selling offices, though as the prices were fixed and there was no
system of public loans, this was only a convenient method of raising
money. As a eunuch, he could not hold any state office; but for this
he partly compensated by transferring some of the powers of the praefect
to the master of the offices and by interfering in matters altogether out-
side the functions of a chamberlain. Thus he is said to have acted as a
judge, probably on a special commission, and to have gone on embassies
to the Goths and Huns, from which he returned with military pomp.
Finally he was made a patrician and assumed the consulship (399),
though his name was not admitted to the Western Fasti. At first he
was necessarily on good terms with the army, and therefore with Stilicho;
but he was no more inclined than Rufinus had been to allow the Western
regent to direct Eastern affairs, and the previous position therefore soon
recurred.
After Stilicho's retreat Greece lay at Alaric's mercy, for, perhaps
because the army was too much under Stilicho's influence, no force was
sent against him, and through the unguarded Thermopylae he marched
plundering into Boeotia. Thebes indeed was too strong to take, and
Athens he entered only under a capitulation. Megara however was
taken, and, the Isthmus being left undefended, Corinth, Argos, and
Sparta also. During 396 Peloponnesus lay under his heel ; but early
a
OH. XVI.
## p. 458 (#488) ############################################
458
Rebellion of Tribigild
(397–399
in 3971 Stilicho, secure in the support of the Eastern army, thought
that the time had come for another campaign. This time he came by
sea to Corinth, and, marching westwards, blockaded the Goths at Pholoe
in Elis. But Eutropius opened negotiations with Gildo, count of
Africa, whose loyalty had long been doubtful, to induce him to transfer
his allegiance to Arcadius; and, the threatening state of affairs making it
necessary for Stilicho to return, he allowed Alaric to withdraw to Epirus,
probably on the understanding that he would keep the Eastern Court
occupied. Eutropius however preferred to satisfy him by the post of
magister militum in Illyricum, and on these terms peace was concluded.
Such being the relations between the two Courts, it is not surprising to
find that some of the eunuch's enemies conspired with the Gothic soldiers,
the allies of Stilicho, against his life, and that, with the fate of Rufinus
before him, he tried to prevent such plots by a law of extraordinary
severity (4 Sept. ). Perhaps for the same reason that no army was sent
against Alaric no support was given to Gildo ; but his revolt occupied
Stilicho's attention during most of 398. The pacification of Africa was
however soon followed by Eutropius' fall.
Gaïnas, now magister militum, had been strengthening his own
position by filling the army with Goths from Moesia ; and in spring
399 an opportunity for action presented itself. Tribigild, commander
of the Gothic colonists in Phrygia, having been refused a donative by
Eutropius, revolted and ravaged the country, upon which Eutropius
offered the money; but Tribigild raised his demands and insisted upon
the eunuch's deposition. Gaïnas, with Leo, the satellite of Eutropius,
was sent against him; but, while Leo advanced toward the disturbed
district, Gaïnas remained at the Hellespont. Tribigild on hearing of
Leo's approach marched through Pisidia into Pamphylia, where a large
part of his army was cut to pieces by a rustic force under Valentinus,
a citizen of Selga, and the rest blockaded between the Eurymedon and
the Melas. Leo moved to the support of the local force: but, as he
was too indolent and dissolute to maintain discipline, Tribigild was able
by an unexpected attack to make his way through, while the disorderly
force scattered in all directions, Leo himself perishing in the flight.
Tribigild then returned to Phrygia, which he again plundered. Nor
was he the only enemy with whom the Empire had to contend; for,
besides the constant incursions of the desert tribes into Egypt and Libya,
the Huns were ravaging Thrace, and Vram Shapuh of Armenia was, at
the instigation of the Persian king, attempting to annex the five satrapies
north of the Tigris.
Accordingly Gaïnas with much show of reason represented to
Arcadius that his best course was to grant Tribigild's demand; and,
1 I cannot resist Koch's argument for 397 rather than 396. The connexion with
Gildo's revolt is then obvious.
? I take this to be the meaning of “Mesopotamia” in Mos. Chor. In. 52.
## p. 459 (#489) ############################################
399–400]
Fall of Eutropius
459
as Eudoxia urged the same, his consent was easily obtained. Eutropius
was deposed from his office, and, though he had abolished by legal
enactment the right of sanctuary possessed by the churches, fled to the
altar of St Sophia, where the bishop, John Chrysostom, who owed his
appointment to the eunuch, made use of his presence to preach on the
vanity of earthly things, but resisted all attempts to remove him.
Finally he left the church on a promise that his life should be spared,
but was deprived of property and honours, and banished to Cyprus
(July or Aug. )! As however Gaïnas insisted upon the necessity of his
)
death, he was, on the pretext that the promise applied only to Con-
stantinople, brought back to Chalcedon, tried on a charge of using
imperial ornaments, and beheaded (Nov. or Dec. )”.
The fall of Eutropius had been effected by a combination between
Eudoxia and Gaïnas ; and during the absence of the Goth, who had
returned to Phrygia, the Empress secured the appointment of Aurelianus
to the praefecture in preference to his brother Caesarius, who was
supported by Gaïnas. After Eutropius' death she further had herself
proclaimed Augusta (9 Jan. 400); and by an innovation which called
forth a protest from Honorius her busts were sent round the provinces
like those of emperors. But Gaïnas had not designed to set Eudoxia in
the place of Eutropius ; accordingly he sent Tribigild, with whom he had
joined forces, to Lampsacus, while he himself returned to Chalcedon, and
demanded the surrender of three of the principal supporters of the empress,
Aurelianus the praefect, Saturninus an ex-consul, and Count John,
her chief favourite. Resistance was useless; and Aurelianus and Saturninus
crossed to Chalcedon, while John hid himself, probably in a church; but
his hiding-place was discovered, and the bishop's enemies afterwards
asserted that he had betrayed him. The three men were ordered to
prepare for death; but, when the executioner's sword was at their necks,
Gaïnas stayed his hand and had them conveyed by sea towards the Adriatic,
perhaps intending to place them in the hands of Stilicho or Alaric.
He next demanded a meeting with the Emperor ; which took place at
Chalcedon, where they gave mutual oaths of good faith in the church of
St Euphemia. Both the Gothic leaders then crossed to Europe. Caesarius
was made praefect, and in consequence of the recent troubles was com-
pelled to increase the taxation ; but in systematising the sale of offices
by limiting the tenure of each he seems to have performed an act of
advantage to the State and justice to the purchasers. Meanwhile Gaïnas
was so distributing the Roman troops in the city as to place them at the
mercy of the Goths; and then, thinking his will law, he asked that a
a
1 The change in the praefecture, which must be connected with his fall, seems
from the dates in the Code to have occurred at this time.
2 Claudian heard reports of the movements of Yezdegerd (who dated his years
from 14 Aug. 399) before hearing of Eutropius' death, while Asterius knew of it
on 1 Jan.
CH. XVI.
## p. 460 (#490) ############################################
460
Overthrow of Gainas
[400—403
a
church within the walls should be given to the Arians. This time how-
ever the strong orthodoxy of Arcadius and the influence of the bishop
caused the demand to be refused. The violent hostility aroused by these
events made men believe that the Goths intended to attack the palace ;
while they on their side were seized with a panic which led them to
expect an attack from forces which did not exist. Accordingly Gaïnas,
alleging ill-health, retired to the suburban church of St John, instructing
his men to come out singly and join him. After the greater part had
left the city, a trivial occurrence brought on a scuffle between the Goths
and the citizens, who attacked the already panic-stricken barbarians with
any weapons they could find, and at last the gates were shut, and the
Goths enclosed within the city, without cohesion and without leaders,
offered little resistance and were mercilessly massacred, while Arcadius
,
found courage to declare Gaïnas a public enemy and send his guards to
support the populace. Next day the survivors, who had fled to a church
that the bishop had given to the orthodox Goths, were surrounded by
the soldiers; and, though none dared to attack them in the church,
the roof was stripped off and burning wood thrown in until all perished,
in spite of the appeals of Caesarius for a capitulation (12 July).
The Roman troops were now collected and placed under Fravitta,
a loyal pagan Goth who had distinguished himself in the time of
Theodosius. The attempts of Gaïnas on the Thracian cities failed,
Tribigild was killed, and lack of provisions compelled the Goths to
withdraw to the Chersonese in order to cross to Asia ; but Fravitta had
already placed a fleet on the Hellespont to intercept them. They were
however forced to attempt the passage in rafts, and, these being sunk,
most of them were drowned, while Gaïnas with the survivors retreated
across the Danube, where he was attacked and killed by Uldin the Hun
(23 Dec. )', who sent his head to Constantinople, where it was carried
through the city (3 Jan. 401). Shortly before the victory Aurelianus and
the other hostages escaped from their guards in Epirus, and returned to
the capital; and early in 401 Caesarius was deposed and imprisoned, and
Aurelianus restored. Some deserters and fugitive slaves, who continued
to ravage Thrace, were put down by Fravitta. But he was accused of
not pressing his advantage against the Goths, and, though acquitted,
incurred Eudoxia's enmity, and afterwards fell a victim to the machina-
tions of her satellites.
Stilicho's hopes of directing Eastern affairs through the army were
thus destroyed; and soon afterwards the government was delivered from
Alaric, who, having exhausted eastern Illyricum, invaded Italy, and
after an indecisive battle at Pollentia (402) was established in western
Illyricum as magister militum, probably on the understanding that he
would help Stilicho to annex eastern Illyricum when opportunity arose.
In other directions things went less fortunately. By the annihilation
1 Seeck in Pauly-Wissowa, 11. 1150.
## p. 461 (#491) ############################################
403–408]
Banishment of John Chrysostom
461
of the Goths the East was left almost without an army; and the Isaurian
robbers terrorised eastern Asia Minor and Syria, where they took Seleucia
(Feb. 403), and even crossed to Cyprus. Arbazacius the Armenian
indeed gained some successes ; but he was suspected of corruption and
recalled, though by the influence of the empress he escaped punish-
ment (404).
The chief power in the State was now Eudoxia ; but there was one
man who dared to oppose her, John Chrysostom.
As early as 401 he
offended her by complaining of some act of oppression ; and not only
was he constantly preaching against the prevailing luxury and dissipation
among the ladies of fashion of whom she was leader, but he used the
names “ Herodias” and “ Jezebel,” and in one of his sermons employed
the word asofia, with an application that could not be mistaken. His
popularity was so great that she would hardly have attacked him on
this ground alone; but, with the help of the ecclesiastical jealousy of
the bishop of Alexandria and the discontent which his high-handed
proceedings in the cause of discipline aroused among some of the clergy,
she procured his deposition (c. July 403). Popular clamour however and
a building-collapse in the imperial chamber frightened her into recalling
him after a few days and excusing herself by throwing the blame upon
others. This reconciliation did not last long. Two months later a
statue of Eudoxia was erected on a spot adjoining the church of St Irene
during divine service, and John, regarding the festivities as an insult to
the church, preached a violent sermon against those responsible for them,
which the empress took as an attack upon herself. The bishops were
therefore again assembled; but the proceedings were protracted, and
Arcadius, who in religious matters had something like a will of his own,
was hard to move. On 20 June 404 however the bishop was finally
expelled. That night some of his fanatical partisans set fire to St Sophia,
which was destroyed with the adjoining Senate-house, in which many
ancient works of art perished.
Less than four months afterwards Eudoxia died from a miscarriage
(6 Oct. ); and the period of active misrule from which the East had
suffered since 395 came to an end. The praefecture was now entrusted
to the capable hands of Anthemius: but the government had still no force
to
repress the incursions of the Libyan tribes or the Isaurian brigands,
whose raids continued to the end of the reign. The relations with the
West had been further embittered by the affair of John Chrysostom;
and, while Stilicho lived, a good understanding was impossible. After
delays not easy to explain Stilicho prepared to carry out his compact
with Alaric, and, as an earnest of his intention, closed the ports against
Eastern ships, while Alaric invaded Epirus. But, hearing that the
usurper Constantine had crossed to Gaul, Stilicho again postponed his
Eastern expedition, and Alaric in anger evacuated the dominions of
Arcadius and threatened Italy. At this juncture Arcadius died (1 May
a
CH. XVI.
## p. 462 (#492) ############################################
462
Administration of Anthemius
[408–414
1
!
408), leaving a son, Theodosius, aged seven, who since 10 Jan. 402
had been his father's colleague, and three (perhaps four) daughters;
and Stilicho, thinking the time come to carry out his old project of
bringing the East under his rule, proposed to send Alaric to Gaul and
go himself to Constantinople as the representative of Honorius; but a
hostile party secured the Emperor's ear, and he was put to death (Aug.
408). The ports were then opened and amity restored.
The care of the Emperor's person was in the hands of Antiochus, a
eunuch with Persian connexions ; but the direction of affairs fell to
Anthemius, whose chief adviser was the sophist Troilus; and the period
of his administration was one of the most fortunate in the history of the
East. The danger from the West had been removed by Stilicho's fall;
and on the eastern side the best relations were maintained with Yezdegerd
the Persian king, with whom a commercial treaty was made. The military
power of the Empire had suffered too much to be quickly restored ; but
we hear no more of Isaurian raids, and it was found possible to send a
small force to support Honorius against Alaric. It was only however
by a combination with subject tribes that the Huns were driven across
the Danube, while their tributaries the Sciri were captured in vast
numbers, and enslaved or settled as coloni in Asia Minor (409). To
prevent such incursions the fleet on the Danube was strengthened (412).
Other salutary measures were the relief given to the taxpayers of Illyricum
and the East (413-14), the restoration of the fortifications of the Illyrian
cities (412), and the re-organisation of the corn supply of Constantinople
(409). But the work for which the name of Anthemius was most
remembered is the wall built from the Propontis to the Golden Horn
to enclose the portion of the city that had grown up outside the wall
of Constantine, a wall which substantially exists to this day (413).
In 414 the administration of Anthemius came to an end, probably
by death; and on 4 July Pulcheria, the daughter of Arcadius, was
proclaimed Augusta, a title that had not been granted to an emperor's
sister since Trajan's time; and henceforth, though only two years
older
than Theodosius, she exercised the functions of regent, and her bust was
placed in the Senate-house with those of the emperors (30 Dec. ). At the
same time Antiochus was removed from the palace.
The Court of Pulcheria was a strange contrast to her mother's. For
political rather than religious reasons she took a vow of perpetual virginity
and induced her sisters to do the same, and the princesses spent their
time in spinning and devout exercises. She herself was a ready speaker
and writer in Greek and Latin; and she had her brother trained in
rhetoric, as well as horsemanship and the use of arms, in ceremony
and deportment, and the observances of religion. Hence he grew up &
strict observer of ecclesiastical rules, a fair scholar with a special interest
in natural science and medicine, a keen huntsman, an excellent penman,
exemplary in private life, mild and good-tempered ; but, as everything
4
## p. 463 (#493) ############################################
414–420]
Regency of Pulcheria
463
likely to make him a capable ruler was excluded from his education,
the Emperor remained all his life a puppet in the hands of his sister, his
wife, and his eunuchs.
The transference of the regency to a girl of 15 could not be effected
without a change in the methods of administration, and it is therefore
not surprising to find the government accused of fiscal oppression,
while the sale of offices, which was restricted under Anthemius, became
again a matter of public notoriety. In Alexandria, which, being almost
equally divided between Christians, Jews, and heathens, was always
turbulent, the change gave occasion for a serious outbreak. After
prolonged rioting between Jews and Christians the bishop Cyril instigated
his followers to expel the Jews. This the praefect Orestes reported to
the Emperor, while Cyril sent his own account; and, Orestes refusing to
yield, some fanatical monks attacked and stoned him. The chief perpe-
trator was tortured to death, whereupon Cyril treated him as a martyr,
and both parties appealed to Constantinople. It now came to be
believed among Cyril's partisans that Orestes was acting under the
influence of the celebrated mathematician and philosopher, Hypatia,
who was in constant communication with him : accordingly a party of
parabolani (sick-attendants) pulled her from her chariot, dragged her
into the church called Caesarium, and beat or scraped her to death with
tiles (Mar. 415). At first the government acted with some vigour. No
personal punishment was inflicted, but the parabolani were limited to
500, and the selection made subject to the approbation of the Augustal
and praetorian praefects, while they were forbidden to appear in the
council-house or law-courts or at public spectacles (29 Sept. 416). It
was not long however before the influence or bribes of Cyril procured
the restoration of the freedom of selection (3 Feb. 418). · The increase
of anti-pagan feeling was also shewn by a law excluding pagans from
high administrative office and from the army (7 Dec. 416). Other dis-
turbances were the rebellion of Count Plintha in Palestine (418), an
attack on the city praefect Aëtius (23 Feb. 419) and a mutiny in the
East (420). In Armenia, Yezdegerd having appointed his brother as
king, the Roman portion of the country was definitely annexed and
placed under a count (415–16).
It was now time for Theodosius to marry; and it was Pulcheria's
object to prevent the choice of a wife with powerful connexions, who
would be likely to endanger her ascendancy. She had by some means
made the acquaintance of Athenais, daughter of the Athenian sophist
Leontius, a woman of high education and literary ability, who had come
to Constantinople through a dispute with her brothers about their
father's property. As a friendless girl dependent on herself, yet fitted
by education for the part of an empress, she seemed exactly suited for
the purpose. The Augusta therefore introduced her to Theodosius,
who declared himself willing to make her his wife; Athenais made no
CH. XVI.
## p. 464 (#494) ############################################
464
Persian War
[ 421-441
-
a
objection to accepting Christianity, and was baptised under the name of
Eudocia, Pulcheria standing sponsor; and on 7 June 421 the marriage
was celebrated. The new empress bore no malice against her brothers,
but summoned them to Court, where one became praefect of Illyricum
and the other master of the offices; in this however she perhaps shewed
worldly wisdom rather than Christian charity. After the birth of a
daughter she received the title of Augusta (2 Jan. 423).
About the time of the marriage the peace with Persia was broken.
Yezdegerd had always shewn himself friendly to the Christians; but at
the end of his reign the fanatical act of a bishop drove him to severe
measures. Some Christians fled to Roman territory, and when their
surrender was refused, the position became so critical that permission
was given to the inhabitants of the exposed provinces to fortify their
own lands (5 May 420). After Yezdegerd's violent death (late in 420)
a more extended persecution was begun by Warahran V; and the Court
of Constantinople began the war by sending the Alan Ardaburius through
Roman Armenia into Arzanene, where he defeated the Persian Narsai
(Aug. or Sept. 421), who retreated to Nisibis. Ardaburius with numerous
prisoners advanced to Amida to prevent an invasion of Mesopotamia ;
and here, as the prisoners were starving, Bishop Acacius melted the
church plate, ransomed them with the price, gave them provisions, and
sent them home. Ardaburius then besieged Nisibis, and Warahran
prepared to march to its relief, while he sent Al Mundhir, sheikh of
Al Hira, to invade Syria. Many of the Arabs were however drowned
in the Euphrates, and the rest defeated by the general Vitianus. On the
king's approach Ardaburius burnt his engines and retreated, and the
Persians, crossing the frontier, vainly attacked Rhesaina for over
a month; but, though the Romans gained some successes, no decisive
victory was obtained, and Theodosius thought it best to propose terms.
Warahran was also inclined for peace; but, wishing to gain a success
first, he ordered an attack upon a Roman force, while he kept the
ambassador with him. The Romans were surprised; but during the
battle another division under Procopius, the son-in-law of Anthemius,
unexpectedly appeared, and the Persians, taken on both sides, were
defeated. Warahran then took up the negotiations in earnest; and, on
his undertaking to stop the persecution and each party binding itself
not to receive the Arab subjects of the other, peace was made for 100
years (422). This victory was celebrated by Eudocia in an epic poem.
It was probably a result of the transference of troops from Europe to
meet the Persians that the Huns this year invaded Thrace, though in
consequence of the prudent measures of Anthemius the Danubian
frontier was rarely violated before 441. The provinces had however
not recovered from the calamities of Arcadius' time, and constant
remissions of taxation were necessary.
The relations with the West were again disturbed through the refusal
## p. 465 (#495) ############################################
421-441]
Elevation of Valentinian III
465
of Theodosius to recognise the elevation of Constantius (421); and when
after the death of Honorius (Aug. 423) the obscure John was proclaimed
emperor in prejudice of the claims of the young Valentinian the son of
Placidia, there was an open breach. When John's envoys arrived to
for recognition, Theodosius threw them into prison. Placidia now received
anew the title of Augusta (424), which Theodosius had before ignored,
Valentinian was declared Caesar at Thessalonica, mother and son were
sent to Italy with a large army under Ardaburius, his son Aspar, and
Candidianus; and, John having been overthrown, Valentinian was in-
vested with the empire (Oct. 425).
The concord between the two
divisions of the Empire was confirmed by the betrothal of Valentinian to
Theodosius' daughter Eudoxia, and the victory celebrated by the building
of the Golden Gate, through which the emperors made their formal
entries into Constantinople. In 431, when Placidia needed assistance
against the Vandals, an army under Aspar was sent to Africa ; but Aspar
returned three years later without success, probably after an under-
standing which made him ever after a friend of the Vandals.
In 427 some Ostrogoths who had seceded from the Huns were
settled in Thrace, and other tribes were received in 433; while a raid
was made by the Huns, and a more serious attack only prevented by
abject submission to their demands (434). At sea a pirate fleet entered
the Propontis, but in 438 the pirate Contradis was captured. At home
stones were thrown at Theodosius in a riot after a famine in 431, and
there were bitter complaints of the extortion of the eunuchs.
Two matters of internal administration deserve special mention—the
codification of the law (438), and the foundation of a university at
Constantinople as a counterpoise to the schools of Athens (27 Feb. 425).
In this university there were 28 professors of Greek and Latin grammar
and rhetoric, and two of law, but only one of philosophy, and all other
public teaching in the city was forbidden.
Eudocia was at first of necessity subservient to her sister-in-law ;
but that she would always accept this position was not to be expected.
A difference appeared at the time of the synod of Ephesus (431), when
Pulcheria was victorious; but afterwards her influence declined, and at
last a palace intrigue drove her to retire from court. Under Eudocia's
patronage a large share in the administration fell to Cyrus, an Egyptian
poet and philosopher, who became city-praefect in 435, and in 439
combined this office with the praetorian praefecture. Cyrus was the
first praefect who published decrees in Greek, and he also distinguished
himself by renovating the buildings of the city, especially by an extension
of the sea-wall to join the wall of Anthemius, which the capture of
Carthage by the Vandals had made desirable (439). Antiochus, the
emperor's old guardian, was restored to favour and made praepositus.
The capture of Carthage caused the despatch of a fleet to Sicily in
1 I assign Codex Just. 11. vii. 5 to this year.
C. MED. H. VOL. I. CH. XVI.
30
## p. 466 (#496) ############################################
466
Fall of Eudocia
[437–460
441 : but in consequence of an irruption of Huns into Illyricum the
force was recalled in 442 and peace made; but not before the ex-
pedition had led to a war with Persia. Under the capable direction
of Anatolius, the magister militum per Orientem, the defence of the
eastern frontier had been strengthened by stricter rules of discipline in the
army (25 Feb. 438) and by the building of the fortress of Theodosiopolis
in Armenia. This last the new king, Yezdegerd II, probably considered
a menace ; and he therefore took advantage of the troubles in the
West to begin war, crossing the frontier from Nisibis and sacking
several towns, while another force raided Roman Armenia (441). He
was however hampered by bad weather and threatened by the Ephthalites
beyond the Caspian ; hence, though the Romans had no army to oppose
to him, Anatolius and Aspar by a large sum of money and a promise to
surrender some Christian refugees persuaded him to make a truce for a
year. As the troubles with the Ephthalites continued, this was followed
by a definite peace on the terms that neither party should build a fort
within a certain distance of the frontier, and the Romans should renew
an undertaking made by Jovian to contribute to the defences of the
Caucasian Gates. One of the last acts of Cyrus was to provide that the
Armenian frontier lands should be held on condition of supplying horses,
wagons, and pikemen for the army (26 June 441).
After her daughter's marriage (21 Oct. 437), for which Valentinian
came to Constantinople, Eudocia went on pilgrimage to Jerusalem (438),
and on the way gained much popularity at Antioch by a speech in which
she boasted of her Greek blood. She returned in 439; and meanwhile
some hostile influence seems to have been at work, for in 440 Paulinus,
ex-master of the offices, was beheaded at Caesarea in Cappadocia on
suspicion, as was popularly believed, of an intrigue with her, and soon
afterwards she asked leave to retire to Jerusalem, and left Constantinople
for ever (441 ? ). With her fell Cyrus, who through the popular
acclamation, “Constantine founded, Cyrus restored,” had incurred the
Emperor's jealousy. Being charged with paganism, he took orders to
save his head, and was made bishop of Cotyaeum, where four bishops
were said to have been murdered. By his discreet conduct he succeeded
in retaining his see till the time of Leo, when on some unknown charge
he was deprived and came back to Constantinople, where he remained
in possession of large property. Antiochus was also deposed and com-
pelled to take orders. Pulcheria returned to Court; but the chief
influence was for the rest of the reign exercised by the eunuch Chrysaphius.
Eudocia was not left in peace at Jerusalem; but Saturninus, count of the
domestici, was sent to spy upon her, and for some reason beheaded two
clergymen who attended upon her (444). She in revenge assassinated
Saturninus and was deprived of her imperial train, though she still
disposed of ample revenues, which she spent on the erection of churches
and monasteries. She composed several poems, of which large portions
are extant, and died in 460 (20 Oct. ).
## p. 467 (#497) ############################################
447–453]
Accession of Marcian
467
The good administration introduced by Anthemius had been in
some measure maintained under the ascendancy of Pulcheria and Eudocia;
but under Chrysaphius the days of Arcadius seemed to have returned.
The Huns overran Thrace and Illyricum, and the murder of the magister
militum of Thrace, John the Vandal, (apparently by order of Chrysaphius)
did not strengthen the resistance. The Romans suffered a severe defeat
(447), and Chrysaphius could only grant Attila's terms and send emissaries
to assassinate him. In 447 the walls of Constantinople were shattered by
an earthquake, and in consequence of the terror caused by the Huns the
praefect Constantine rebuilt them in 60 days, and the Isaurians, who had
renewed their raids in 4+1, were called in under their leader Zeno to
defend the city. Zeno afterwards extorted the office of magister militum
per Orientem, and demanded the surrender of Chrysaphius; and, though
this was not granted, the danger from the Huns prevented an intended
campaign against the marauders. Bands of Tzani, Saracens, and
Caucasian Huns had invaded the Empire during the Persian war, and we
hear of Saracen raids again several years later (448), while Yezdegerd
shewed signs of a desire to renew hostilities. Libya too was again
harassed by the frontier tribes, and the Vandals terrorised the Ionian sea.
On 26 July 450 Theodosius broke his spine by a fall from his horse
while hunting, and died two days later. The appointment of a successor
was left to the Augusta Pulcheria; and her choice fell upon Marcian,
a veteran soldier from Thrace of high character who had held the post
of domesticus (chief of the staff) to Aspar, to whose influence the selection
must be ascribed. Pulcheria crowned Marcian in the presence of the
Senate (24 Aug. ), and gave him her hand in nominal marriage.
The first act of the new rulers was to put Chrysaphius to death. The
sale of offices was prohibited, though it is unlikely that the prohibition
was strictly carried out; and attempts were made to lighten the burden
of taxation by a remission of arrears, by reducing the number of praetors
to three and relieving non-resident senators from the burden of the office
(18 Dec. 450), and by enacting that the consuls instead of squandering
money on the populace should make a contribution towards the repair
of the aqueducts (452), an obligation which was extended to honorary
consuls by the Emperor Zeno. Marcian also put an end to a system
under which the possessors of certain lands which had been sold by the
State in the time of Valens escaped their share of taxation. The
popularity of his rule is shewn by the words “ Reign like Marcian,”
,
with which the citizens in 491 greeted Anastasius.
In external relations the reign was a fortunate one.
As Attila was
preparing for his western expedition, his demands for money could
safely be refused; and, when after his return he repeated them with
threats, death prevented him from carrying these out (453). From
Zeno, who was appealing to heathen support, the Emperor was delivered
by his death following a fall from his horse. Envoys from the Armenian
CH. XVI.
30—2
## p. 468 (#498) ############################################
468
Accession of Leo I
[452–471
insurgents had come before Theodosius' death to ask for help; but
Marcian refused to break the peace with Persia. With the Vandals also
peace was maintained ; for, though after the sack of Rome (455) Marcian
tried to obtain the release of Eudoxia and her daughters, the possession
of these hostages as well as Aspar's influence secured Gaiseric from
attack. In Syria the magister militum, Aspar's son Ardaburius, was in
452 fighting with Arab raiders near Damascus, after which negotiations
were begun, but with what result is not known. At the same time
Egypt was suffering from incursions of the Blemmyes, who gave hostages
to the imperial envoy Maximin, and made peace for 100 years, but on
,
his sudden death recovered the hostages by force and renewed their raids
till put down by Florus, praefect and count of Egypt. A more serious
position arose on the Danubian frontier, where after the collapse of the
Hun empire (454) some of the Huns and other tribes were settled in the
north of Nlyricum and Thrace as foederati. Of these the most important
was a body of Ostrogoths, who under three brothers of the Amal family,
Walamir, Theodemir, and Widimir, settled in eastern Pannonia, of
which they received a grant from Marcian, who did not recognise
Valentinian III's successors: they also received pay as foederati.
In 453 Pulcheria died, leaving all her property to the poor, a bequest
which Marcian faithfully carried out. By a former wife Marcian had a
daughter, whom he had given in marriage to Anthemius, grandson of the
praefect Anthemius; but, when he died (27 Jan. 457) at the age of 65, he
had taken no steps to secure his son-in-law's succession, and the throne
lay at the disposal of Aspar the patrician and magister militum, who
as an Arian and barbarian could not himself assume the crown, but
might reign in the name of some puppet-emperor. He therefore chose
Leo, a military tribune from Dacia and his own steward, a man of some
capacity but little education; and the choice was ratified by the Senate.
As there was no elder emperor or Augusta to perform the coronation,
Leo was crowned by the patriarch Anatolius (7 Feb. ). This precedent
was henceforth followed whenever an emperor was not merely being
associated with a senior colleague.
One of the first acts of the new reign was the recognition of Majorian
(April), after whose death (461) Leo, though not recognising Severus,
accepted the Western consuls, and, while sending an embassy to Gaiseric
to secure the liberation of the widow and daughters of Valentinian,
urged him to cease attacking Italy and Sicily. Gaiseric refused to make
peace with the West or to release Eudoxia, whom he married to his son,
but on receiving a share of Valentinian's property released his widow and
her other daughter Placidia, who came to Constantinople. Some years
later Eudoxia escaped (471) and ended her days at Jerusalem. Leo also
induced Marcellinus, who had set up an independent power in Dalmatia,
to keep peace with the Western Emperor; but further embassies to
Gaiseric effected nothing.
About this time the migration of the Avars from the east caused a
## p. 469 (#499) ############################################
489–468]
Affairs of Lazica
469
movement among the Hunnic tribes of the Caucasus, in consequence of
which the Saragurs asked for Roman protection, and obtained it, though
some trouble with the fugitive peoples followed. But when the Saragurs
invaded Persian territory, an embassy arrived from King Piroz to complain
of the treatment of Magians in the Empire and the reception of fugitives,
and to ask for the stipulated contribution in money or men towards the
defence of the Caucasian Gates, and money for the war against the
Ephthalites; to which an answer was sent through the ex-praefect
Constantine that the complaints were unfounded and the contribution
could not be given. Meanwhile Gobazes, king of Lazica (Colchis), had
offended the government, and a campaign in his country was under-
taken (464), the troops returning to Roman territory for the winter.
The coast-road was however so difficult that the Romans were thinking
of asking leave to pass through Persian territory ; accordingly on receiving
an embassy from Gobazes Leo granted peace on the nominal condition
that he and his son should not reign conjointly; and Gobazes, having
failed to obtain help from Piroz on account of the Ephthalite war, con-
sented to retire in his son's favour. A certain Dionysius, who was known
to Gobazes from previous negotiations, was at his request sent to Lazica
and brought the king back with him to Constantinople (466), where by
plausible words and the wearing of Christian emblems he obtained favour,
so that his abdication was not insisted on. His submission drew upon
him the enmity of Piroz, and a force under Heraclius was sent to his
support; but, as the Persians were occupied elsewhere and the maintenance
of the troops was expensive, Gobazes sent them back. Leo was mean
while negotiating with Piroz through Constantine; but Piroz, having
overcome the Ephthalites, sent to announce the fact and turned against
Gobazes, who had meanwhile taken some forts from his north-eastern
neighbours, the Suani, who were in alliance with Persia. Gobazes asked
that part of the Armenian frontier force might be sent to his support;
but Leo, being occupied with the African expedition, refused assistance
(468).
Meanwhile the relations between Leo and Aspar had become strained.
A difference between them had arisen in 459, when Leo appointed Vivianus
praefect in preference to Aspar's candidate, Tatianus; and again in 460
Leo expelled the patriarch Timothy of Alexandria in spite of Aspar's
opposition. Another dispute arose over the affairs of Illyricum. The
Pannonian Ostrogoths, whose subsidy had been withheld by Leo, raided
Illyricum and took Dyrrachium (459), but were obliged to give
Theodemir's son, the boy Theodoric, as a hostage before obtaining the
pay which they claimed. They then turned against the neighbouring
tribes, and after a time became involved in a war with the Sciri. Both
parties appealed to the Emperor for help, and, though Aspar advised
neutrality, Leo insisted on supporting the Sciri, who gained a victory,
Walamir falling in the battle.
OH. XVI.
## p. 470 (#500) ############################################
470
Rise of Zeno
[ 460–470
The Emperor was alarmed by the condition of the West, which after
Majorian's death fell under the domination of Ricimer; and he de-
termined, if possible, to save the East from a similar fate: but, as
Aspar was surrounded by a large body-guard of Goths and other
dependents and the Thracian Goths, whose chief, Theodoric, son of
Triarius, was his wife's nephew, were in alliance with him, it was
necessary to raise a force from some other quarter to overthrow him.
Accordingly Leo turned his eyes towards the Isaurians, who had done
so much injury to the Empire in the days of Arcadius and Theodosius,
but might now be used to rescue it from more dangerous enemies. His
elder daughter, Ariadne, was therefore given in marriage to the Isaurian
Tarasicodissa, who in memory of his countryman of the time of Theo-
dosius took the name of Zeno and brought with him an Isaurian
body-guard to set against that of Aspar (467 ? ).
Meanwhile disturbances had arisen in Thrace. From about 460 the
command there was held by Ardaburius, but it was afterwards transferred
to Basiliscus, brother of Leo's wife Verina. In 467 trouble arose with
Attila's son Dengizic, and a force of Huns crossed the Danube with a
large body of Goths; but the two nations were surrounded by a Roman
army, and induced by a trick to fight one another, so that a general
slaughter followed, from which only a few escaped.
In 467 Ricimer, requiring the Eastern fleet for protection against
the Vandals, asked Leo to nominate an emperor; whereupon he chose
Marcian's son-in-law, Anthemius, and, having persuaded Marcellinus to
submit to the new emperor, prepared a great expedition by land and
sea (468): but the fleet was by the mismanagement of Basiliscus almost
annihilated ; and Aspar, the Vandals' friend, was believed to have induced
him to betray his trust. After his return he took refuge in St Sophia,
but at Verina's intercession escaped punishment.
Meanwhile Zeno was sent to Thrace; and the soldiers, instigated, as
was supposed, by Aspar, tried to murder him, and he with difficulty
escaped to Sardica. The command was then given to Anagast, who soon
afterwards rebelled (469).
